1986 Reading Borough Council election explained

Election Name:1986 Reading Borough Council election
Type:parliamentary
Previous Election:1984 Reading Borough Council election
Previous Year:1984
Next Election:1987 Reading Borough Council election
Next Year:1987
Seats For Election:15 seats of 45 on council
Majority Seats:23
Image1: Lab
Leader1:Mike Orton
Party1:Labour Party (UK)
Seats Before1:17
Seats After1:22
Seat Change1:5
Popular Vote1:15,213
Percentage1:36.4
Swing1:2.9
Leader2:Deryck Morton
Party2:Conservative Party (UK)
Seats Before2:23
Seats After2:18
Seat Change2:5
Popular Vote2:13,736
Percentage2:32.8
Swing2:9.6
Image3: Lib
Leader3:Jim Day
Party3:Liberal Party (UK)
Alliance3:SDP-Liberal Alliance
Seats Before3:5
Seats After3:5
Popular Vote3:11,920
Percentage3:28.5
Swing3:5.3

The 1986 Reading Borough Council election was held on 8 May 1986, at the same time as other local elections across England and Scotland. One third of Reading Borough Council's 45 seats were up for election.

The election saw the Conservatives lose their majority on the council. Labour gained most seats, but remained one seat short of an overall majority, leaving the council with no overall control. After the election, Labour had 22 seats, the Conservatives had 18 seats, and the SDP-Liberal Alliance had 5 seats, all of whom were Liberals.

Labour subsequently took control of the council, with the support of two disaffected Conservatives.[1] The Labour leader, Mike Orton, took the council's top political job as chair of the policy committee. The Conservative leader, Deryck Morton, stood down as party leader immediately after the election, being replaced by Geoff Canning.[2] The Liberal leader remained Jim Day. Turnout was reported to be 39%.

Results

Ward results

The results in each ward were as follows (candidates with an asterisk* were the previous incumbent standing for re-election, candidates with a dagger(†) were sitting councillors contesting different wards):[3] [4]

By-elections 19861987

The Peppard ward by-election in 1986 was triggered by the resignation of Conservative councillor Geoff Lowe.[5] [6]

Notes and References

  1. News: Fuads give Labour reins of power . 6 April 2022 . Evening Post . 21 May 1986 . Reading . 9.
  2. News: Geoff elected to lead Tories . 6 April 2022 . Evening Post . 13 May 1986 . Reading . 9.
  3. News: Power struggle for Reading: How they line up . 6 April 2022 . Evening Post . 10 April 1986 . Reading . 5.
  4. News: Tory defeat in town means a hung council . 6 April 2022 . Evening Post . 9 May 1986 . Reading . 6.
  5. News: Leading Tory resigns his council seat . 10 April 2022 . Evening Post . 16 July 1986 . Reading . 9.
  6. News: By-election win boosts Alliance drive for victory . 10 April 2022 . Evening Post . 12 September 1986 . Reading . 1.