2002 Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council election explained

The 2002 Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council election took place on 2 May 2002 to elect members of Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council in the West Midlands, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Labour Party stayed in overall control of the council.[1]

After the election, the composition of the council was:

Campaign

Before the election the Labour Party controlled the council with 55 seats, compared to 8 Conservatives, 7 Liberal Democrats and 1 independent.[3] A further seat was vacant after the recent death of Labour councillor Fred Smith.[3]

Candidates in the election included five independents who were standing in protest at a decision by the council to close a swimming pool in Tipton and a nearby leisure centre.[4] [5] The Tipton area also saw 2 candidates from the British National Party standing in the wards of Princes End and Tipton Green.[3]

Election result

The results saw Labour easily keep its strong majority on the council after winning 19 of the 24 seats contested.[6] Neither the British National Party, nor the candidate from the Freedom Party managed to win a seat on the council,[7] but the British National Party did win 24% in Princes End ward.[8]

Notes and References

  1. News: Sandwell. BBC News Online. 14 February 2011.
  2. News: Full results. 4 May 2002. Financial Times. 7.
  3. News: Uphill job to oust Labour; But Tories hope for gains. Johnson. Steve. 1 May 2002. Birmingham Mail.
  4. News: Poll fight by mother; ; Leisure protester stands. Johnson. Steve. 3 April 2002. Birmingham Mail.
  5. News: Society: frontline: Links: In deep water: Adrian Johnson on why the planned closure of a rundown pool in the West Midlands has provoked a political backlash. Johnson. Adrian. 24 April 2002. The Guardian. 14.
  6. News: Local Election Results 2002: Labour ward off the right; Majority retained against BNP challenge. 3 May 2002. Birmingham Mail. 17.
  7. News: Local Election Results 2002: No headway for far right. 3 May 2002. Birmingham Mail. 20.
  8. News: Comment & Analysis: Analysis: The devil is in the detail: It is not just Burnley and Oldham we should be worrying about - the British National party made progress in 16 other areas too. Travis. Alan. 9 May 2002. The Guardian. 15.