Sunday, May 21, 2006

Hackney Election Fraud Report Causes A Stir

Blair and Kelly mobbed by
Shoreditch locals just days
after the Hackney election
result was declared
Safely re-elected with a huge increase in his Mayoral majority and with his ruling Labour Group having lost only one seat in the council elections (when other London boroughs showed large swings to the opposition), Hackney Labour leader Jules Pipe was feeling pretty smug in the heady, post-May 4th days. Smug enough to hang a self-congratulatory banner bearing his full-colour portrait Ceausescu-like from the top of Hackney town hall and to welcome Tony Blair to Shoreditch for a private back-slapping session.

What they did not realise, while quaffing their champagne, was that the opposition in Hackney had not accepted their inevitable punishment at the polls lying down. In the wake of the 2002 all-postal elections, when rumours of massive electoral fraud swept the borough, some "concerned individuals" had got their act together and hired a consultant to examine Hackney’s electoral register in detail and to carry out an analysis of the council ward and mayoral elections, looking for evidence of fraud.


A draft version of the analyst’s report circulated amongst opposition politicians within a few days of the elections and the full report – 20 pages with 200 pages of detailed appendices – was issued last week. I’ve long been a political cynic of the first order, but when a copy of the report fell into my lap the other day and I saw what had been discovered, even I was shocked. The author (who according to rumours was a Lithuanian academic), stated that he was unable to report definite evidence of fraud in the elections, but then went on to detail:

  • 152 cases of duplicate polling cards with identical names and addresses;
  • 636 cases of duplicate polling cards with identical names and the same address written differently or separate flats in the same house or block with a common front door;
  • 4,157 register entries with at least two identical but uncommon names (such as Dashraht Mason-Malik, Richard G Tarasofsky and Frumet Wertzberger) registered at more than one address, with 550 of them at three or more addresses;
  • Three “extended families” with a total of 62 members apparently registered to vote 176 times on a “round-robin” basis at 82 different properties;
  • A 3.7% increase in the Hackney electorate since 2005, after several years of gradual decline (the implication being that this is due to the increase in duplicate register data rather than genuine population rise);
  • A 35% increase in turnout since 2002 for the mayoral election, compared with a 3% rise in electorate and an 11% increase in turnout for the council election;
  • A first preference mayoral vote for Jules Pipe 51% higher than in 2002, with Jules getting 526 more votes than the largest number of votes gained by a Labour candidate in each of the 19 wards all added together – all the more surprising considering that 1,659 fewer people voted in the mayoral election than in the council election;
  • Strange results for Tory leader Andrew Boff, who lost his Queensbridge ward seat with a 22% swing to Labour but managed a 66% increase in his mayoral vote despite what the report describes as “…personal factors that caused a decline in support” (believed to be a reference to the fact that Hasidic voters in northern Conservative strongholds withdrew support for him after his well-publicised Civil Partnership);
  • A strangely low “average votes per voter” figure for the Hackney council election of just 2.67 of the maximum 3 votes, compared with 2.89 in Islington, 2.83 in Southwark and 2.82 in Wandsworth;
  • Vote share patterns for the council and mayoral elections showing large differences, whereas corresponding data in nearby Newham showed similar vote share patterns for the two elections;
  • A strangely low mayoral vote for well-known Independent candidate Hettie Peters who ran an active “battle bus” campaign with supporters drawn from all political parties, but managed only 2/3 of the vote achieved in 2002 by the Trotskyist candidate, the late Paul Foot;
  • The case of sisters Katharine and Alison Dixon who once again appeared twice on the electoral register at two different addresses, despite an investigation by Guardian journalist Hélène Mulholland in 2005 after they received two postal voting forms each, resulting in a Council statement that such an error was “a very rare occurrence”.

The history of elections in Hackney is riddled with reports of voting fraud, some of which eventually proved to be true, as with the Conservative and LibDem Councillors who were jailed in 2001 for vote rigging in the 1998 council elections.

In the old days, the trick was supposedly based on fraudulent proxy votes, using names obtained from local cemetery gravestones or by convincing geriatric or non-English speaking voters to surrender their papers.

In 2002, the trick allegedly was to use insider information to follow the postal vote deliveries round in areas with large numbers of ethnic minority voters and to offer to “help” the recipients with the complex issue of witness signatures and sealing of envelopes within envelopes.

This time around, with extensive media focus on postal voting fraud allegations country-wide, it did not surprise me that the Hackney report states: “Some aspects of the Hackney elections data clearly palliate the concerns raised. For instance, I was not able to detect any signs of fraud associated with postal voting.”

Either the elections were fraud-free and simply generated a set of extra-ordinary metrics, or someone very smart decided in advance to keep the postal voting clean and perform the vote rigging by other means. Who knows which of these is true? What is indisputable, however, is that one way or another some very, very strange things happened in Hackney in the elections of May 4th 2006.

Hackney Cynic

With apologies - correction to earlier posting shown in mauve.

31 comments:

Anonymous said...

Great article, Cynic! I'd heard a bit about this going on but not having seen the report I didn't know how bad it was. I just wrote a piece myself on the Hackney Labour Whip for The England Project website which deals with political hypocrisy

Anonymous said...

I sent this URL to journalist Helene Mulholland earlier today as she is mentioned in Cynic's blog as having investigated problems with the Hackney register before. If anyone out there has got a copy of the consultant's report, please mail it to me at: david_evans_hackney@blueyonder.co.uk

Anonymous said...

Thanks for making me look like a plonker! I've just had an email from Helene Mulholland and she says the bit about the sisters and duplicate voting forms is not true. Did you make up the rest of it as well?

Hackney cynic said...

David - please accept my profound apologies. I guess that's why Helene Mulholland is a professional journalist and I'm an amateur blogger. I misread the report section on the two sisters - it didn't say that they received two votes but that they were still on the electoral register twice. The text was as follows:

"Concerns have been raised by various individuals about their duplicate entries. For example, in a blog in 2005 shown in Appendix G2, Guardian journalist Hélène Mulholland raised the issue of Hackney sisters Katharine and Alison Dixon who received two postal votes each, with Katharine’s name incorrectly spelt (Katherine) on one of the voting forms. Ms. Mulholland reports that, on investigation, she was told that such an incident was a “very rare occurrence”. One year later, the Hackney electoral register still contains the name of both sisters at duplicate addresses and Katherine’s name spelling error remains unremedied. Given that the issue was raised by a Guardian journalist a year ago, this does not inspire confidence in the determination of the Borough to ensure a clean electoral roll."

I've amended my blog as having an error like this was not a great way to kick off the new site. Once again, sorry!!!!

Anonymous said...

Thanks for the apology and for correcting the article. I found something very interesting when I looked at the electoral register and the postal voting list. The Dixon sisters are on the register twice and on the post voting list once. The Guardian journalist said that they didn't have a postal vote this year, so I sent her the voting list. I don't understand what's going on with these lists but there's something wrong, isn't there? Ciao. David

Anonymous said...

Why do you get so excited about all these things? You are like little boys with toys. We all know how things work and the rest of us just get on with our lives because we have more important things to do than playing with the internet making stories. If you think you are finding out something new then you don't come from Hackney because all this is not news to us.

Anonymous said...

Just seen the website. I knew there was something wrong with the election because I don't know anyone who voted for Pipe but he got so many votes.

Anonymous said...

The report claims:
"Three “extended families” with a total of 62 members apparently registered to vote 176 times on a “round-robin” basis at 82 different properties"

- if you look at the names they are NOT extended families - one are called Singh & Kaur which means Mr & Mrs and is a name given to all Sikhs - every Sikh has the same surname - so this is just a list of every Sikh in Hackney. Another is Patel which is an extremely common name amongst Hindus and Muslims - again you would expect many on the register. The final name - Gluck - is Orthadox Jewish which in Hackney invariably means they would not be Labour supporters.

Anonymous said...
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Anonymous said...

The "3.7% increase in the Hackney electorate since 2005" might have something to do with the massive registration drive by the council last year and the building of several huge new blocks of flats in the south of the borough.

Anonymous said...

Part of the explanation for "A 35% increase in turnout since 2002 for the mayoral election, compared with a 3% rise in electorate and an 11% increase in turnout for the council election" is that in 2002 the election for Mayor was held 6 months after that for the council and had a far lower turnout to start with.

Anonymous said...

Andrew Boff did not "lose his Queensbridge ward seat with a 22% swing to Labour" - that is comparing the 2006 result with a byelection on a very low turnout in 2005, whereas with his Mayoral vote you are comparing 2006 to 2002. In fact Boff massively increased the Tory vote from 2002 but not by enough to hold a historically very Labour ward.

Anonymous said...

Er... Labour runs better campaign than other parties, has improved council for 4 years, and Jules Pipe is according to MORI polling both popular and high profile ... other parties still tainted by hung council chaos of '90s ... why is it a surprise that Labour won?

Anonymous said...

Sorry, I'm posting anonymously cos I've never posted on a blog b4 and have no idea how to create a name & log-in.

I accept your explanation that you are not targeting your queries at Labour and I'm glad that has been spelt out now. Though it doesn't explain the perjorative way you describe Jules Pipe in your post of 21 May.

Hettie came off Hackney Council in Feb 98 and back on in May 98 after her debts were cleared. There's nothing wrong with being bankrupt but she served whilst disqualified from late 97 to the Feb, thus avoiding the need for a difficult byelection. It was all reported in the Hackney Gazette back then.

You should go and talk through your concerns with Electoral Services at Hackney Town Hall.

A stat you ought to highlight is the apparent disappearance of 500 Tory votes in Springfield ward between 2002 and 2006...

One other thing - you should take the lists of names in the report appendices off the web - it may be a breech of the Data Protection Act to publish excerpts from the register like that.

Anonymous said...

The increased ward electorates you point to: De Beauvoir would be caused by the Gainsborough Studios & other developments totalling over a 1000 flats I think; Cazenove is long term growth in the Orthodox Jewish community who are buying up properties in the area and usually have large numbers of adults in their families. Queensbridge there are new blocks of flats along the A10.

Anonymous said...

The other point I would make is that the "marked register" of who voted will be available to the political parties soon - which will show if any of the "double-registered" (e.g. on register twice at 65a and garden flat 65)names voted more than once. If they did hopefully they will get a visit from the Met... if they didn't it suggests that all the consultant has identified is that LBH are not that efficient in culling duplicate names from their register.

Anonymous said...

I've gone back to the appendices and checked the Singhs, Kaurs, Patels & Glucks. There is nothing in the list of names to suggest this is anything other than 4 very common BME surnames and some of them have the same - again common in their community - first names. The "round robin" patterns are just not there.

If the consultant had run a similar exercise in Wales he would have produced a list that would look equally "interesting" of Jones and Lloyd families.

Similarly, some of the multiply registered individual names that are highlighted e.g. Fatou Jeng, are in fact common African or Asian name combinations that you would expect to appear more than once in a heavily BME borough like Hackney.

One of the alleged double registrations is that of "Seamus Mulready" who appears twice at an address in Cranwich road ... er... because one Seamus is the father of the other one... and happens to be married to a Labour councillor.

How many of the other people smeared as potentially fraudulently registered twice are actually parents who have given their kids their own first name ... which is pretty common, especially in some BME communities.

I think "culturally insensitive" is the politest way to describe the smearing and naming of every member of Hackney's tiny Sikh community ... and really stupid as it could give the BNP or Combat 18 a nice targeted mailing list to send hate mail or worse to.

The great irony is that because of the 1998 proxy fraud Hackney puts more energy into anti-fraud measures than almost any borough in London.

And why has the consultant used a pseudonym that is the Yiddish words for "honest voter" - are they implying a link to the community in Stamford Hill?

Hackney cynic said...

“Anonymous” says that the extended families mentioned in the report are not really extended families but just common Sikh, Hindu/Muslim and Orthodox Jewish names - and the latter group would not be Labour supporters.

My response: This comment seems to contain so many confusions that it is hard to know where to start. In the consultant’s report the phrase “extended families” is in quotes. This is code for “they are not really extended families in the true sense of the phrase” and the author seems to have been well aware of marital naming traditions (see his comment on “Begum”).

If I understand correctly, the important point about these groups is round-robin registration. According to the report, they are not just three groups of people with the same “family” name but three groups with limited numbers of given names, even allowing for ethnic tradition. For example, take the Glucks. Simon and Sarah live together, as do David and Miriam, Rachel and Sarah, Sarah and Simon, David and Rachel… and at another address David, Miriam, Rachel, Sarah and Simon all live and vote together. And that’s only a part of the rotation of names between the properties.

I’m not sure what “anonymous” is suggesting by pointing out that the Glucks are probably not Labour supporters. By my recent count, this website contains 18 links to articles about alleged or proved fraud by Tories or LibDems, 13 links to articles about alleged or proven fraud by Labour, and 7 links to “neutral” articles. The report on the 2006 Hackney elections raises issues in respect of all three leading parties. I worry about anyone who defends themselves when not singled out for attack.

Hackney cynic said...
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Hackney cynic said...

“Anonymous” said that the 3.7% increase in electorate is due to last year’s registration drive and new housing development in the south of the borough.

My response: The largest increase in electorate over the past four years was in De Beauvoir, Cazenove and Queensbridge, suggesting that the splitting of large houses into flats was a significant factor in the rise. In any event it is indisputable that there are literally thousands of duplicate entries on the electoral register. This must surely account for much of the increase, unless of course there was a similar mass of duplicate entries on the register back in 2002.

Hackney cynic said...

“Anonymous” said that part of the explanation for "a 35% increase in turnout… for the mayoral election, compared with a 3% rise in electorate and an 11% increase in turnout for the council election" is that in 2002 the election for Mayor was held six months after that for the council and had a far lower turnout to start with.

My response: I have no doubt that a large increase in turnout would be caused by the turnout having been much lower to start with. What I think you are arguing is that the first mayoral election had a low turnout relative to the council elections earlier in the year and in 2006 the turnouts were more closely aligned. This is true and not of itself very exciting. What is more interesting is how Jules Pipe and Andrew Boff managed to achieve 51% and 66% increases in mayoral vote respectively. Had the increase in turnout not been as high as 35%, these figures would have been even more difficult to explain.

Hackney cynic said...

“Anonymous” commented: Andrew Boff did not "lose his… ward seat with a 22% swing… - that is comparing the 2006 result with a byelection... In fact Boff massively increased the Tory vote from 2002 but not by enough to hold a… very Labour ward.

My response: I’m sorry, but the report appears to be correct. You can’t compare Andrew Boff’s results for 2002 and 2006 as he did not stand in Queensbridge in 2002. As the report shows, on total votes Andrew Boff had the fourth highest % increase of any candidate who stood in the same ward previously, but allowing for the increase in turnout he plunged from fourth from top to third from bottom of a list of 41 such candidates. I’m not an expert in election mathematics, but surely this is what psephologists would call “spooky”.

Hackney cynic said...

“Anonymous” added: Labour runs better campaigns than other parties, has improved the… council for 4 years... why is it a surprise that Labour won?

My response: It doesn’t surprise me at all that Labour won. I wouldn’t think it would surprise many people that Labour won and nothing I read in the consultant’s report suggested to me that the author of the report was surprised by Labour winning. I refer you back to my earlier comment - I worry about anyone (or, seemingly in this case, any political party) defending themselves when not singled out for attack.

Hackney cynic said...

"Anonymous" constantly refers to people being "smeared". This is an unpleasant tactic used by various political forces in history to attack those who attempt to reveal uncomfortable truths.
The author of the consultancy report may or may not be correct in all of the issues that he raises.
However, nowhere in the report that I have read does he suggest that any of the electors with multiple register entries are associated in any way with electoral fraud of their own making.
My own reading of the report is that these people are probably victims, rather than perpetrators - either victims of the council's administrative chaos or of some large-scale malpractice. The author says as much in the introduction to the report.
I'm open to allowing as much free speech on this site as possible, but if comments are going to descend into smear tactics and libel then I will have to act to moderate that free speech.

Anonymous said...

I'm on the case of the anonymous poster and should have the case solved in time for tea. Who is it? Elementary, my dear Watson!

Anonymous said...

As someone who has lived in Hackney for over thirty years and been a staunch supporter of Labour ever since I came here, I would like to say that I am shocked by what I have read here. I truly hope that none of this is true and that Mayor Pipe is telling the truth when he says he has stamped out election fraud. I don't want to see a return to the old days of Tory misrule and the misery of life under Thatcher. I would like to appeal to everyone in the Labour Party and all of our supporters, please, please if you know anything about anyone who has done anything wrong go to the police or the newspapers now and tell them what you know. I know you will not suffer if you do this and once the criminals have been locked up we will be able to hold our heads up high and continue to do the wonderful work that Labour has been doing since Tony Blair was elected.

Anonymous said...

My Dear Watson: The first clue lies within:
http://www.whatnextjournal.co.uk/
Pages/Back/Wnext6/Hackney.html

Anonymous said...

"You have a grand gift of silence, Watson. It makes you quite invaluable as a companion." [The Man With The Twisted Lip, December 1891]

Anonymous said...
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Hackney cynic said...

Magsinhackney says it "seems like there's a lot of conspiracy theories going on here". Conspiracy is defined as "a secret agreement between two or more people to perform an unlawful or wrongful act". I guess it's possible for one individual to quietly and secretly commit election fraud, but in general you will find that the newspaper reports and articles on this website refer to acts involving more than one person. So yes Mags, there's a lot of conspiracy theories going on here!

kris said...

Those of us who have been disenfranchised in the past, and remember past party political indiscretions in Stamford Hill (that trancended ethnic and religious divides) nothing, but nothing, that happens in this Godforsaken borough suprises me.

To Aderemi- some of us still cling onto the dream of civil democracy- rather than he with the biggest bung gets what they want.