2021 Hyndburn Borough Council election explained

Election Name:Hyndburn Borough Council election, 2021
Type:parliamentary
Previous Election:2019_Hyndburn_Borough_Council_election
Previous Year:2019
Next Election:2022_Hyndburn_Borough_Council_election
Next Year:2022
Seats For Election:13 of 35 seats to Hyndburn Borough Council
Election Date:6 May 2021
Majority Seats:18
Turnout:36%
Party1:Labour Party (UK)
Party2:Conservative Party (UK)
Leader1:Miles Parkinson
Leader2:Marlene Haworth
Leaders Seat1:Altham
Leaders Seat2:St Oswald's

A by-thirds Hyndburn Borough Council local election (postponed since March 2020, due to the Coronavirus outbreak), was held on Thursday 6 May 2021. Approximately one third of the local council's 35 seats fall up for election on that day.[1]

This election, postponed for 12-months since 2020, took place at the same time as the regularly-scheduled 2021 Lancashire County Council elections and the rescheduled Lancashire Police & Crime Commissioner elections.

Background

Before the election Labour had a majority of 25 councillors, Conservatives had 7 councillors, with 1 Independent councillor who had previously been a Conservative and had since resigned from that party and become an Independent, plus 2 Vacant seats where after councillor Stephanie Haworth opted to stand-down (in 2020) her seat was left Vacant (during the covid pandemic) and the other suddenly became vacant (in March 2020) following the death of long-serving councillor Tony Dobson, who had also originally planned to stand-down (in 2020).[2]

  1. Hyndburn's Conservative MP, Sara Britcliffe was previously elected in 2018 to one of the St. Andrew's HBC-ward seats AND that vacated seat's postponed by-election is due to take place in May-2021

In this election, Labour was defending 10-ward-seats and Conservatives were defending 3-ward-seats. The winning ward-candidates will serve out only the last 3-years of a standard 4-year term in office, with those same seats coming up for re-election, in May 2024, 12-months prior to the next LCC election, in May 2025.

Candidates were also standing as potential Reform Party ward-councillors in Netherton, Overton, Rishton and St Andrew's. Candidates were also standing as potential Lib-Dem Party ward-councillors in Rishton and St Oswald's. A single Candidate stood as a potential Independent ward-councillor in Rishton. The Green Party did not stand candidates in any Hyndburn ward-seats and only contested LCC seats. There were no UKIP Candidates standing in any Hyndburn ward-seats, with just one such candidate for the Accrington North LCC-seat.

  1. Candidates standing for both a HBC-ward seat AND a LCC-seat – are tagged with "(& LCC)"

Local Election result

PartyLeaderCouncillorsVotes
Of totalWhole CouncilOf total
Labour6data-sort-value=""
7,83147.5%
Conservative Party7data-sort-value=""
7,54845.8%
Independents0data-sort-value=""
4112.5%
Reform UK0data-sort-value=""
4042.5%
Liberal Democrats0data-sort-value=""
730.5%

Reference: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2016_Hyndburn_Borough_Council_election

NB: Four (of 16) Council wards, where seats were NOT be up for re-election in 2021, include the following wards – Clayton Le Moors, Huncoat, Immanuel in Oswaldtwistle and Milnshaw in Accrington. However, as there was ALSO an election previously scheduled for Lancashire's next Police and Crime Commissioner, polling stations in those other Four wards would normally ALSO have been OPEN to accept those ballots for a new Commissioner.

Previous Councillors who were looking to Stand-Down in May 2021 included – Stephanie Haworth (Lab-Overton), Jean Battle (Lab-Church) and Jeff Scales (Lab-Rishton). As well as the (Con) Barnfield seat, which became vacant in March 2020 when Councillor Tony Dobson died.

Ward results

St. Oswald's

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Elections & Referendums – what we do . 7 May 2021 . The Electoral Commission.
  2. Web site: Hyndburn Borough Council – Your councillors by political party . 12 March 2021 . The Hyndburn Borough Council.