2009 United Kingdom local elections explained

Election Name:2009 United Kingdom local elections
Country:United Kingdom
Type:parliamentary
Previous Election:2008 United Kingdom local elections
Previous Year:2008
Next Election:2010 United Kingdom local elections
Next Year:2010
Seats For Election:All 27 county councils, 7 out of 55 unitary authorities,
1 sui generis authority, and 3 directly elected mayors
Election Date:4 June 2009
1Blank:Councils
2Blank:Councils +/–
3Blank:Councillors
4Blank:Councillors +/–
Party1:Conservative Party (UK)
Percentage1:38%[1]
Swing1:6%
1Data1:30
2Data1:7
3Data1:1,531
4Data1:244
Party2:Liberal Democrats (UK)
Percentage2:28%
Swing2:3%
1Data2:1
2Data2:1
3Data2:484
4Data2:2
Party3:Labour Party (UK)
Percentage3:23%
Swing3:1%
1Data3:0
2Data3:4
3Data3:178
4Data3:291
Map Size:300px

The 2009 United Kingdom local elections were elections held to all 27 County Councils, three existing Unitary Authorities and five new Unitary Authorities, all in England, on 4 June 2009.[2] [3] The elections were due to be held on 7 May 2009, but were delayed in order to coincide with elections to the European Parliament.[4] [5]

The elections resulted in significant gains for the Conservatives. The party won Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire, Staffordshire and Lancashire from Labour, as well as Devon and Somerset from the Liberal Democrats. The Liberal Democrats did however win a majority in Bristol. Despite the optimism for the Conservatives in seat and council gains, their share of the vote at 38% was 6% down on 2008. That said, they had a clear 10% lead over the Liberal Democrats who achieved a respectable second place on 28%.

Labour, taking the blame in government from a worsening economic climate, soaring unemployment and the expenses scandal, lost all of its councils, with some authorities being swept clear of any Labour councillors at all. The party also performed poorly in the European elections on the same day.

Summary of results

PartyCouncillorsCouncils
NumberChangeNumberChange
1,531244307
484211
17829104
9760
1880
Residents920
770
330
30
20
Others30150
No overall controln/an/a32

Source: BBC NewsIsles of Scilly Council not included in the above figures.

County councils

All 27 English County Councils were up for election. All seats on the councils were contested at this election.

CouncilPrevious controlResultDetails
Buckinghamshire holdDetails
Cambridgeshire holdDetails
Cumbria holdDetails
Derbyshire gainDetails
Devon gainDetails
Dorset holdDetails
East Sussex holdDetails
Essex holdDetails
Gloucestershire holdDetails
Hampshire holdDetails
Hertfordshire holdDetails
Kent holdDetails
Lancashire gainDetails
Leicestershire holdDetails
Lincolnshire holdDetails
Norfolk holdDetails
North Yorkshire holdDetails
Northamptonshire holdDetails
Nottinghamshire gainDetails
Oxfordshire holdDetails
Somerset gainDetails
Staffordshire gainDetails
Suffolk holdDetails
Surrey holdDetails
Warwickshire gainDetails
West Sussex holdDetails
Worcestershire holdDetails

Unitary authorities

Existing authorities

CouncilProportion up
for election
Previous controlResultDetails
Bristol1/3 gainDetails
Isle of WightAll holdDetails

New authorities

Elections were held for five new unitary authorities. All councillors were elected at this election.

CouncilResultDetails
BedfordDetails
Central BedfordshireDetails
Cornwall (Conservative/Independent Coalition)Details
ShropshireDetails
WiltshireDetails

Isles of Scilly

The Council of the Isles of Scilly was created by the Local Government Act 1888, meaning they lie outside the classifications of authorities used in the rest of England.

Mayoral elections

Local AuthorityPrevious MayorCandidate electedDetails
DoncasterMartin Winter (Independent[6])Peter Davies (English Democrats)Details
HartlepoolStuart Drummond (Independent)Stuart Drummond (Independent)Details
North TynesideJohn Harrison (Labour)Linda Arkley (Conservative)Details

A mayoral election was also due to be held in Stoke-on-Trent, however voters in the city voted to abolish the directly elected mayor system in a referendum held in October 2008. The referendum decided to replace the mayor and executive system with a council leader and cabinet system of local government.[7]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: BBC projected national vote shares for 2009 . BBC News . 2009-06-05. 2009-06-06.
  2. Web site: Communities and Local Government - Local government elections in 2009 . Communities.gov.uk . 2009-06-06 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090309060038/http://www.communities.gov.uk/localgovernment/360902/electoralarrangements/elections/localgovernmentelections/ . March 9, 2009 .
  3. http://www.communities.gov.uk/documents/localgovernment/pdf/812363.pdf Communities and Local Government - Moving the date of English Local Government elections to the date of the European Parliament elections in 2009 - Consultation
  4. Web site: Department of the Official Report (Hansard), House of Commons, Westminster . House of Commons Hansard Debates from 04 Nov 2008 - Local Government Motion . Publications.parliament.uk . 2008-11-04 . 2009-06-06.
  5. Web site: 'British expenses scandal dominates political debate', 23 May 2009 . City Mayors . 2009-05-23 . 2009-06-06.
  6. Winter was twice elected mayor as the Labour Party's candidate, but he declared himself an independent following the 2008 local elections and was subsequently expelled from the Labour Party. He did not stand for re-election in 2009.
  7. News: Mayor faces final months in power . BBC News . 2009-03-06 . 2009-06-06.