All 75 seats were contested.Labour won a small majority with a total of 38 seats on a 3.2%swing from theConservatives,[2] meaning that the council moved from Conservative control to Labour control.
Cheshire West and Chester was the only council to change hands in this way in the 2015 elections,[3] and this unique result has been variously attributed to public dissatisfaction withfracking in the area,[4][5][6]local planning issues,[4] the organisation and leadership of the local parties,[2][7][8][9] and to a generally difficult climate for Conservatives in the area.[8] In addition, the onlyLiberal Democrat (Lib Dem) seat on the council was lost, while an independent was elected to theParkgateward. No other minor party won a seat, but both theGreen Party andUnited Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP) fielded large numbers of candidates and saw significant positive swings. Labour'sSamantha Dixon became the first woman to lead the council, while the previous leader Mike Jones survived a Conservative leadership challenge and became Leader of the Opposition.
HQ, the headquarters of Cheshire West and Chester Council
Cheshire West and Chester (CWaC) had been governed since its formation in 2009 by the Conservative Party.[10] However, the Conservatives lost seats in CWaC against the national trend at the2011 local election,[11] and the Chester area was identified byThe Economist before the election as a challenging area for the party.[12] The election also took place at an especially bad period nationally for the Liberal Democrats, who lost 310 councillors in England at theprevious local elections,[13][14] and at a period of growth for other minor parties – especially UKIP, who won the CWaC council area in the2014 European Parliament elections and were identified by the BBC as potentialspoiler candidates.[10] Although there were severalby-elections in the 2011–2015 term,[15][16] the number of councillors representing each party did not change over the course of the council.
In total, there were 75 Conservative candidates, 75 Labour candidates, 45 Green candidates, 43 Liberal Democrat candidates, 33 UKIP candidates, 4TUSC candidates, 1Socialist Labour candidate and 9 candidates running as independents.[17] Of the incumbents, 14 did not seek re-election, including several parliamentary candidates:[5] Bob Thompson, formerly the only Lib Dem on the council, stood for Parliament inCity of Chester;[18] the former Labour councillor Julia Tickridge stood inWeaver Vale;[19] andJustin Madders, previous leader of the Labour group, stood in and was elected toEllesmere Port and Neston.[20]
Turnout by ward, from lowest (darkest) to highest (lightest)
The Statement of Persons Nominated was published on Friday 10 April 2015.[21] The election took place on 7 May 2015, on the same day as the general election, variousparish council elections, town council elections inFrodsham,Neston,Northwich andWinsford, and areferendum ontown planning inMalpas.[22] As is standard for council elections in England,first-past-the-post voting was used in single seat wards, andblock voting was used in multi-seat wards. All 75 seats on the CWaC council were up for election. Of around 34,000 postal ballots issued, about 1,300 papers forFrodsham and the Garden Quarter district of Chester were voided and re-issued due to a printing error that removed the party emblems of some candidates,[23] and 284 were not delivered in time for the election.[24] Anattack leaflet targeted at Labour leaderSamantha Dixon was distributed to Chester city centre residents on the day of the election which lacked printing details and may have contained "incorrect information", in violation of theRepresentation of the People Act 1983.[25]Cheshire Police confirmed that they were investigating the leaflet.[25]
The count for the parliamentary election toCity of Chester took priority, and so the count for CWaC began on at 2 PM, 8 May.[22][26] The count took place atNorthgate Arena, and ended up running through the whole of the allotted 9-hour day without a decisive result.[5] The count was suspended on a "cliffhanger", with Labour and the Conservatives tied at 36 seats each after arecount was called on the two decisive two-seat ward of Newton.[5] The count resumed on 9 May, and after a quick "bundle recount" suggested a Labour lead, the Conservative Party asked for a full recount, lasting another three and a half hours.[27] The second recount revealed that Labour's Gill Watson led by 34 votes over the incumbent Adrian Walmsley in the final seat.[5][27] The final result was delivered at 5.30 PM on 9 May 2015 after 14 hours of counting.[28]
The final results saw the Conservatives retain the largest share of the popular vote, but with a smaller proportion than at the previous election. Labour gained 6 seats (5 from Conservative, 1 from Lib Dem), the Conservatives lost 6 seats (5 to Labour, 1 to independent) and the Lib Dems lost their only seat in Hoole to Labour.[6] Labour therefore won an absolute majority, with 38 seats to the Conservatives 36 on the 75 seat council.[3] This made CWaC the only council in the entire country to transfer from Conservative to Labour control at the 2015 elections,[a] a result that was described byConservativeHome as a "catastrophic loss"[9] and by theChester Chronicle as "deeply embarrassing" for the local Conservative Party.[3][6][36]
No minor parties won any seats, but UKIP and the Greens saw large positive swings both across the borough and in individual wards, including a 9% swing to UKIP in Blacon[37] and a 17.5% swing to the Greens in Garden Quarter, where they finished second.[26]
Seat composition between 2011 (top) and 2015 (bottom):
42
32
1
38
36
1
^As the only Liberal Democrat councillor, Thompson was theirde facto group leader but did not stand for re-election, no candidates from the party were subsequently elected.
^As the only Liberal Democrat councillor, Thompson was theirde facto group leader but did not stand for re-election, no candidates from the party were subsequently elected.
^As the only independent elected to the council, Martin Barker became the de facto independent group leader.
In all, there were 22 new councillors to CWaC council – 12 from Labour, 9 from the Conservatives and one independent.[27] Local Labour leaderSamantha Dixon became the council leader, making her the first woman to hold the role,[7] while former council leader Mike Jones remained leader of the Conservative group despite a leadership challenge.[36]
Following the election, the first council meeting under Labour control took place on 21 May 2015.[39] The new administration significantly restructured the council: the existing scrutiny committees were merged while new local committees were established for Chester, Ellesmere Port, Northwich and Winsford, and rural Cheshire, and the roles ofLord Mayor of Chester and Chair of the council were separated.[39] This meant that thecasting vote remained with former Lord Mayor, Bob Rudd (Labour), instead of the new Lord Mayor, Hugo Deynem (Conservative), which Conservatives criticized for politicizing the role.[39] The new overview and scrutiny committee was arranged on a nonpartisan basis, with equal numbers of Labour and Conservative members and the casting vote given to the independent Martin Barker.[39]
As leader of the only Labour group to take control of a former Conservative council at the elections,Samantha Dixon described her local party as "a little ray of hope in theNorth West" but warned that it would be difficult to operate Labour policies under anational Conservative majority government, and proposed a more consensualcross-party approach to running the council.[6][7] The outgoing Conservative leader, Mike Jones, suggested that a Labour majority of just one would decrease private sector confidence in the council.[7][36]
Fracking was noted by both theChester Chronicle andBBC News as a politically hot topic in Cheshire, particularly aroundUpton where one gas company had planning permission for a drilling site,[40][41] and the Conservative loss was partly attributed to community fears about the practice.[4][6] Matt Bryan, ananti-fracking Labour candidate in Upton unseated the sitting Conservative councillor in what theChester Chronicle described as arguably "the biggest poll shock".[5] The Labour MP for City of Chester,Chris Matheson, who had similarly defeated the incumbentStephen Mosley against the national trend, described unhappiness with fracking planning permission procedures and planning more generally as key issues that had helped Labour locally.[4]
The loss of the safe Conservative seat of Parkgate to the independent Martin Barker was also described as a "surprise" byAboutMyArea.[42] Barker stood on a platform oflocalism for Parkgate and his victory was attributed by the site to dissatisfaction with the choice of Conservative candidate, who lived outside Parkgate inMickle Trafford.[42][43]
On taking office, Dixon credited the result to a "positive campaign" by the Labour Party rather than any mistakes by the Conservative Party.[7] However,Private Eye's "Rotten Boroughs" column blamed "own goals" by Jones – such as removing the planning committee chairperson[44] and withdrawing the party whip from councillors who voted against developments that Jones supported,[45] insulting members of the public,[46] and removing a respect clause from the council constitution[47] – for having "handed victory to Labour".[2][8] There was similar criticism fromConservativeHome, whose correspondent accused Jones of behaving "in a way which allowed our opponents to paint us as dodgy, or even corrupt",[9] and from councillor Mark Stocks, who launched an unsuccessful leadership challenge against Jones, saying:
"As the only council in the entire country to make the transition from Conservative to Labour, someone has to take the responsibility for what must be considered a monumental defeat. This responsibility has to start at the top. For me, it is an unavoidable belief that with proper leadership, Cheshire West and Chester would have followed the national trend and remained under Conservative control."[8]
Jones, supported by other Conservative councillors, rejected this suggestion, noting the fact that the local Conservative Party had taken the largest share of the popular vote at the council election and retained the parliamentary seat ofWeaver Vale againstopinion poll predictions. When looked at this way, Jones said, the result "does not seem like a catastrophe".[8]
Labour councillor Lynn Clare (Ellesmere Port Town) died in February 2018.[50] The by-election was held on 3 May.[51] This was on the same day as otherlocal elections.
^Although CWaC elects all members at once every four years, many councils elect members in thirds and have more frequent elections. This means that although CWaC was the only council to transfer directly from Labour to Conservative control at the 2015 elections, it was not the only one to change hands this way between 2011 and 2015. Labour also gained two councils –Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council andWest Lancashire Borough Council – fromno overall control at the 2015 elections.[29] West Lancashire was also held by the Conservatives at the 2011 election, but elects its representatives in thirds.[30] This means there were other elections intervening, and West Lancashire went into no overall control at the2014 local election.[31] In addition,Crawley,Derbyshire,[32]Dudley,Harlow,Nottinghamshire,[33]Redditch andSouthampton were gained by Labour from Conservative control at some point between the 2011 and 2014 local elections and held at the 2015 elections.[29][14][34][35]