2018 Lambeth London Borough Council election explained

Election Name:2018 Lambeth London Borough Council election
Type:Parliamentary
Ongoing:no
Party Colour:yes
Previous Election:2014 Lambeth London Borough Council election
Previous Year:2014
Next Election:2022 Lambeth London Borough Council election
Next Year:2022
Seats For Election:All 63 seats to Lambeth London Borough Council
Majority Seats:32
Election Date:3 May 2018
Leader1:Lib Peck
Party1:Labour Party (UK)
Seats1:57
Popular Vote1:43,526
Percentage1:51.7%
Party2:Green Party of England and Wales
Seats2:5
Popular Vote2:16,232
Percentage2:19.3%
Image3: Con
Party3:Conservative Party (UK)
Seats3:1
Popular Vote3:10,572
Percentage3:12.6%
Map Size:300px
Council control
Posttitle:Council control after election
Before Election:Labour
After Election:Labour

The 2018 Lambeth London Borough Council election took place on 3 May 2018 alongside other local elections in London, to elect members of Lambeth London Borough Council in England. The election saw Labour remain in control of Lambeth Council with a slightly reduced majority, winning over 90% of the seats. The Green Party achieved its best-ever result in the borough, winning five seats and becoming the official opposition and the largest Green group in London.

The Green Party finished the runner up in nine of the wards, the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats in five wards and Labour in two.

Overall Results

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Council composition

The election saw Labour remain in control of Lambeth Council with a majority reduced by two seats. The party were wiped out in the St Leonard's ward, and they also lost a councillor in both Gipsy Hill and Herne Hill wards.

For the first time since the creation of the council, the Greens became the official opposition with five councillors, including Jonathan Bartley, who is the co-leader of the Green Party.

The Conservatives were reduced down to a single seat in Clapham Common, after Labour gained two of the seats they had previously held, despite the Conservative vote share in the ward increasing. The Conservatives failed to gain their target wards of Thurlow Park, Clapham Town and Larkhall.

The Liberal Democrats failed to make any gains at the election. However, they did comes second to Labour in their target wards.

Rachel Heywood, a former Labour councillor in Coldharbour sought re-election as an independent candidate. Heywood failed to win the seat and finished in 6th place, behind both Green Party candidates but ahead of the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats.

The Women's Equality Party received 8% of the vote in the Brixton Hill ward, finishing in 5th place, ahead of two of the Green Party candidates, the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats. The party also stood candidates in the wards of Prince's and Ferndale.

UKIP saw their vote share largely decrease in the wards they stood in.

The Federalist Party polled 0.2% of the vote in the Prince's ward with the Pirate Party polling 0.2% in the ward of Vassall.

Council composition following the election in May 2018:

Proportionality

The disproportionality of the 2018 election was 31.00 using the Gallagher Index.

Political PartyVoteShareSeatShareDifferenceDifference²
Labour51.790.538.81505.4
Green19.07.911.1123.2
Conservative12.61.5911.0121.2
Liberal Democrat12.30.0012.3151.3
Other4.10.004.116.8
TOTAL1917.8
TOTAL /2958.9
31.0

Results by ward

Candidates shown below are confirmed candidates. An asterisk * indicates an incumbent Councillor seeking re-election.

Bishop's

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Coldharbour

On 29 July 2018, Cllr Parr died; this subsequently triggered a by-election on 13 September 2018.

Thornton

Jane Edbrooke was previously an Oval ward councillor (2010–2018).

Tulse Hill

Ben Kind was previously a Bishop's ward councillor (2014–2018).

Vassall

By-elections 2018-2022

Coldharbour

The by-election was caused by the death of Matthew Parr.

Thornton

The by-election was caused by the resignation of Jane Edbrooke.

The by-election was caused by Lib Peck who resigned as Leader of Lambeth Council and as a councillor in order to take the role as the Director of the Mayor of London’s newly established Violence Reduction Unit.[1] [2] [3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: team . London SE1 website . All change in Lambeth as Lib Peck quits for City Hall job . 2024-05-07 . London SE1 . en.
  2. Web site: 2019-01-14 . Council leader Lib Peck quits for GLA job . 2024-05-07 . Brixton Blog . en-GB.
  3. Web site: Lib Peck London City Hall . 2024-05-07 . www.london.gov.uk . en.