You have several issues in my opinion. After the riser and lams are all glued and stacked up, but before you put the first piece of rubber on, you should wrap some 3/4" strapping tape around the whole works, right in the middle of the riser, and/or clamp it, pulling it down securely. Then, an inch or two from each fadeout, wrap the riser and lams with the same tape. Do the first wrap with moderate pressure, check your alignment, and if all is well, go back over it again pulling it down more tightly. Do it also tightly right at the fadeouts, and part way up the riser. Work back and forth from one side to the other, and then wrap a few places out each limb, and keep checking the alignment. Before any real pressure is applied with the rubber pieces, it should be held quite firmly by the tape.
Then cover the whole works with plastic wrap... like Saran Wrap. This keeps the glue off of your bands, and your hands.
And when you get to applying pressure with the rubber bands, start at the riser and work outwards, alternating working each side a little at a time until you're well past the fadeouts.
Next, your riser shouldn't end at an angle like it does. It should look more like the bottom of a ski slope, curved and gradual. They also end too abruptly, and should gradually get thinner and thinner, down to 'paper thin' at their ends. I don't know what's going on with that fadeout lam/power lam. It looks like it gets thinner, then thicker, and has some weird angle on it right there where the riser block fades out. It appears the gaps in the glue lines are more because of the fadeout issues than the shifting.
You also have only two core lams which seem pretty thick. How thick are they? Thinner lams make the bends at the fadeouts more easily and reliably.