Election Name: | 2023 Coventry City Council election |
Country: | West Midlands |
Type: | parliamentary |
Previous Election: | 2022 Coventry City Council election |
Previous Year: | 2022 |
Next Election: | 2024 Coventry City Council election |
Next Year: | 2024 |
Seats For Election: | 18 out of 54 seats to Coventry City Council |
Majority Seats: | 28 |
Leader1: | George Duggins |
Party1: | Labour Party (UK) |
Last Election1: | 39 seats, 48.1% |
Seats Before1: | 38 |
Seats After1: | 37 |
Seat Change1: | 1 |
Leader2: | Gary Ridley |
Party2: | Conservative Party (UK) |
Last Election2: | 14 seats, 29.3% |
Seats Before2: | 15 |
Seats After2: | 15 |
Leader3: | N/A |
Party3: | Green Party of England and Wales |
Last Election3: | 1 seat, 10.4% |
Seats Before3: | 1 |
Seats After3: | 2 |
Seat Change3: | 1 |
Leader | |
Posttitle: | Leader after election |
Before Election: | George Duggins |
Before Party: | Labour Party (UK) |
After Election: | George Duggins |
After Party: | Labour Party (UK) |
The 2023 Coventry City Council election took place on 4 May 2023. One third of councillors — 18 out of 54 — on Coventry City Council was elected. The election took place alongside other local elections across the United Kingdom.
The Labour Party retained its majority on the council, although it did lose one seat to the Green Party.[1]
The Local Government Act 1972 created a two-tier system of metropolitan counties and districts covering Greater Manchester, Merseyside, South Yorkshire, Tyne and Wear, the West Midlands, and West Yorkshire starting in 1974. Coventry was a district of the West Midlands metropolitan county.[2] The Local Government Act 1985 abolished the metropolitan counties, with metropolitan districts taking on most of their powers as metropolitan boroughs. The West Midlands Combined Authority was created in 2016 and began electing the mayor of the West Midlands from 2017, which was given strategic powers covering a region coterminous with the former West Midlands metropolitan county.[3]
Coventry Council has variously been under Labour control, Conservative control and no overall control since it was established. Labour most recently gained control of the council in the 2010 election, when they gained six seats at the expense of the Conservatives and Socialist Alternative.[4] Labour continued to make gains to consolidate its majority on the council in the 2011 and 2012 elections, since when the party's position has remained stable. In the 2022 Coventry City Council election, Labour won 13 of the seats up for election with 48.1% of the vote, the Conservatives won five seats with 29.3% of the vote, and the Greens won one seat with 10.4% of the vote. Labour maintained its majority on the council.[5]
Positions up for election in 2023 were last elected in 2019. In that election, Labour won fourteen seats and the Conservatives won four seats.[6]
Labour retained its majority on the council.[7]
The council elects its councillors in thirds, with a third being up for election every year for three years, with no election in the fourth year.[8] [9] The election will take place by first-past-the-post voting, with wards being represented by three councillors, with one councillor elected in each ward each election year to serve a four-year term.
All registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) living in Coventry aged 18 or over will be entitled to vote in the election. People who live at two addresses in different councils, such as university students with different term-time and holiday addresses, are entitled to be registered for and vote in elections in both local authorities. Voting in-person at polling stations will take place from 07:00 to 22:00 on election day, and voters will be able to apply for postal votes or proxy votes in advance of the election. People voting in this election in Coventry only vote for a councillor in the ward they reside.
After 2022 election | Before 2023 election | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Seats | Party | Seats | ||
39 | 38 | ||||
14 | 15 | ||||
1 | 1 |
Asterisks denote incumbent councillors seeking re-election.