2024 Nuneaton and Bedworth Borough Council election explained

Election Name:2024 Nuneaton and Bedworth Borough Council election
Country:Warwickshire
Type:parliamentary
Previous Election:2022 Nuneaton and Bedworth Borough Council election
Previous Year:2022
Next Election:2026 Nuneaton and Bedworth Borough Council election
Next Year:2026
Seats For Election:All 38 seats to Nuneaton and Bedworth Borough Council
Majority Seats:20
Leader1:Chris Watkins
Party1:Labour Party (UK)
Seats Before1:5
Seats1:20
Seat Change1: 15
Popular Vote1:22,388
Percentage1:45.0%
Swing1: 10.3%
Leader2:Kristofer Wilson
Party2:Conservative Party (UK)
Seats Before2:27
Seats2:16
Seat Change2: 11
Popular Vote2:21,906
Percentage2:44.1%
Swing2: 6.4%
Leader3:Michele Kondakor
Party3:Green Party of England and Wales
Seats Before3:2
Seats3:2
Popular Vote3:3,837
Percentage3:7.7%
Swing3: 6.3%
Leader
Posttitle:Leader after election
Before Election:Kristofer Wilson
Before Party:Conservative Party (UK)
After Election:Chris Watkins
After Party:Labour Party (UK)

The 2024 Nuneaton and Bedworth Borough Council election was held on Thursday 2 May 2024, alongside the other local elections in the United Kingdom being held on the same day. All 38 members of Nuneaton and Bedworth Borough Council in Warwickshire were elected following boundary changes.

Labour gained overall control of the council from the Conservatives, winning just enough seats to have a majority.[1] The Labour group leader, Chris Watkins, was formally appointed as leader of the council at the subsequent annual council meeting on 15 May 2024.[2]

Background

Nuneaton and Bedworth was a traditionally Labour council. From its creation up to 2008, the party held a majority on the council.[3] The Conservatives took control in 2008, but the council fell into no overall control in 2010,[4] and was retaken by Labour in 2012.[5]

Labour controlled the council until 2018, when it again fell into no overall control. The Conservatives gained the council in 2021, and retained control in 2022. In that election, the Conservatives gained 1 seat with 50.5% of the vote, Labour lost 2 with 34.7%, and the Green Party gained 1 with 14.0%.

Boundary changes

Nuneaton and Bedworth usually elects its councillors in halves, on a 4-year cycle. However, following boundary changes, all councillors will be elected to the new wards.[6] All wards have 2 councillors. The change increases the number of councillors by 4.

Old wards[7] New wards
Abbey Arbury
Arbury Attleborough
Attleborough Bede
Bar Pool Bulkington
Bede Camp Hill
Bulkington Chilvers Coton
Camp Hill Eastboro
Exhall Exhall
Galley Common Galley Common
Heath Heath
Kingswood Milby
Poplar Poplar
Slough Slough
St Nicolas St Mary's
Weddington St Nicolas
Wem Brook Stockingford East
Whitestone Stockingford West
Weddington
Whitestone

Previous council composition

After 2022 electionBefore 2024 election[8] After 2024 election
PartySeatsPartySeatsPartySeats
272716
5520
222

Results

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Ward results

An asterisk denotes an incumbent councillor seeking re-election.

Whitestone

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2024-05-03 . Labour gains control of Nuneaton and Bedworth council after Conservative loss . 2024-05-04 . Channel 4 News . en-GB.
  2. News: Harrison . Claire . 'Be courteous' says new council leader after toxic Town Hall claims . 23 July 2024 . Coventry Live . 16 May 2024.
  3. Web site: Nuneaton & Bedworth Borough Council Election Results 1973-2012 . Elections Centre . 6 March 2024.
  4. News: Nuneaton & Bedworth Vote 2010 . 6 March 2024 . BBC News.
  5. News: BBC News - Vote 2012 - Nuneaton & Bedworth . 6 March 2024 . BBC News.
  6. si . 2024 . 3 . The Nuneaton & Bedworth (Electoral Changes) Order 2024 . 6 March 2024 .
  7. si . 2000 . 2058 . The Borough of Nuneaton and Bedworth (Electoral Changes) Order 2000 . 6 March 2024 .
  8. Web site: Your local councillor . 6 March 2024 . en . 6 March 2024 . Nuneaton and Bedworth Borough Council.