Election Name: | 1990 Strathclyde Regional Council election |
Type: | parliamentary |
Ongoing: | no |
Previous Election: | 1986 Strathclyde Regional Council election |
Previous Year: | 1986 |
Next Election: | 1994 Strathclyde Regional Council election |
Next Year: | 1994 |
Seats For Election: | All 103 seats to Strathclyde Regional Council |
Majority Seats: | 52 |
Image1: | Lab |
Leader1: | Charles Gray |
Party1: | Labour Party (UK) |
Seats1: | 90 |
Seat Change1: | 3 |
Popular Vote1: | 409,905 |
Percentage1: | 52.2% |
Swing1: | 0.4% |
Party2: | Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party |
Seats2: | 5 |
Seat Change2: | 1 |
Popular Vote2: | 127,827 |
Percentage2: | 16.3% |
Swing2: | 3.2% |
Image3: | LD |
Party3: | Scottish Liberal Democrats |
Last Election3: | N/A |
Seats3: | 4 |
Seat Change3: | 4 |
Popular Vote3: | 46,356 |
Percentage3: | 5.9% |
Swing3: | 8.3% |
Council Leader | |
Before Election: | Charles Gray |
Before Party: | Labour Party (UK) |
Posttitle: | Council Leader after election |
After Election: | Charles Gray |
After Party: | Labour Party (UK) |
Map2 Image: | Strathclyde Regional Council 1990.svg |
Elections to Strathclyde Regional Council were held on Thursday 3 May 1990, on the same day as the eight other Scottish regional elections. This was the fifth election to the regional council following the local government reforms in the 1970s.
The election was the last to use the 103 electoral divisions created by the Initial Reviews of Electoral Arrangements in 1978. Each electoral division elected one councillor using first-past-the-post voting.[1]
Labour, who had won every previous election to Strathclyde Regional Council, retained a large majority by winning 90 of the 103 seats – up three from the previous election in 1986 despite their vote share falling by 0.4%. The Conservatives remained as the second largest party by retaining five of their six seats. The Liberal Democrats contested their first election in Strathclyde following the merger of the Liberal Party and the Social Democratic Party (SDP) in 1988.[2] The new party won four of the five seats that the Liberal Party had won in the 1986 election but with less than half vote share of its predecessors. The Liberal Party and the SDP had contested the previous election in a political alliance.[2] Despite coming second in the popular vote and increasing their vote share to more than 20%, the Scottish National Party (SNP) retained only one of their two seats. The remaining three seats were won by independent candidates.