Election Name: | 1980 Leeds City Council election |
Country: | England |
Type: | Parliamentary |
Ongoing: | no |
Party Colour: | yes |
Previous Election: | 1979 |
Previous Year: | 1979 |
Next Election: | 1982 |
Next Year: | 1982 |
Majority Seats: | 50 |
Election Date: | 1 May 1980 |
Party1: | Labour Party (UK) |
Leaders Seat1: | Seacroft |
Seats1: | 62 |
Seat Change1: | 18 |
Popular Vote1: | 94,460 |
Percentage1: | 43.7% |
Party2: | Conservative Party (UK) |
Leaders Seat2: | Moortown |
Seats2: | 29 |
Seat Change2: | 16 |
Popular Vote2: | 74,442 |
Percentage2: | 34.4% |
Map Size: | 300px |
Council control | |
Posttitle: | Council control after election |
Before Election: | Minority administration |
Before Party: | Conservative |
After Election: | Majority administration |
After Party: | Labour |
The 1980 Leeds City Council election took place on 1 May 1980 to elect members of Leeds City Council in England.
A full boundary review of Leeds's electoral wards increased the number of wards from 32 to 33, also increasing the number of councillors from 96 to 99. This prompted the entire council needing to be elected.[1]
The boundary changes added an extra ward to the existing 32 - increasing the councillor total by three to 99 - with just half the ward names surviving the changes:
Abolished:
Created:
The drop in Conservative support - which seen them set lows in vote share and seats won - allowed Labour to win record representation and comfortably regain control of the council from the Conservatives, with a 25-seat strong majority. Labour also managed highs in votes and vote share, once the previous year's totals are omitted for unrepresentatively high turnout (which were gained from coinciding with the general election that year).
The Liberals, who fielded their first full-slate of candidates, also achieved party records but were rewarded with fewer seats in the new landscape; their gains confined to Armley, Horsforth and Otley, looking unlikely to win the new seats replacing the formerly favourable seats for Hunslet and Pudsey.
Elsewhere, the Ecologists bettered their previous efforts with an increased outing, standing candidates in over a half of the wards, surpassing Liberal support in a number of them. Beyond the regular Communist slate, there was also another appearance from an Independent in Morley North, an Independent Liberal standing in Rothwell and the first appearance of a Residents Association by way of a candidate each in Headingley, Kirkstall and Weetwood.
This result has the following consequences for the total number of seats on the council after the elections:
valign=top colspan="2" style="width: 230px" | Party | valign=top style="width: 30px" | Previous council | valign=top style="width: 30px" | New council |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Labour | 44 | 62 | |||
Conservatives | 45 | 29 | |||
Liberals | 7 | 8 | |||
Total | 96 | 99 | |||
Working majority |