1976 Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council election explained

See main article: 1976 United Kingdom local elections.

Election Name:1976 Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council election
Country:England
Flag Image:Coat of arms of Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council.png
Type:parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1975 Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council election
Previous Year:1975
Next Election:1978 Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council election
Next Year:1978
Seats For Election:23 of 66 seats (One Third and one by-election)
to Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council
Majority Seats:34
Turnout:37.8% (1.1%)[1]
3Blank:Swing (pp)-->
Leader of the Council
Before Election:Malcolm Thornton
Before Party:Conservative
Posttitle:Leader of the Council after election
After Election:Malcolm Thornton
Image1: Con
Leader1:Malcolm Thornton
Party1:Conservative Party (UK)
Leaders Seat1:North Liscard-Upper Brighton Street
Seats Before1:37
Seats1:17
Seats After1:42
Popular Vote1:53,029
Percentage1:54.3%
Leader2:Bill Wells
Party2:Labour Party (UK)
Leaders Seat2:Leasowe
Seats Before2:21
Seats2:5
Seats After2:18
Popular Vote2:26,276
Percentage2:26.9%
Leader3:Gruff Evans
Party3:Liberal Party (UK)
Leaders Seat3:Cathcart-Claughton-Cleveland
Seats Before3:8
Seats3:1
Seats After3:6
Popular Vote3:17,928
Percentage3:18.4%

The 1976 Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council election took place on 6 May 1976 to elect Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council members in England.[2] This election was held on the same day as other local elections.

After the election, the composition of the council was:

PartySeats±
42 5
18 3
6 2

[3]

Election results

Overall election result

Overall result compared with 1975.

[1] [2]

Ward results

Birkenhead

No. 1 (Argyle-Clifton-Holt)

[2]

No. 2 (Bebington and Mersey)

[2]

No. 3 (Cathcart-Claughton-Cleveland)

[2] [4]

No. 4 (Devonshire and Egerton)

[2]

No. 5 (Gilbrook and St James)

[2]

No. 6 (Grange and Oxton)

[2]

No. 7 (Prenton)

[2]

No. 8 (Upton)

[2]

Wallasey

No. 9 (Leasowe)

[2]

No. 10 (Marlowe-Egremont-South Liscard)

[2]

No. 11 (Moreton and Saughall Massie)

[2]

No. 12 (New Brighton-Wallasey-Warren)

[2] [5]

No. 13 (North Liscard-Upper Brighton Street)

[2]

No. 14 (Seacombe-Poulton-Somerville)

[2]

Bebington

No. 15 (Higher Bebington and Woodhey)

[2]

No. 16 (Park-New Ferry-North Bromborough)

[2]

No. 17 (South Bromborough and Eastham)

[2] [6]

No. 18 (Lower Bebington and Poulton)

[2]

Hoylake

No. 19 (Caldy and Frankby)

[2]

No. 20 (Central-Hoose-Meols-Park)

[2]

Wirral

No. 21 (Barnston-Gayton-Heswall-Oldfield)

[2]

No. 22 (Irby-Pensby-Thurstaston)

[2]

Notes

italics denote the sitting councillor • bold denotes the winning candidate

References

Web site: Mellows-Facer . Adam . 10 May 2006 . Local election 2006. parliament.uk. 29 December 2018.
News: BBC NEWS VOTE 2003 WIRRAL . 1 May 2003 . . 29 December 2018.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Local Election Summaries 1976. The Elections Centre. 24 November 2018.
  2. Web site: Metropolitan Borough of Wirral Election Results 1973-2012 (Pg. 2 and 3). The Elections Centre. 24 November 2018.
  3. Web site: Council compositions. The Elections Centre. 27 July 2018.
  4. Web site: Councillor Walter Smith. Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council. 24 November 2018. 12 June 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180612144009/https://democracy.wirral.gov.uk/mgUserInfo.aspx?UID=119. dead.
  5. Web site: Councillor Mrs Kate Wood. Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council.
  6. Web site: Councillor Phil Gilchrist. Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council.