2004 Colchester Borough Council election explained

Election Name:2004 Colchester Borough Council election
Country:Essex
Type:parliamentary
Previous Election:2003 Colchester Borough Council election
Previous Year:2003
Next Election:2006 Colchester Borough Council election
Next Year:2006
Seats For Election:20 out of 60 seats to Colchester Borough Council
Majority Seats:31
Turnout:34.0% (6.5%)
Party1:Conservative Party (UK)
Last Election1:24 seats, 40.6%
Seats Before1:24
Seats1:11
Seats After1:28
Seat Change1: 4
Popular Vote1:13,908
Percentage1:40.9%
Swing1: 0.3%
Party2:Liberal Democrats (UK)
Last Election2:25 seats, 32.0%
Seats Before2:25
Seats2:6
Seats After2:23
Seat Change2: 2
Popular Vote2:11,619
Percentage2:34.2%
Swing2: 2.2%
Party4:Labour Party (UK)
Last Election4:5 seats, 20.0%
Seats Before4:5
Seats4:2
Seats After4:6
Seat Change4: 1
Popular Vote4:6,197
Percentage4:18.2%
Swing4: 1.8%
Party5:Independent politician
Last Election5:6 seats, 5.7%
Seats Before5:6
Seats5:1
Seats After5:3
Seat Change5: 3
Popular Vote5:2,266
Percentage5:6.7%
Swing5: 1.0%
Council control
Posttitle:Council control after election
Before Election:No overall control
After Election:No overall control

The 2004 Colchester Borough Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Colchester Borough Council in Essex, England. This was the same day as the other 2004 United Kingdom local elections and as the 2004 European Parliament Elections. One third of the seats were up for election and the council stayed under no overall control.[1]

Background

Following the previous election, Cllr Bob Newman (Wivenhoe Quay) left the Labour group to sit as an independent, reducing Labour to 4 councillors.[2] Labour then went into opposition after refusing to work with the Conservatives and a new cabinet was formed with 4 Conservative and 4 Liberal Democrat members.

A by-election took place in Wivenhoe Quay ward after the death of sitting Independent councillor Richard Davies. The by-election was won by Labour, increasing their seat count to 5.

Election result

The Conservatives gained 4 seats to become the largest party on the council with 28 seats, 3 short of a majority.[3] [4] They overtook the Liberal Democrats who held 23 seats, Labour with 6 seats and 3 independents.[3] Overall turnout at the election was 34.4%.[5]

As a result, the Conservatives took all the seats on the council cabinet for the first time since that style of government was introduced in Colchester, with the Conservative group leader John Jowers becoming the new leader of the council.[4]

Ward results

Castle

No Green candidate as previous (8.0%).

Mile End

No Independent (9.4%) or Green (3.0%) candidates as previous.

St. Andrew's

No Socialist Alliance candidate as previous (3.1%).

St. Anne's

No Socialist Alliance candidate as previous (2.1%).

Shrub End

No Socialist Alliance candidate as previous (1.5%).

Wivenhoe Quay

By-elections

Berechurch

A by-election took place on 21 October 2004 in Berechurch after the resignation of Liberal Democrat councillor Susan Brooks.[6] Labour's Dave Harris took the seat from the Liberal Democrats by a majority of 345.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: BBC News Vote 2004 Colchester Council . BBC . BBC News . 5 June 2013.
  2. News: Wivenhoe: Councillor Newman leaves Labour. 7 May 2003. Essex County Publications. NewsBank.
  3. News: Colchester : Conservatives become leading party. 12 June 2004. Essex County Publications. NewsBank.
  4. News: Colchester : Council names all-Tory cabinet. 16 June 2004. Essex County Publications. NewsBank.
  5. Web site: Summary of the number of votes cast and % turnout. Colchester Borough Council. 5 June 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20130909044404/http://www.colchester.gov.uk/CHttpHandler.ashx?id=3109&p=0. 9 September 2013. dead.
  6. News: Mixed results for the Lib Dems. Dines. Graham. 22 October 2004. East Anglian Daily Times. 27 May 2014.