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2003 Guildford Borough Council election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2003 UK local government election

The2003 elections forGuildford Borough Council were the first, and as of 2011 the only, full election for Guildford Borough Council conducted by an all postal ballot.[1] The result saw theConservatives win a majority of seats on Guildford Borough Council for the first time since losing their majority in the 1991 election.

Boundary changes

[edit]

In September 1998, the Local Government Commission for England published their "Final Recommendations on the Future Electoral Arrangements for Guildford in Surrey".[2] The recommendations in this report formed the basis for the redrawing of ward boundaries in Guildford increasing the number of wards from 21 to 22; and increasing the number of councillors from 45 to 48. The 2003 council election was the first contested under these new ward boundaries.[3]

The new ward boundaries differed from the old ones as follows:

  • 13 of the 21 wards in Guildford saw their boundaries alter to some degree or other;
  • 8 wards were left unaltered namely - Clandon & Horsley, Effingham, Lovelace, Normandy, Pirbright, Send, Tillingbourne and Worplesdon;
  • Merrow & Burpham ward, which previously had elected 3 councillors, was split in two. In its place was created a new Merrow ward with 3 councillors and a new Burpham ward with 2 councillors.[4]
  • the three wards representing Ash and Tongham, prior to the 2003 boundary changes, had been named Ash, Ash Vale and Tongham. Between them they had been represented by 6 councillors. They were replaced by three substantially redrawn wards with the names Ash South & Tongham, Ash Vale and Ash Wharf, which between them had 7 councillors. The new Ash Vale ward covered a significantly smaller geographical area than the previous ward known as Ash Vale;
  • the boundary line between the Pilgrims ward and the Shalford ward was altered so that the Shalford ward would now include the areas of Artington and Compton which had previously been part of Pilgrims. This change saw the number of councillors representing Shalford increase from 1 to 2 and the number of councillors representing Pilgrims decline from 2 to 1;
  • the dividing line between the Stoughton ward and the Westborough ward was redrawn;
  • the various dividing lines between the following wards in Guildford town were redrawn: Christchurch, Friary & St Nicolas, Holy Trinity, Onslow, and Stoke; and
  • the number of councillors representing Holy Trinity increased from 2 to 3 and the number of councillors representing Stoke decreased from 3 to 2.

Voter turnout

[edit]

Average voter turnout increased throughout Guildford Borough Council from 36.2%, in 1999, to 53.4%, in 2003.[5]

Summary of election results

[edit]
2003 election Guildford Borough Council

Going into the 2003 election the net position was as follows. (The net position includes the defection of one of theLiberal Democrat councillors for Worplesdon first to theindependents, in 1999, and then, in 2002, to theConservatives).[6]

Prior to 2003 council election
PartySeats
Conservative18
Labour6
Liberal Democrats19
Independent2

After the election the position was as follows.

After 2003 council election[7]
PartySeats
Conservative26
Labour2
Liberal Democrats19
Independent1
  • TheConservatives made a net gain of eight seats, gaining nine and losing one;
  • TheLiberal Democrats retained the same number of seats; gaining four and losing four;
  • TheLabour Party lost four seats;
  • The number ofindependents on Guildford Borough Council reduced from two to one.

Conservative seat changes

[edit]

In the May 2003 elections, theConservatives gained 6 seats in Guildford town itself (4 in the Merrow and Burpham area, 1 in Holy Trinity Ward and 1 in Onslow ward); 2 seats in the Ash and Tongham area, towards the west of the borough of Guildford; and 1 seat in Tillingbourne, the rural district towards the south east of Guildford borough.

TheLiberal Democrats retook from theConservatives the 1 Worplesdon seat which theLiberal Democrats had lost as a result of a defection during the 1999-2003 session.

Liberal Democrat seat changes

[edit]

In May 2003, theLiberal Democrats gained 3 seats from theLabour Party in Westborough ward, towards the west of Guildford town. TheLiberal Democrats retook from theConservatives the Worplesdon seat which theLiberal Democrats had lost as a result of a defection during the 1999-2003 session.

TheLiberal Democrats lost 4 seats to theConservatives three in Guildford town itself (2 losses in the Merrow & Burpham areas and 1 in Onslow ward) and one in the rural Tillingbourne ward.

Labour seat changes

[edit]

TheLabour Party lost 3 seats to theLiberal Democrats in Westborough. Additionally theLabour Party lost 1 seat in Stoke ward, towards the north of Guildford town as a result of boundary changes and a reduction in the number of councillors representing that ward from 3 to 2.

By election changes

[edit]

Subsequent to the May 2003 elections, the Liberal Democrats gained a seat from the Conservatives in Merrow ward, in a by election in July 2003, increasing the number of Liberal Democrat seats on the council from 19 to 20 and reducing the number of Conservative seats from 26 to 25.

May 2003 Results

[edit]
Ash South & Tongham (top 3 candidates elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeJohn Grenville Ades169156.2
ConservativeStuart James Carter139546.4
ConservativeNicholas John Sutcliffe135645.1
Liberal DemocratsAlan Richard Hilliar103534.4
Liberal DemocratsSusan Gail Elizabeth Spencer98532.8
Liberal DemocratsCarolyn Elisabeth Ruth Hilliar96732.2
LabourRosa Katherine Pawsey2769.2
LabourDonald Bennett Hirsch2628.7
LabourAlan Duthie Roy2438.1
Majority32110.7
Turnout3007[8]49.7
Ash Vale (top 2 candidates elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeNigel Manning108556.3
ConservativeMarsha Jayne Moseley103753.8
Liberal DemocratsDenise Jacqueline Smith58130.2
Liberal DemocratsCraig Victor Pickets56229.2
LabourLynne Janice MacDonald1769.1
LabourAmanda Elizabeth Emily Reed1598.3
Majority45623.7
Turnout192645.5
Ash Wharf (top 2 candidates elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeJayne Hewlett104847.9
ConservativeSteven Thomas Evans102847.0
Liberal DemocratsChristine Valerie Frampton76234.8
Liberal DemocratsPeter Richard Frampton74334.0
LabourKevin Eric Jenkinson26912.3
LabourKazimierz Mieczyslaw Jasinski23910.9
Majority26612.2
Turnout218748.8
Burpham (top 2 candidates elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Liberal DemocratsEdward Patrick Mayne101545.5
ConservativeNicholas Dominic Leonard Brougham96643.3
Liberal DemocratsRupert John Kinnaird Sheard92741.6
ConservativeJulie Jean Perry91641.1
LabourAdrian Charles Newton24010.8
LabourMalcolm Piers Hill1968.8
Majority391.7
Turnout223055.5
Christchurch (top 2 candidates elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeAndrew John Edward Hodges131250.5
Liberal DemocratsVivienne Natalie Johnson115444.5
ConservativeDavid Hunter115144.3
Liberal DemocratsTom Sharp96837.3
GreenJohn Michael Pletts1806.9
LabourCelia Anne Lindsay1485.7
LabourTim David Wolfenden1184.5
Majority30.1
Turnout259667.6
Clandon & Horsley (top 3 candidates elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeJennifer Eleri Powell276172.4
ConservativeJenny Mary Wicks256367.3
ConservativeAndrew John French252166.2
Liberal DemocratsRonald James Harman72018.9
Liberal DemocratsPhilip John Palmer59715.7
Liberal DemocratsTeresa Thorne52413.7
LabourMeriel Anne Beynon38910.2
LabourJulie Roxburgh3779.9
LabourJohn Virgo Brown3649.6
Majority180147.3
Turnout381158.6
Effingham (only 1 candidate elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Liberal DemocratsElizabeth Irene Hogger70052.3
ConservativeJames Louie Nicholls57242.7
LabourFanny Lines322.4
Majority1289.6
Turnout133968.8
Friary & St. Nicolas (top 3 candidates elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Liberal DemocratsRichard George Marks169457.9
Liberal DemocratsRobert Evelyn Blundell168457.6
Liberal DemocratsDavid John Goodwin164256.2
ConservativeMichael John Gorman62821.5
ConservativeElizabeth Ann Hooper62121.2
ConservativePhilip Matthew Simon Hooper57119.5
LabourHelen Mary Ayscough32511.1
LabourJames Heaphy29210.0
LabourAlexander Dominic Robin Ayscough2618.9
TrinityMichel Wayne Harper2257.7
TrinityRaschid Michael Abdullah2057.0
Majority101434.7
Turnout292446.6
Holy Trinity (top 3 candidates elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Liberal DemocratsTamsy Katharine Baker150947.7
Liberal DemocratsGordon Alfred Bridger139044.0
ConservativeSarah Kathleen Creedy133742.3
Liberal DemocratsPeter Slade123739.1
ConservativeDavid Anthony Ellis Williams118737.5
ConservativeVivien Mary Sale117937.3
GreenBarbara Kathleen Edwards39212.4
LabourBarry Hall2146.8
LabourFrank Gunning1926.1
LabourAlexander Hamilton MacDonald1705.4
UKIPRobert Alexander McWhirter1063.4
Majority1003.2
Turnout316255.8
Lovelace (only 1 candidate elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeJohn Richard Garrett62959.2
LabourCarol Hayton20419.2
Liberal DemocratsCharles Arthur Julian Thorne17916.9
Majority42540.0
Turnout106257.5
Merrow (top 3 candidates elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeAnthony William Bays158046.5
ConservativeJennifer Jordan157246.2
ConservativeSheridan Nicholas Westlake156946.1
Liberal DemocratsAnne Lee143442.2
Liberal DemocratsMargaret Rachael Stanley141941.7
Liberal DemocratsMerilyn Gail Spier139941.1
LabourMichael Peter Hornsby-Smith3379.9
LabourGeoffrey Robert Balls3149.2
LabourGraham Redvers Gosling2898.5
Majority1354.0
Turnout340158.2
Normandy (only 1 candidate elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeDiana Lockyer-Nibbs92361.7
Liberal DemocratsRichard Henry Vincent Charman36524.4
LabourKathleen Brady17211.5
Majority55837.3
Turnout149762.1
Onslow (top 3 candidates elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Liberal DemocratsLynda Strudwick111542.2
Liberal DemocratsTony Phillips109441.4
ConservativeSheila Ann Kirkland98437.3
ConservativeAdrian Stuart Chandler96036.3
Liberal DemocratsSteven Christopher Freeman92034.8
ConservativeMichael Andrew Chambers89333.8
LabourJoseph Ian Bullock54120.5
LabourFlorence Flynn38214.5
LabourRaymond Thomas Rogers31011.7
GreenRichard William Stephens31011.7
Majority240.9
Turnout264141.6
Pilgrims (only 1 candidate elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeAnthony Rooth75067.7
Liberal DemocratsPhilip Scott Mellor23120.8
LabourKathleen Parfitt857.7
Majority51946.8
Turnout110858.4
Pirbright (only 1 candidate elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeMichael George William Nevins60663.9
Liberal DemocratsRebecca Charlotte Marie Healy20621.7
LabourPeter Paul Newmark9810.3
Majority40042.2
Turnout94850.9
Send (top 2 candidates elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeKeith Charles Taylor126267.6
ConservativeTerence Dickson Patrick104956.2
LabourSheila Bean38620.7
Liberal DemocratsMadeline Amelia Clements30916.5
Liberal DemocratsRupert Emerson28515.3
LabourSally Carrol Tiffin18610.0
Majority66335.5
Turnout186858.3
Shalford (top 2 candidates elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeVasilis Alexandros Kapsalis134855.4
ConservativeNeil Ward115247.4
Liberal DemocratsDavid Vyvyan Orchard86335.5
Liberal DemocratsDavid Thomson76831.6
LabourMichael Stanley Jeram26610.9
LabourSusan Pauline Gomm1807.4
Majority28911.9
Turnout243259.4
Stoke (top 2 candidates elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourBrian Keith Chesterton99443.8
LabourAngela Gunning98943.6
Liberal DemocratsThibault-Charles Jamme65128.7
Liberal DemocratsStephen John Wright58425.7
ConservativeMichael David Catton43619.2
ConservativeKenneth Henry Johns33614.8
BNPFrancis Samuel McAllister1878.2
Majority33814.9
Turnout226849.9
Stoughton (top 3 candidates elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Liberal DemocratsPauline Ann Searle136747.4
Liberal DemocratsJayne Diana Marks135246.9
Liberal DemocratsFiona Jean White108737.7
IndependentAnthony James Ferris67023.2
ConservativeDavid James Quelch65722.8
ConservativeAndrew Nicholas Whitby-Collins54819.0
ConservativeCharlotte Helen Louise Keys42814.8
LabourCarole Jean Barber33311.6
LabourIan Stuart Mather32811.4
LabourWilliam McCulloch Scott31911.1
TrinityNigel Herbert Foreman30710.6
TrinityMichael George Pooley1655.7
Majority41714.4
Turnout288347.3
Tillingbourne (top 2 candidates elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
IndependentKeith Childs155960.6
ConservativeDavid Alan Wright143555.8
Liberal DemocratsClive Montgomery Wicks81131.5
LabourCarolyn Fiddes2389.3
Majority62424.3
Turnout257262.3
Westborough (top 3 candidates elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Liberal DemocratsValerie Jean Hazelwood129241.3
Liberal DemocratsOlaf Eugen Kolassa123339.4
Liberal DemocratsMarilyn Merryweather119238.1
LabourMichael Joseph Hassell107534.3
LabourMartin Phillips105633.7
LabourDavid Vaughan Hide96930.9
ConservativeMary Johns57618.4
ConservativePamela Anne Parke56618.1
ConservativeJohn Marshall54417.4
Pacifist PartyJohn Hugh Morris1334.2
Majority1173.7
Turnout313246.9
Worplesdon (top 3 candidates elected)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Liberal DemocratsJill Margaret Chan158645.7
Liberal DemocratsTerence Nigel King156545.1
Liberal DemocratsVictor John Searle151943.8
ConservativeAlexander Nigel Sutcliffe149643.1
ConservativeSheila Gladys Knight141840.9
ConservativeChristine Margaret Stacy140240.4
LabourKerry Jane James3028.7
LabourNorma Patricia Hedger2968.5
LabourEdward John Boys Pawsey2587.4
Majority230.7
Turnout346954.4

[9]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Seehttp://www.getsurrey.co.uk/news/s/85232_postal_power_puts_voting_back_in_poll_position An all postal ballot was used in one subsequent Guildford ward by-election - the Friary and St Nicolas ward by-election for Guildford Borough Council held on 25 March 2004. For further details see para 5 athttp://www.guildford.gov.uk/NR/rdonlyres/40CE1851-7BB3-438B-A633-DAF9E954C275/4276/Item7AllPostalBallotReview2272004.pdf[permanent dead link]
  2. ^"Archived copy". Archived fromthe original on 31 May 2012. Retrieved19 May 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^The Borough of Guildford (Electoral Changes) Order 1999, SI 1999 No. 2475
  4. ^There had been a significant degree of new housing and consequent population increase in parts of Burpham and in the Merrow Park area since the previous ward boundaries had been drawn up in time for the 1976 Guildford local elections.
  5. ^See para 2.3 athttp://www.guildford.gov.uk/NR/rdonlyres/40CE1851-7BB3-438B-A633-DAF9E954C275/4276/Item7AllPostalBallotReview2272004.pdf[permanent dead link]
  6. ^For 1999 election results see Surrey Advertiser 14 May 1999. For councillor Nigel Sutcliffe resigning from the Liberal Democrats in July 1999 see:http://www.getsurrey.co.uk/news/s/82138_former_leader_quits_lib_dem_group_after_row . For Nigel Sutcliffe standing as a Conservative in 2003 see Guildford BC election results 2003:"Archived copy"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 1 October 2006. Retrieved18 November 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. ^Guildford BC election results 2003:"Archived copy"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 1 October 2006. Retrieved18 November 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. ^The turnout figures given herein are the published figures for the number of ballot papers. All percentages whether related to the percentage vote per candidate; the percentage majority; or the percentage turnover are calculated using this figure for the number of ballot papers.
  9. ^Guildford BC election results 2003
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