2007 United Kingdom local elections
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All 36 metropolitan boroughs, 45 out of 46 unitary authorities, 231 out of 238 English districts, all 32 Scottish council areas, and 3 directly elected mayors | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Colours denote the winning party, as shown in the main table of results. |
The 2007 United Kingdom local elections were held on Thursday 3 May 2007. These elections took place in most of England and all of Scotland. There were no local government elections in Wales though the Welsh Assembly had a general election on the same day. There were no local government elections in Northern Ireland. Just over half of English councils and almost all the Scottish councils began the counts on Friday, rather than Thursday night, because of more complex arrangements regarding postal votes.
These elections were a landmark in the United Kingdom as it was the first time that 18- to 20-year-olds could stand as candidates for council seats. The change was due to an alteration of the Electoral Administration Act. At least fourteen 18- to 20-year-olds are known to have stood as candidates for council seats[1] and as a result William Lloyd became the youngest person to be elected to official office in Britain. There were also a number of councils which used new voting methods such as internet and telephone voting in addition to the traditional methods of polling stations and postal votes.
These were the final elections to be overseen by Labour leader and prime minister Tony Blair, who resigned the following month after a decade as prime minister to be succeeded by chancellor Gordon Brown. His party only finished in second place with a narrow lead over the third-placed Liberal Democrats, whose leader Menzies Campbell would also resign later in the year, while it was a strong showing for the Conservatives under David Cameron.
Summary of results
[edit]There was a suggestion in February 2006 that many of the 2007 local elections in England would be cancelled due to a reform of local government.[2] However, since then possible reforms are still in the consultation stage and no decisions have yet been made.
312 English district councils, nearly all districts in England held some form of election – either thirds or full – on Thursday, 3 May 2007.
The final results are summarised below; firstly, with a table ranked by the party with the greatest number of councillors elected.
Party | Councils | Councillors | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Number | Change | Number | Change | ||
Conservative | 165 | 39 | 5,458 | 932 | |
Liberal Democrats | 23 | 4 | 2,337 | 255 | |
Labour | 36 | 18 | 2,225 | 665 | |
SNP | 0 | 1 | 363 | 182 | |
Residents | 1 | 67 | 19 | ||
Green | 0 | 62 | 17 | ||
BNP | 0 | 10 | 1 | ||
Liberal | 0 | 9 | 1 | ||
Scottish Green | 0 | 8 | 8 | ||
Mebyon Kernow | 0 | 7 | 1 | ||
UKIP | 0 | 5 | 1 | ||
Health Concern | 0 | 4 | 1 | ||
Respect | 0 | 3 | |||
Solidarity | 0 | 1 | 1 | ||
Scottish Socialist | 0 | 0 | 1 | ||
Socialist Alternative | 0 | 0 | 1 | ||
Other | 4 | 949 | 162 | ||
No overall control | 85 | 27 | n/a | n/a |
Source BBC BBC NEWS | Politics | Vote 2007 | English councils map
England
[edit]All 36 English Metropolitan borough councils had one third of their seats up for election.
Whole council
[edit]In 25 English unitary authorities the whole council was up for election.
Third of council
[edit]In 20 English unitary authorities one third of the council was up for election.
District councils
[edit]Whole council
[edit]In 153 English district authorities the whole council was up for election.[3]
Third of council
[edit]In 78 English district authorities one third of the council was up for election.
Mayoral elections
[edit]Council | Independent | Conservative | Labour | Liberal Democrat | Green | Elected | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bedford | 15,967 | 10,710 | 4,757 | 10,551 | 1,538 | Frank Branston | Independent hold |
Mansfield | 13,756 | 2,770 | 8,774 | 1,944 | 1,489 | Tony Egginton | Independent hold |
Middlesbrough | 17,455 | 1,733 | 3,539 | 7,026 | no candidate | Ray Mallon | Independent hold |
Scotland
[edit]All 32 Scottish councils had all their seats up for election - all Scottish councils are unitary authorities. These local elections were held on the same day as the Scottish Parliament general election. They were the first election for local government in mainland Great Britain to use the Single transferable vote (the system is used in Northern Ireland), as implemented by the Local Governance (Scotland) Act 2004.[4]
Summary of results
[edit]Party | Councils - majority | Councils - in coalition/minority | Councillors | |
SNP | 0 | 11 | 363 | |
Labour | 2 | 11 | 348 | |
Liberal Democrats | 0 | 12 | 166 | |
Conservative | 0 | 8 | 143 | |
Scottish Green | 0 | 0 | 8 | |
Scottish Socialist Party | 0 | 0 | 1 | |
Solidarity | 0 | 0 | 1 | |
Other | 3 | 9 | 193 | |
No overall control | 27 | - | - |
Councils
[edit]The notional results in the following table are based on a document that John Curtice and Stephen Herbert (Professors at the University of Strathclyde) produced on 3 June 2005, calculating the effect of the introduction of the Single Transferable Vote on the 2003 Scottish Local Elections.[5]
Pre-election predictions
[edit]A Newsnight poll by the analysts Rallings and Thrasher some days before the election predicted the following results for the English council elections:
Con 38% (Conservatives gaining 330 seats and losing 2% of the vote on 2006)
Lab 24% (Labour losing 500 seats and losing 2% of the vote on 2006)
LD 29% (Liberal Democrats gaining 110 seats and gaining 2% of the vote on 2006)
However, these predictions, as in 2006, were largely inaccurate, underestimating Conservative support and grossly overestimating the Lib Dems' performance. However, it did accurately predict the number of seats Labour would lose.
Notes and references
[edit]- ^ "Teenagers to run as councillors". BBC News. 4 April 2007.
- ^ "Council polls could be scrapped". BBC News. 8 February 2006.
- ^ a b Young, Ross (19 July 2007). "Local and Mayoral elections 2007" (PDF). House of Commons Library. SOCIAL AND GENERAL STATISTICS SECTION (RESEARCH PAPER 07/47). Retrieved 17 December 2023.
- ^ "Electoral Panorama / Panorama Electoral". electionresources.org.
- ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 September 2008. Retrieved 6 February 2016.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ Labour minority control. The council was previously run by a coalition of Scottish Liberal Democrats, Independents and the SNP.
- ^ Liberal Democrats lack a majority (LD: 12 councillors; opposition: 12 councillors)
- ^ Labour lack a majority, after by election loss to Scottish National Party (Lab: 29 councillors; opposition: 29 councillors)
- ^ Labour minority administration
- ^ Conservative and Unionist control, on a cut of the cards (Con: 15 councillors; opposition: 15 councillors)
- ^ Labour lack a majority, after by election loss to Scottish National Party (Lab: 11 councillors; opposition: 11 councillors)
External links
[edit]- Results table (BBC News)
- Overview of councils up for election Archived 12 January 2006 at the Wayback Machine
- CityMayors article
- Young candidates article
- Barnsley
- Birmingham
- Bolton
- Bradford
- Bury
- Calderdale
- Coventry
- Doncaster
- Dudley
- Gateshead
- Kirklees
- Knowsley
- Leeds
- Liverpool
- Manchester
- Newcastle upon Tyne
- North Tyneside
- Oldham
- Rochdale
- Rotherham
- Salford
- Sandwell
- Sefton
- Sheffield
- Solihull
- South Tyneside
- St Helens
- Stockport
- Sunderland
- Tameside
- Trafford
- Wakefield
- Walsall
- Wigan
- Wirral
- Wolverhampton
- Bath and North East Somerset
- Blackburn with Darwen
- Blackpool
- Bournemouth
- Bracknell Forest
- Brighton & Hove
- Bristol
- Darlington
- Derby
- East Riding of Yorkshire
- Halton
- Hartlepool
- Herefordshire
- Kingston upon Hull
- Leicester
- Luton
- Medway
- Middlesbrough
- Milton Keynes
- North East Lincolnshire
- North Lincolnshire
- North Somerset
- Nottingham
- Peterborough
- Plymouth
- Poole
- Portsmouth
- Reading
- Redcar and Cleveland
- Rutland
- Slough
- South Gloucestershire
- Southampton
- Southend-on-Sea
- Stockton-on-Tees
- Stoke-on-Trent
- Swindon
- Telford and Wrekin
- Thurrock
- Torbay
- Warrington
- West Berkshire
- Windsor and Maidenhead
- Wokingham
- York
- Allerdale
- Alnwick
- Amber Valley
- Arun
- Ashfield
- Ashford
- Aylesbury Vale
- Babergh
- Barrow-in-Furness
- Basildon
- Basingstoke and Deane
- Bassetlaw
- Bedford
- Berwick-upon-Tweed
- Blaby
- Blyth Valley
- Bolsover
- Boston
- Braintree
- Breckland
- Brentwood
- Bridgnorth
- Broadland
- Bromsgrove
- Broxbourne
- Broxtowe
- Burnley
- Cambridge
- Cannock Chase
- Canterbury
- Caradon
- Carlisle
- Carrick
- Castle Point
- Castle Morpeth
- Charnwood
- Chelmsford
- Cherwell
- Chester
- Chester-le-Street
- Chesterfield
- Chichester
- Chiltern
- Christchurch
- Chorley
- Colchester
- Congleton
- Copeland
- Corby
- Cotswold
- Craven
- Crawley
- Crewe and Nantwich
- Dacorum
- Dartford
- Daventry
- Derbyshire Dales
- Derwentside
- Dover
- Easington
- Eastbourne
- East Cambridgeshire
- East Devon
- East Dorset
- East Hampshire
- East Hertfordshire
- Eastleigh
- East Lindsey
- East Northamptonshire
- East Staffordshire
- Eden
- Ellesmere Port and Neston
- Elmbridge
- Epping Forest
- Epsom and Ewell
- Erewash
- Exeter
- Fenland
- Forest Heath
- Forest of Dean
- Fylde
- Gedling
- Gloucester
- Gravesham
- Great Yarmouth
- Guildford
- Hambleton
- Harborough
- Harlow
- Harrogate
- Hart
- Havant
- Hertsmere
- High Peak
- Hinckley and Bosworth
- Horsham
- Huntingdonshire
- Hyndburn
- Ipswich
- Kennet
- Kerrier
- Kettering
- King's Lynn and West Norfolk
- Lancaster
- Lewes
- Lichfield
- Lincoln
- Macclesfield
- Maidstone
- Maldon
- Malvern Hills
- Mansfield
- Melton
- Mendip
- Mid Bedfordshire
- Mid Devon
- Mid Suffolk
- Mid Sussex
- Mole Valley
- New Forest
- Newark and Sherwood
- Newcastle-under-Lyme
- North Cornwall
- North Devon
- North Dorset
- North East Derbyshire
- North Hertfordshire
- North Kesteven
- North Norfolk
- North Shropshire
- North Warwickshire
- North West Leicestershire
- North Wiltshire
- Northampton
- Norwich
- Nuneaton and Bedworth
- Oadby and Wigston
- Oswestry
- Pendle
- Penwith
- Preston
- Purbeck
- Redditch
- Reigate and Banstead
- Restormel
- Ribble Valley
- Richmondshire
- Rochford
- Rossendale
- Rother
- Rugby
- Runnymede
- Rushcliffe
- Rushmoor
- Ryedale
- Salisbury
- Scarborough
- Sedgefield
- Sedgemoor
- Selby
- Sevenoaks
- Shepway
- Shrewsbury and Atcham
- South Bedfordshire
- South Bucks
- South Cambridgeshire
- South Derbyshire
- South Hams
- South Holland
- South Kesteven
- South Lakeland
- South Norfolk
- South Northamptonshire
- South Oxfordshire
- South Ribble
- South Shropshire
- South Somerset
- South Staffordshire
- Spelthorne
- St Albans
- St Edmundsbury
- Stafford
- Staffordshire Moorlands
- Stevenage
- Stratford-on-Avon
- Stroud
- Suffolk Coastal
- Surrey Heath
- Swale
- Tamworth
- Tandridge
- Taunton Deane
- Teesdale
- Teignbridge
- Tendring
- Test Valley
- Tewkesbury
- Thanet
- Three Rivers
- Tonbridge and Malling
- Torridge
- Tunbridge Wells
- Tynedale
- Uttlesford
- Vale of White Horse
- Vale Royal
- Wansbeck
- Warwick
- Watford
- Waveney
- Waverley
- Wealden
- Wear Valley
- Wellingborough
- Welwyn Hatfield
- West Devon
- West Dorset
- West Lancashire
- West Lindsey
- West Oxfordshire
- West Somerset
- West Wiltshire
- Weymouth and Portland
- Winchester
- Woking
- Worcester
- Worthing
- Wychavon
- Wycombe
- Wyre
- Wyre Forest
- Aberdeen
- Aberdeenshire
- Angus
- Argyll and Bute
- Clackmannanshire
- Dumfries and Galloway
- Dundee City
- East Ayrshire
- East Dunbartonshire
- East Lothian
- East Renfrewshire
- Edinburgh
- Falkirk
- Fife
- Glasgow
- Highland
- Inverclyde
- Midlothian
- Moray
- Comhairle nan Eilean Siar
- North Ayrshire
- North Lanarkshire
- Orkney
- Perth and Kinross
- Renfrewshire
- Scottish Borders
- Shetland
- South Ayrshire
- South Lanarkshire
- Stirling
- West Dunbartonshire
- West Lothian