Vanessa Calou, Reform UK candidate for Addiscombe East in Croydon.

With local elections here in Croydon in May, we speak with Vanessa Calou, Reform UK candidate for Addiscombe East.

“I’m standing because I believe in putting Britain and our communities first and in giving residents a real say in decisions that affect their lives”

Can you introduce yourself to our readers, and tell us what made you decide to run?

I’m Vanessa Calou, Reform UK’s candidate for Addiscombe East. I am a proud British Chagossian, born in exile after my family were forcibly removed from the Chagos Islands. I’ve lived in Croydon for over 20 years, raised two children (both born at Mayday Hospital) and have long been active locally. My background includes youth counselling and leadership work overseas, a Diploma in Travel & Tourism, more than 15 years at Gatwick as a Passenger Service Agent and union representative, and volunteer service as a BIOT citizen representative and with Citizens Advice. I’m standing to deliver accountable, community-first leadership for the place I call home.

I’m standing because I believe in putting Britain and our communities first and in giving residents a real say in decisions that affect their lives. Reform’s commitment to secure our borders, protect sovereignty and defend our Overseas Territories aligns with my campaign for recognition and self-determination for the British Chagossian community. Having seen how policy affects families, I want to restore integrity, stop waste, and make the council work for ordinary people.

“People want reliable frontline services and safer, cleaner streets”

You’re the prospective candidate for Addiscombe East ward, what are the major concerns in the area?

Residents tell me their top concerns are: the housing crisis and poor-quality housing or delays in repairs; the risk of homelessness for vulnerable families; persistent fly-tipping, litter and poorly maintained public spaces; antisocial behaviour and the need for more visible, effective local policing; parking and local traffic management; and lack of investment in youth services and local schools. People want reliable frontline services and safer, cleaner streets.

More widely what do you see as the big issues for Croydon and if elected what would you hope to champion?

Croydon faces a broken model of council spending and risky property deals, rising bills without better services, a housing crisis, and patchy delivery on basic street maintenance and public safety. If elected I will push for: a full efficiency review of council spending; no council tax rises above inflation until residents see value for money; prioritising decent, safe housing and preventing homelessness; tackling fly-tipping and antisocial behaviour; and stronger investment in education and youth wellbeing. I will also champion recognition and self-determination for the British Chagossian community and ensure local decisions are transparent and accountable.

“Croydon faces a broken model of council spending and risky property deals, rising bills without better services, a housing crisis…..”

How can people find out more or get involved in the campaign?

Visit the Reform UK Croydon Facebook page on the Reform Croydon UK website.  Come to our street stalls and surgeries or get in touch through the campaign contact details on our site. You can help by volunteering to deliver leaflets, door-knock, phone bank, host a small meeting, or simply spread the word locally. If you have a local issue you want me to raise, please get in touch via chair.croydon@reformuk.com — I’m listening and ready to help. You can find out more in our booklet ‘CROYDON NEEDS REFORM – OUR CONTRACT WITH YOU’.