2003 University of Oxford Chancellor election explained

Country:United Kingdom
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:University of Oxford Chancellor election, 1987
Previous Year:1987
Election Date:14 and 15 March 2003
Next Year:2024
Candidate1:Chris Patten
Party1:Conservative Party (UK)
Popular Vote1:4,203
Percentage1:51.5%
Candidate2:Lord Bingham of Cornhill
Party2:Independent (politician)
Popular Vote2:2,483
Percentage2:30.4%
Candidate3:Lord Neill of Bladen
Party3:Crossbencher
Popular Vote3:1,470
Percentage3:18.0%
Chancellor
Before Election:Lord Jenkins of Hillhead
After Election:Chris Patten

The 2003 University of Oxford election for the position of Chancellor was called upon the death of the incumbent Chancellor, Roy Jenkins, Baron Jenkins of Hillhead, on 5 January 2003.

Electorate

The electorate consisted of all members of the University holding the rank of MA. Votes had to be cast in person at Oxford. To stand, a candidate had to be nominated by two electors.

It was the first such election to be held in which voters were not required to wear academic dress to vote. It was also the first election to use the instant-runoff vote, after the previous election by first past the post in 1987 saw two Conservative candidates (Lord Blake and Sir Edward Heath) splitting the Conservative vote at 2,500 each, allowing Social Democrat Roy Jenkins to win with 3,500 votes.

Candidates

Four candidates were nominated:

The campaign

For much of the race, Chris Patten was generally considered to be the front-runner, due to his high profile as the last Governor of Hong Kong.[2] The bookmaker William Hill offered odds of 7/4 for Mr Patten, 9/4 for Lord Bingham, 11/4 for Lord Neill, and 3/1 for Toksvig.[3]

Sandi Toksvig was the candidate most vociferously opposed to the government's proposed top-up fees, and so received the endorsement of the Oxford University Student Union. However, as most of the union's members were undergraduates, they did not have a vote in the election itself.[4] Lord Neill also declared himself opposed to top-up fees, but said in his candidates' statement that he preferred not to make this the basis of his campaign.[1]

Result

Polling ran over two days, on 14 and 15 March 2003. The results went to two rounds before one candidate secured more than 50% of the vote.

First round

CandidateVotes%
Chris Patten3,65743.66
Lord Bingham of Cornhill2,25126.87
Lord Neill of Bladen1,29015.40
Sandi Toksvig1,17914.07
Turnout8,377
Sandi Toksvig eliminated
[5]

Second round

CandidateVotes%
Chris Patten4,20351.53
Lord Bingham of Cornhill2,48330.44
Lord Neill of Bladen1,47018.02
Turnout8,156
[5]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: UK | England | Statements released in chancellor race . BBC News . 2003-03-08 . 2011-06-10.
  2. Web site: Mount . Harry . Patten ahead in race to be Oxford's new chancellor . Telegraph . 2003-03-15 . 2011-06-10.
  3. http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article1117116.ece
  4. Web site: UK | Education | Oxford students back Toksvig . BBC News . 2003-03-11 . 2011-06-10.
  5. Web site: Patten accepts 'tall order' of leading Oxford in hard times - Education News, Education . https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220501/https://www.independent.co.uk/news/education/education-news/patten-accepts-tall-order-of-leading-oxford-in-hard-times-591492.html . 1 May 2022 . subscription . The Independent . 2003-03-18 . 2011-06-10.