2004 Sunderland City Council election explained

Election Name:2004 Sunderland City Council election
Country:England
Type:Parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Party Colour:yes
Previous Election:2003 Sunderland City Council election
Previous Year:2003
Election Date:10 June 2004
Next Election:2006 Sunderland City Council election
Next Year:2006
Seats For Election:All 75 seats on Sunderland City Council
Majority Seats:38
Party1:Labour Party (UK)
Seats Before1:63
Seats1:61
Seats After1:61
Seat Change1:2
Majority party
Before Election:Labour
Posttitle:Majority party after election
After Election:Labour
Party2:Conservative Party (UK)
Seats Before2:9
Seats2:12
Seats After2:12
Seat Change2:3
Party4:Independent (politician)
Party5:Liberal Party (UK, 1989)
Seats Before4:1
Seats Before5:1
Seats4:0
Seats5:0
Seats After4:0
Seats After5:0
Seat Change4:1
Seat Change5:1
Party3:Liberal Democrats (UK)
Seats Before3:1
Seats3:2
Seats After3:2
Seat Change3:1

The 2004 Sunderland City Council election took place on 10 June 2004 to elect members of Sunderland City Council Council in Tyne and Wear, England. The whole council was up for election following boundary changes since the last election in 2003.[1] The Labour Party stayed in overall control of the council.[2]

Campaign

Every seat was contested in the election for the first time since 1982.[3] Labour held a big majority before the election with 63 seats, but almost a quarter of Labour's councillors stood down at the election.[3] Labour was the only party to field a full 75 candidates, while the next largest number of candidates was from the Conservative party who fielded 54 candidates.[3] Candidates in the election also included 25 from the British National Party after the party failed to win any seats in the 2003 election but came second in 6 wards.[4]

Labour described their record in control of the council as being positive and that they were making progress, but the Conservatives described Labour as being "arrogant and remote".[3] The Conservatives targeted wards in the town of Washington as well as Millfield, St Chad's and St Peters, while Barnes ward was seen as being a three-way battle between Labour, Conservatives and Liberal Democrats.[5]

At the election count anti-Nazi demonstrators had a scuffle with British National Party supporters when the candidates entered the building, with one British National Party candidate being arrested on suspicion of assault.[6] [7]

Election result

The results saw Labour hold control of the council with a large majority, but the Conservatives made some gains in Barnes, Fulwell and St Michael's.[6] This meant Labour ended with 61 seats, while the Conservatives were up three on 12 seats.[8] The Liberal Democrats took two seats, while the British National Party failed to win any seats.[8] Overall turnout was 40.26%, down on the 47.47% in 2003 but up on the 22% at the 2002 election before all postal voting was used.[6] [8]

This resulted in the following composition of the council:

PartyPrevious councilNew council
Labour6361
Conservatives912
Liberal Democrats12
Liberal10
Independent10
Total7575
Working majority

Notes and References

  1. News: Sunderland council . 24 December 2010 . BBC News Online.
  2. News: Local councils . . 7 . 12 June 2004 .
  3. News: Matt . Casey . All change for city's council . . 8 . 19 May 2004 .
  4. News: Stuart . Arnold . BNP sets its sights on the Labour vote . . 4 . 13 May 2004 .
  5. News: Ross . Smith . A mountain to climb . . 16 . 28 May 2004 .
  6. News: Tories make a dent in stronghold. 11 June 2004. The Journal. 8.
  7. News: Helen . Carter . Elections 2004: Mixed results a surprise for BNP . . 8 . 12 June 2004 .
  8. News: Matt . Casey . Labour romp home, BNP fail . . 8 . 11 June 2004 .