Cambuslang East (ward) explained

Cambuslang East
Year:2007
Council:South Lanarkshire
Region:Scotland
Map1:Cambuslang East.svg
Map Entity:South Lanarkshire
Map Year:2007–2017
Previous:Cairns
Cambuslang Central
Hallside
Long Calderwood
Electorate:13,227 (2022)
Population:17,418 (2021)[1]
Elects Howmany:3
Councillor1:Walter Brogan
Party1:Scottish Labour Party
Councillor2:Katy Loudon
Party2:Scottish National Party
Councillor3:Alistair Fulton
Party3:Scottish National Party
Towns:Cambuslang (part of)
Scot Parl:Rutherglen
Scot Region:Glasgow
Westminster:Rutherglen

Cambuslang West is one of the 20 electoral wards of South Lanarkshire Council. Created in 2007, the ward elects three councillors using the single transferable vote electoral system and covers an area with a population of 17,418 people.

The ward was previously a Labour stronghold with the party holding at least two of the three seats between 2007 and 2017. However, it has since swung towards the Scottish National Party (SNP) with the party holding two of the three seats since 2017.

Boundaries

The ward was created following the Fourth Statutory Reviews of Electoral Arrangements ahead of the 2007 Scottish local elections. As a result of the Local Governance (Scotland) Act 2004, local elections in Scotland would use the single transferable vote electoral system from 2007 onwards so Cambuslang East was formed from an amalgamation of several previous first-past-the-post wards. It contained the majority of the former Cairns ward, roughly half of the former Cambuslang Central ward as well as all of the former Hallside ward. As a result of amendments to the boundaries of the South Lanarkshire Council's management areas, the boundaries between Rutherglen and Cambuslang, East Kilbride and Hamilton were tweaked so Cambuslang East also contained part of the former Long Calderwood ward.[2]

Most new multi-member wards were formed from at least three smaller predecessors, but the population of Cambuslang in the area now represented by Cambuslang East had increased substantially over the dozen years following the local government reforms in the 1990s due to the construction of the new Drumsagard neighbourhood, with further developments planned for sites including Westfarm, Newton Farm and Gilbertfield – these projects were largely completed over the next decade, increasing the ward's population above that of its neighbours.[3]

Cambuslang East covers a suburban area in the east of Cambuslang including the neighbourhoods of Halfway, Cairns, the Circuit, Drumsagard, Lightburn, Newton and Westburn. The ward's northern boundary is the division with Glasgow City Council which runs along the River Clyde and its eastern boundary is the Rotten Calder.[2]

Prior to the local government reforms in the 1990s, Cambuslang was within the Glasgow District under Strathclyde Regional Council. One of its single-member wards was Halfway which included much of the same area as the current Cambuslang East.[4]

Following the Fifth Statutory Reviews of Electoral Arrangements ahead of the 2017 Scottish local elections, streets between Greenlees Road and the Cathcart Circle Line railway tracks over Hamilton Road were transferred into Cambuslang West.[5]

Councillors

ElectionCouncillors
2007Walter Brogan
(Labour)
John Higgins
(SNP)
Pam Clearie
(Labour)
2008
by-election
Richard Tullett
(Labour)
2012Christine Deanie
(SNP)
2017Katy Loudon
(SNP)
Alistair Fulton
(SNP)
2022

Election results

2022 election

See main article: 2022 South Lanarkshire Council election.

2017 election

See main article: 2017 South Lanarkshire Council election.

2012 election

See main article: 2012 South Lanarkshire Council election.

2007 election

See main article: 2007 South Lanarkshire Council election.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cambuslang East . Scottish Government . 11 March 2023.
  2. Web site: Fourth Statutory Review of Electoral Arrangements; South Lanarkshire Council Area . Local Government Boundary Commission for Scotland . May 2006 . 11 March 2023.
  3. Web site: Population in Cambuslang continues to rise - but Rutherglen is shrinking . Daily Record . Douglas . Dickie . 24 August 2011 . 11 March 2023.
  4. Web site: Second Statutory Reviews of Electoral Arrangements . Local Government Boundary Commission for Scotland . 11 March 2023.
  5. Web site: Fifth Statutory Review of Electoral Arrangements; South Lanarkshire Council Area . Local Government Boundary Commission for Scotland . May 2016 . 11 March 2023.