2008 Winchester City Council election explained

Election Name:2008 Winchester City Council election
Next Election:2010 Winchester City Council election
Party1:Liberal Democrats (UK)
Election Date:1 May 2008
Majority Seats:29
Seats Before1:23
Seats After1:24
Next Year:2010
Previous Election:2007 Winchester City Council election
Previous Year:2007
Ongoing:no
Party Colour:yes
Type:Parliamentary
Country:England
Percentage1:46.0%
Seats For Election:19 of 57 seats to Winchester City Council
After Election:Conservative
Seats2:6
Seats1:12
Council control
Seats3:1
Popular Vote2:14,609
Seats Before2:29
Before Election:Conservative
Posttitle:Council control after election
Party2:Conservative Party (UK)
Seats After2:29
Percentage3:3.6%
Popular Vote3:1,225
Seats Before3:4
Party3:Independent politician
Seats After3:3
Popular Vote1:15,511
Percentage2:43.3%

The 2008 Winchester Council election took place on 1 May 2008 to elect members of Winchester District Council in Hampshire, England. One third of the council was up for election and the Conservative Party stayed in overall control of the council.[1]

After the election, the composition of the council was:

Campaign

One third of the seats were being contested with the Conservatives, Liberal Democrats and Labour each contesting all 19 seats.[3] The Conservatives, who ran the council since the 2006 election were defending 6 seats compared to 11 for the Liberal Democrats and 2 independents.[4] Among the councillors who were defending seats were the Conservative council leader, George Beckett, and the Liberal Democrat group leader Therese Evans.[3] Other candidates included 2 independents, 7 from the United Kingdom Independence Party and 4 from the Green Party.[3]

The Conservatives defended their record of running the council saying that they had improved services while keeping council tax rises below the rate of inflation.[4] Meanwhile, the Liberal Democrats criticised the Conservatives over housing and development in the council area.[4]

During the campaign a Conservative activist in Whiteley ward, John Hall, was charged after a police investigation over electoral fraud offences.[5]

Election result

The results saw the Conservatives just maintain their one-seat majority after losing two seats to the Liberal Democrats in St Barnabas and Whiteley wards, but gaining one seat back in St Michael and taking one seat from an independent in Shedfield.[6]

Ward results

Wonston and Micheldever

Notes and References

  1. News: Winchester . 2010-02-03 . . 2008-04-19.
  2. News: National: Full election results . . 45 . 2008-05-03 .
  3. News: Winchester city council nominations . 2010-02-04 . 2008-04-08 . Southern Daily Echo.
  4. Web site: Winchester gears up for city elections . 2010-02-04 . 2008-04-29 . This is Hampshire.
  5. News: Man charged over election fraud . 2010-02-04 . 2008-04-28 . BBC News Online.
  6. Web site: Election 2008: Tories cling on to power in Winchester district . 2010-02-04 . 2008-05-02 . The News.