2002 Worcester City Council election explained

The 2002 Worcester City Council election took place on 2 May 2002 to elect members of Worcester City Council in Worcestershire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the council stayed under no overall control.[1]

After the election, the composition of the council was:

Campaign

Before the election no party had a majority, but the Conservatives provided the leader of the council after gaining 5 seats in the 2000 election.[3] Both the Conservatives and Labour had 15 seats, along with 5 independents and 1 Liberal Democrat.[4] The election saw 12 seats being contested with Labour defending 7, the Conservatives 3 and the Liberal Democrats and independents 1 each.[3] Labour only contested 11 of the seats after their candidate in Claines ward was dropped by the party over a letter he wrote to the local paper.[5]

Election result

The results saw Worcester remain a hung council but with the Conservatives becoming clearly the largest party.[6] They gained 3 seats from Labour in All Saints, St Clement and St Martin wards.[6]

Notes and References

  1. News: Worcester . 2010-01-03 . BBC News Online.
  2. News: Election results; Local Election . . 16 . 2002-05-04 .
  3. News: Labour control on a knife-edge; Mail focus on the May 2 local council elections . . 8 . 2002-04-12 .
  4. News: Sarah . Probert . Local Elections 2002: Balance of power teeters on knife-edge . . 4 . 2002-04-30 .
  5. Web site: Labour in spin over axing . 2010-01-04 . 2002-04-18 . .
  6. News: Sue . Smith . Local Election Results 2002: Protest's healthy majority . . 17 . 2002-05-03 .