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2015 Cheshire West and Chester Council election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2015 UK local government election
Main article:2015 United Kingdom local elections

Cheshire West and Chester Council election, 2015

← 20117 May 20152019 →

All 75 seats onCheshire West and Chester Council
38 seats needed for a majority
Turnout68.2% (Increase 24.7%)
 First partySecond party
 
No image wide.svg
No image wide.svg
LeaderSamantha DixonMike Jones
PartyLabourConservative
Leader's seatChester CityTattenhall
Last election32 seats,
37.38%
42 seats,
45.34%
Seats before3242
Seats won3836
Seat changeIncrease 6Decrease 6
Popular vote115,473120,477
Percentage38.09%39.74%
SwingIncrease 0.71%Decrease 5.6%

 Third partyFourth party
 
No image wide.svg
No image wide.svg
LeaderBob Thompson[i]
PartyIndependentLiberal Democrats
Leader's seatDid not stand
Last election0 seats,
3.07%
1 seat,
11.9%
Seats before01
Seats won10
Seat changeIncrease 1Decrease 1
Popular vote6,10423,887
Percentage2.01%7.88%
SwingDecrease 1.06%Decrease 4.02%

Results map for CWaC, showing Labour with most urban seats and Conservatives with most rural seats, with some seats on the edges of towns in mixed control, and an independent in Parkgate.
Colours denote winning party. Striped wards have mixed representation.

Leader of the Council before election

Mike Jones
Conservative

Leader of the Council after election

Samantha Dixon
Labour

The2015 Cheshire West and Chester Council election took place on 7 May 2015, electing members ofCheshire West and Chester Council in England.[1] This was on the same day as otherlocal elections across the country as well as thegeneral election.

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.

Background

[edit]
A photograph of a circular glass building with six storeys
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]

Election proceedings

[edit]
A map showing turnout across the council area
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]

Seats
  1. Labour (50.7%)
  2. Conservative (48.0%)
  3. Independent (1.30%)
Vote share
  1. Conservative (36.7%)
  2. Labour (34.8%)
  3. Lib Dem (9.77%)
  4. UKIP (9.22%)
  5. Green (6.34%)
  6. Independent & other (3.26%)

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]

Summary of the 2015Cheshire West and Chester Council election results[38]
Political partyGroup leaderCandidatesTotal
votes
Total
seats
Seats
gained
Seats
lost
Seats,
net change
Seats,
of total (%)
Votes,
of total (%)
Total votes,
change (%)
ConservativeMike Jones7568,5803606Decrease 648.036.7Decrease 7.5
LabourSamantha Dixon7564,9963860Increase 650.734.7Decrease 0.6
Liberal DemocratsBob Thompson[ii]4318,273001Decrease 10.09.8Decrease 3.5
UKIP3317,240000Steady0.09.2Increase 7.3
Green4511,867000Steady0.06.3Increase 5.4
Independent[iii]95,627110Increase 11.33.0Decrease 1.0
Socialist Labour1286000Steady0.00.2Steady
TUSC4184000Steady0.00.1New
Total285187,05375---Turnout68.2-

Seat composition between 2011 (top) and 2015 (bottom):

42321
38361
  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.
  2. ^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.
  3. ^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]

Reactions and analysis

[edit]
Butler swing from 2011
Map showing swing to Labour across the majority of wards, swing to Conservatives in some areas of Ellesmere Port and Northwich, and some rural wards.
Labour/Conservative swing by ward
Map showing swing to Labour across the majority of wards, swing to Lib Dems across southern seats, swing to independents in Malpas and Parkgate, swing to Greens in Garden Quarter, swing to UKIP in Ellesmere Port Town.
Largest party/second party swing by ward

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]

Results

[edit]

Councillor changes

[edit]

New councillors

[edit]
  • Val Armstrong (Labour, Witton)
  • Martin Barker (Independent, Parkgate)
  • Michael Baynham (Conservative, Winsford Over and Verdin)
  • Richard Beacham (Labour, Newton)
  • Robert Bisset (Labour, St Paul's)
  • Matt Bryan (Labour, Upton)
  • Angie Chidley (Labour, Hoole)
  • Jess Crook (Labour, Ellesmere Port Town)
  • Carol Gahan (Labour, Blacon)
  • Lynn Gibbon (Conservative, Marbury)
  • Nige Jones (Conservative, Little Neston and Burton)
  • Susan Kaur (Conservative, Hartford and Greenbank)
  • Jane Mercer (Labour, Lache)
  • Patricia Parkes (Conservative, Hartford and Greenbank)
  • James Pearson (Conservative, Davenham and Moulton)
  • Peter Rooney (Labour, Ledsham and Manor)
  • Karen Shore (Labour, Whitby)
  • Stephen Smith (Labour, Elton)
  • Harry Tonge (Conservative, Weaver and Cuddington)
  • Gill Watson (Labour, Newton)
  • Chris Whitehurst (Conservative, Malpas)
  • Paul Williams (Conservative, Weaver and Cuddington)

Outgoing councillors

[edit]
  • Keith Butcher (Labour)[b]
  • Malcolm Byram (Conservative)[b]
  • Robert Crompton (Conservative)
  • Brenda Dowding (Conservative)[b]
  • Les Ford (Conservative)[b]
  • Carolyn Graham (Labour)[b]
  • John Grimshaw (Conservative)[b]
  • Graham Heatley (Conservative)
  • Mark Henesy (Labour)[b]
  • Lynda Jones (Conservative)
  • Kay Loch (Conservative)
  • Justin Madders (Labour)[b]
  • Herbert Manley (Conservative)[b]
  • Hilarie McNae (Conservative)
  • Keith Musgrave (Conservative)[b]
  • Tom Parry (Conservative)[b]
  • Ben Powell (Labour)[b]
  • Alexandra Tate (Labour)[b]
  • Bob Thompson (Liberal Democrat)[b]
  • Julia Tickridge (Labour)[b]
  • Adrian Walmsley (Conservative)
  • Elton Watson (Conservative)[b]
  • Ann Wright (Conservative)[b]

Re-elected councillors

[edit]
  • Gareth Anderson (Conservative, Ledsham and Monor)
  • David Armstrong (Labour, Winsford Swanlow and Deane)
  • Don Beckett (Labour, Winsford Over and Verdin)
  • Alex Black (Labour, Hoole)
  • Tom Blackmore (Labour, Winsford Over and Verdin)
  • Keith Board (Conservative, Great Boughton)
  • Pamela Booher (Labour, Winsford Wharton)
  • Stephen Burns (Labour, Winsford Swanlow and Deane)
  • Lynn Clare (Labour, Ellesmere Port Town)
  • Brian Clarke (Labour, Winsford Wharton)
  • Angela Claydon (Labour, St Paul's)
  • Brian Crowe (Conservative, Saughall and Mollington)
  • Razia Daniels (Conservative, Handbridge Park)
  • Andrew Dawson (Conservative, Frodsham)
  • Martyn Delaney (Labour, Boughton)
  • Hugo Deynem (Conservative, Tarvin and Kelsall)
  • Samantha Dixon (Labour, Chester City)
  • Paul Dolan (Labour, Winnington and Castle)
  • Paul Donovan (Labour, Sutton)
  • Charles Fifield (Conservative, Weaver and Cuddington)
  • Howard Greenwood (Conservative, Farndon)
  • Louise Gittins (Labour, Little Neston and Burton)
  • Pamela Hall (Conservative, Great Boughton)
  • Don Hammond (Conservative, Marbury)
  • Myles Hogg (Conservative, Willaston and Thornton)
  • Jill Houlbrook (Conservative, Upton)
  • Eleanor Johnson (Conservative, Gowy)
  • Brian Jones (Labour, Whitby)
  • Mike Jones (Conservative, Tattenhall)
  • Reggie Jones (Labour, Blacon)
  • Tony Lawrenson (Labour, Witton)
  • John Leather (Conservative, Tarvin and Kelsall)
  • Alan McKie (Conservative, Helsby)
  • Nicole Meardon (Labour, Sutton)
  • Pat Merrick (Labour, Rossmore)
  • Eveleigh Moore Dutton (Conservative, Tarporley)
  • Sam Naylor (Labour, Winnington and Castle)
  • Marie Nelson (Labour, Blacon)
  • Ralph Oultram (Conservative, Kingsley)
  • Margaret Parker (Conservative, Chester Villages)
  • Stuart Parker (Conservative, Chester Villages)
  • Lynn Riley (Conservative, Frodsham)
  • Diane Roberts (Labour, Netherpool)
  • Bob Rudd (Labour, Garden Quarter)
  • Tony Sherlock (Labour, Grange)
  • Gaynor Sinar (Conservative, Davenham and Moulton)
  • Mark Stocks (Conservative, Shakerley)
  • Neil Sullivan (Conservative, Handbridge Park)
  • Helen Weltman (Conservative, Davenham and Moulton)
  • Andrew Williams (Labour, Neston)
  • Mark Williams (Conservative, Dodleston and Huntington)
  • Norman Wright (Conservative, Marbury)

Seat changes

[edit]
Conservative toIndependent (1)
  • Parkgate
Conservative toLabour (5)
  • Elton
  • Newton (2 seats)
  • Upton (1 seat)
  • Whitby (1 seat)
Liberal Democrat toLabour (1)
  • Hoole (1 seat)

Results by ward

[edit]
  • Vote share by ward
  • Map of Conservative vote share, concentrated in rural seats and some suburbs.
    Conservative vote share by ward
  • Map of Labour vote share, concentrated in urban seats and some suburbs.
    Labour vote share by ward
  • Map of Lib Dem candidates and vote share, concentrated in rural areas of southern Cheshire.
    Lib Dem vote share by ward
  • Map of Green candidates and vote share, concentrated in wards of Chester.
    Green vote share by ward
  • Map of UKIP candidates and vote share, scattered across urban and rural seats.
    UKIP vote share by ward
  • Map of TUSC, Socialist Labour and independent candidates and vote share, scattered across urban and rural seats.
    Independent and other vote share by ward
Turnout by ward
WardTurnout (%)
Blacon61.2
Boughton63.0
Chester City63.5
Chester Villages78.0
Davenham and Moulton70.4
Dodleston and Huntington77.3
Ellesmere Port Town55.7
Elton66.2
Farndon74.5
Frodsham71.4
Garden Quarter58.6
Gowy74.3
Grange57.0
Great Boughton76.1
Handbridge Park76.0
Hartford and Greenbank75.1
Helsby73.5
Hoole71.9
Kingsley76.7
Lache65.3
Ledsham and Manor73.4
Little Neston and Burton76.1
Malpas70.0
Marbury68.9
Neston63.7
Netherpool61.9
Newton69.2
Parkgate77.1
Rossmore59.3
Saughall and Mollington75.3
Shakerley65.4
St Paul's65.7
Strawberry73.6
Sutton67.2
Tarporley75.0
Tarvin and Kelsall73.7
Tattenhall74.3
Upton71.5
Weaver and Cuddington71.3

Blacon

[edit]
Blacon (3 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourReginald Francis Jones3,57921.07
LabourMarie Nelson3,34919.72
LabourCarol Margaret Gahan3,11918.36
ConservativeChristian Philip Dunn1,1096.53
UKIPSteve Ingram1,0546.21
UKIPChris Erskine1,0376.11
ConservativeAlexander Edward Roberts9795.76
ConservativeJack Alex Jackson9415.54
UKIPLiz Hutchison8054.74
GreenChristine Watson4822.84
GreenZoe Marie Gorzelak3031.78
GreenColin Drysdale Watson2271.34
Turnout6,29561.2[48]
Labourhold
Labourhold
Labourhold

Boughton

[edit]
Boughton (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourMartyn Delaney1,30846.53
ConservativeKate Elizabeth Vaughan93333.19
GreenAllison Clare Parkes30810.96
UKIPStephen Carter Nichols2629.32
Turnout2,82763.0
Labourhold

Chester City

[edit]
Chester City (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourSamantha Kate Dixon90947.52
ConservativeCarlotta Eva Dunn60731.73
GreenAndy Davidson1789.30
UKIPKatie Erskine1256.53
Liberal DemocratsNoel McGlinchey944.91
Turnout1,92863.5
Labourhold

Chester Villages

[edit]
Chester Villages (Christleton,Guilden Sutton,Mickle Trafford andWaverton), (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeMargaret Phyllis Parker2,74428.04
ConservativeStuart Parker2,73427.94
LabourSteve Davies1,24112.68
LabourSandra Rudd1,01910.41
Liberal DemocratsIan Hopkinson5876.00
UKIPPaul Rees5855.98
GreenPaula Irene D'Arcy5365.48
GreenDarren James Burling3413.48
Turnout5,43078.0
Conservativehold
Conservativehold

Davenham and Moulton

[edit]
Davenham and Moulton (3 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeHelen Catherine Weltman3,28317.52
ConservativeJames Pearson3,26217.41
ConservativeGaynor Jean Sinar2,97115.86
LabourRebecca Cooper2,41712.90
LabourAndrew Graham Cooper2,31612.36
LabourKyle McGregor1,7969.59
UKIPSimon Gerald McDonald1,0405.55
UKIPGlyn Roberts8544.56
Liberal DemocratsPamela Joyce Gaskill7984.26
Turnout7,42170.4
Conservativehold
Conservativehold
Conservativehold

Dodleston and Huntington

[edit]
Dodleston and Huntington (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeMark Graham Williams1,43952.65
LabourJacky Creswick71726.23
Liberal DemocratsChristopher John Ward32111.75
UKIPDavid S Evans2569.37
Turnout2,74877.3
Conservativehold

Ellesmere Port Town

[edit]
Ellesmere Port Town (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourLynn Clare2,38636.03
LabourJess Crook2,13432.23
UKIPJeanette Starkey80212.11
ConservativeGordon Douglas Meldrum4036.09
ConservativeGraham Pritchard3955.96
GreenStefanie Anne Boyle3074.64
GreenJames Douglas Benzie1952.94
Turnout3,75955.7
Labourhold
Labourhold

Elton

[edit]
Elton (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourStephen Robert Smith1,22453.13
ConservativeGraham Heatley1,08046.88
Turnout2,33566.2
Labourgain fromConservative

Farndon

[edit]
Farndon (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeHoward Greenwood1,13845.59
Liberal DemocratsPaul David Roberts99039.66
LabourPaul Alfred Cornwell2449.78
GreenAlexander James Clement1244.97
Turnout2,50474.5
Conservativehold

Frodsham

[edit]
Frodsham (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeAndrew William Dawson2,45626.08
ConservativeLynn Riley2,17823.13
LabourMichael Garvey1,43515.24
LabourDeborah Fletcher1,30513.86
Michael John Pusey4935.24
IndependentTom Reynolds4775.07
GreenJonny Pendlebury4214.47
GreenSue Beesley4094.34
Liberal DemocratsVera Sandra Roberts2422.57
Turnout5,32171.4
Conservativehold
Conservativehold

Garden Quarter

[edit]
Garden Quarter (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourBob Rudd95340.9
GreenCatherine Green80234.5
ConservativeEd Longe49121.1
Liberal DemocratsChris Senior823.5
Majority1516.4
Turnout2,32858.6
Labourhold

Gowy

[edit]
Gowy (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeEleanor Johnson1,36760.97
LabourNick Dixon36716.37
UKIPMandie Davies2119.41
GreenSteven Mitchell1516.74
Liberal DemocratsTrevor Glyn Jones1466.51
Turnout2,44674.3
Conservativehold

Grange

[edit]
Grange (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourTony Sherlock1,54579.43
ConservativeSimon James Vernon Eardley26913.83
GreenGed Isaac1316.74
Turnout1,96257.0
Labourhold

Great Boughton

[edit]
Great Boughton (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeKeith William Edward Board2,19121.62
ConservativePamela Theresa Hall2,15321.24
LabourJohn Creswick1,46414.44
LabourLee Bradshaw1,37313.55
Liberal DemocratsRose Price9098.97
UKIPHarry Cowley6526.43
UKIPPeter James Lowe5975.89
GreenPhilip Hannay4074.02
GreenGraham John Weaver3903.85
Turnout5,58176.1
Conservativehold
Conservativehold

Handbridge Park

[edit]
Handbridge Park (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeRazia Daniels2,85226.88
ConservativeNeil Anthony Sullivan2,55824.11
LabourJim Freeman1,43813.55
LabourPat McGuirk1,40013.20
GreenAlexandra Valerie Davies6796.40
Liberal DemocratsPeter James Speirs5465.15
UKIPFraser Smillie4534.27
UKIPAllan Andrew James Weddell3493.29
GreenDominic Leeson3353.16
Turnout5,68476.0
Conservativehold
Conservativehold

Hartford and Greenbank

[edit]
Hartford and Greenbank (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeSusan Kaur2,49628.09
ConservativePatricia Mary Parkes2,02722.81
LabourDerek Bowden1,28814.49
LabourPeter Naylor1,23013.84
UKIPMartin David Loftus8549.61
Liberal DemocratsWendy Jones5195.84
GreenOwen Robert Hardiker4725.31
Turnout4,95875.1
Conservativehold
Conservativehold

Helsby

[edit]
Helsby (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeAlan Leonard McKie1,51152.10
LabourUna Long1,06436.69
GreenDavid Hampton1916.59
Liberal DemocratsValerie A Melnyczuk1344.62
Turnout2,93473.5
Conservativehold

Hoole

[edit]
Hoole (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourAlex Black2,21521.45
LabourAngie Chidley1,82917.72
ConservativeLesley Elizabeth George1,19011.53
Liberal DemocratsMark Andrew Williams1,17011.33
UKIPRosemary Rogers1,14911.13
ConservativeAden Lucas1,05110.18
Liberal DemocratsAlan Rollo7697.45
GreenDiana Mary Wilderspin-Jones5405.23
GreenSteven Richard Jones4113.98
Turnout5,17871.9
Labourgain fromLiberal Democrats
Labourhold

Kingsley

[edit]
Kingsley (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeRalph Edward Oultram1,52055.37
LabourJill Peacock50018.21
UKIPChris Proudfoot29210.64
GreenAlex Dedman2208.01
Liberal DemocratsGeorge Martin England2137.76
Turnout2,72076.7
Conservativehold

Lache

[edit]
Lache (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourJane Mercer1,34152.12
ConservativeMichael Tomlinson78430.47
UKIPJohn Stroud2409.33
GreenKevin Smart1194.62
Liberal DemocratsAminul Hassan893.46
Turnout2,58665.3
Labourhold

Ledsham and Manor

[edit]
Ledsham and Manor (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourPeter Rooney2,00424.07
ConservativeGareth Anderson1,80321.66
ConservativeRob Griffiths1,58519.04
LabourBrenda Margaret Zaman1,58118.99
UKIPJonathan Charles Starkey6597.92
Liberal DemocratsRobert Michael Taylor4935.92
IndependentAnn McQuade2002.40
Turnout4,73873.4
Labourhold
Conservativehold

Little Neston and Burton

[edit]
Little Neston and Burton (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeNige Jones2,17421.84
LabourLouise Clare Gittins2,10821.18
ConservativeKay Loch1,96119.70
LabourRay McHale1,47314.80
Liberal DemocratsTony Cummins8538.57
UKIPSue Kettle7367.39
Liberal DemocratsRichard Adam Farrance5445.46
TUSCJoe Rimmington1061.06
Turnout5,37076.1
Conservativehold
Labourhold

Malpas

[edit]
Malpas (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeChris Whitehurst1,24152.01
IndependentCharles Lowick Higgie77732.56
LabourJanet Black2068.63
GreenMichael John Boxall1626.79
Turnout2,41970.0
Conservativehold

Marbury

[edit]
Marbury (3 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeLynn Joyce Gibbon3,25320.10
ConservativeNorman Geoffrey Wright2,95218.24
ConservativeDon Hammond2,89817.90
LabourDebbie Dalby1,88611.65
LabourJo Morlidge1,69810.49
LabourMichael Falzon1,4819.15
Liberal DemocratsAnnie Makepeace1,1937.37
GreenSez Ismail8265.10
Turnout6,58068.9
Conservativehold
Conservativehold
Conservativehold

Neston

[edit]
Neston (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourAndrew Williams1,05850.69
ConservativePaul Lloyd69333.21
GreenGeoffrey Lane Nicholls1617.71
Liberal DemocratsDerek Gaskell1406.71
TUSCDeclan Wells Khan351.68
Turnout2,09763.7
Labourhold

Netherpool

[edit]
Netherpool (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourDiane Elizabeth Roberts1,12766.06
ConservativeJack Harris30217.70
UKIPAlistair Kirk20712.13
GreenKier Aaron Sinclair704.10
Turnout1,71461.9
Labourhold

Newton

[edit]
Newton (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourRichard Mark Beacham2,10119.96
LabourGill Watson1,67215.88
ConservativeAdrian Peter Walmsley1,63815.56
ConservativePauline Frances Brown1,55414.76
Liberal DemocratsMark Edward Gant8277.86
UKIPFrank Samuel6265.95
GreenSimon Ward Brown5815.52
IndependentJohn Brian Ebo5054.80
Liberal DemocratsAnnie Mead5014.76
GreenMary Elizabeth Horbury4774.53
TUSCKenny Cunningham460.44
Turnout5,46069.2
Labourgain fromConservative
Labourgain fromConservative

Parkgate

[edit]
Parkgate (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
IndependentMartin Barker93139.22
ConservativeAndrew Merrill87836.98
LabourAbdul Kadir Jilani31413.23
GreenOliver James Peers25110.57
Turnout2,41177.1
Independentgain fromConservative

Rossmore

[edit]
Rossmore (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourPat Merrick1,07459.17
ConservativeLinda Ellen Jones32818.07
Socialist LabourKenny Spain28615.76
GreenJoanne Frances Evans-Stone1277.00
Turnout1,83159.3
Labourhold

Saughall and Mollington

[edit]
Saughall and Mollington (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeBrian Crowe1,28044.93
IndependentCarl Denis Jones73725.87
LabourSally Clare Atkin57220.08
UKIPJohn Walton1726.04
Liberal DemocratsSally Louise Senior883.09
Turnout2,87275.3
Conservativehold

Shakerley

[edit]
Shakerley (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeMark Lister Stocks1,41463.95
LabourPhilippa Jamieson59727.00
Liberal DemocratsMary Elizabeth Thompson2009.05
Turnout2,23765.4
Conservativehold

St Paul's

[edit]
St Paul's (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourAngela Janette Claydon2,78936.83
LabourRobert Ian Bisset2,28630.19
ConservativeFrancis Kwateng1,21616.06
ConservativeSteve Loch83010.96
Liberal DemocratsGraham Handley4525.97
Turnout4,43665.7
Labourhold
Labourhold

Strawberry

[edit]
Strawberry (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourMark Anthony Henesy1,49348.66
ConservativeNicholas Hebson1,15537.65
UKIPSarah Jane Mugridge37712.29
TUSCDan Lee431.40
Turnout3,08273.6
Labourhold

Sutton

[edit]
Sutton (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourPaul Francis Donovan2,64930.99
LabourNicole Meardon2,24126.22
ConservativeSandra Evans1,05312.32
ConservativeLee David Evans1,04212.19
UKIPAlan Moore92310.80
GreenChloe Joinson3604.21
Liberal DemocratsRosemarie Handley2803.28
Turnout4,78467.2
Labourhold
Labourhold

Tarporley

[edit]
Tarporley (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeEveleigh Moore Dutton1,93867.36
Liberal DemocratsIan Douglas Priestner51017.73
LabourCarol Wilson42914.91
Turnout2,90675.0
Conservativehold

Tarvin and Kelsall

[edit]
Tarvin and Kelsall (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeJohn Leather2,58829.37
ConservativeHugo William Edward Deynem2,41427.39
Liberal DemocratsTed Lush1,06612.10
Liberal DemocratsAndrew Paul Hyde95710.86
LabourDavid Edwards6867.78
LabourGina Lewis6116.93
GreenLouis McEvoy4915.57
Turnout5,08273.7
Conservativehold
Conservativehold

Tattenhall

[edit]
Tattenhall (1 seat)[49]
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeMike Jones1,41452.23
Liberal DemocratsEdward Walley44816.55
LabourJohn Robert Vernon43916.22
UKIPRay Hill40615.00
Turnout2,72374.3
Conservativehold

Upton

[edit]
Upton (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeJill Houlbrook1,95621.24
LabourMatt Bryan1,72318.71
ConservativeHilarie June McNae1,65717.99
LabourDavid Vincent Ford1,42915.51
Liberal DemocratsJean Elizabeth Evans8148.84
Liberal DemocratsJames Alexander Cameron5916.42
UKIPJules Evans5455.92
GreenAled Rhys Howells4965.38
Turnout5,04571.5
Conservativehold
Labourgain fromConservative

Weaver and Cuddington

[edit]
Weaver and Cuddington (3 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeCharles Fifield3,19416.86
ConservativePaul Williams3,18016.79
ConservativeHarry Tonge2,58013.62
LabourRobert Cernik1,7729.35
IndependentGillian Edwards1,7649.31
LabourCallum Bryce1,7459.21
LabourAndy Stott1,6038.46
UKIPChris Watkin1,3577.16
Liberal DemocratsStephen M Donhue9284.90
GreenAndy Robinson8204.33
Turnout7,38071.3
Conservativehold
Conservativehold
Conservativehold

Whitby

[edit]
Whitby (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourBrian Jones2,10425.82
LabourKaren Louise Shore1,82822.43
ConservativeBrian Anderson1,36816.79
ConservativeRobert Redford Crompton1,24815.31
UKIPGlen Lomax90511.10
GreenSarah Ann Bowers2673.28
Liberal DemocratsTom Marlow2232.74
GreenTony Griffiths2072.54
Turnout3,98360.9
Labourhold
Labourgain fromConservative

Willaston and Thornton

[edit]
Willaston and Thornton (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%
ConservativeMyles Hogg1,91275.39
LabourJames Robert Evans62424.61
Turnout2,56976.8
Conservativehold

Winnington and Castle

[edit]
Winnington and Castle (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourSam Naylor1,71923.75
LabourPaul Dolan1,67523.14
ConservativeJim Sinar1,19316.48
ConservativeKathy Ford1,14715.85
UKIPAmos Daniel Wright5888.12
GreenDarrelle Ann Bower3915.40
Liberal DemocratsAlice Philippa Chapman3054.21
Northwich IndependentPhillip Michael Dawson Bower2203.04
Turnout4,28459.6
Labourhold
Labourhold

Winsford Over and Verdin

[edit]
Winsford Over and Verdin (3 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourTom Blackmore2,27915.59
LabourDon Beckett2,15414.74
ConservativeMichael Baynham1,71711.75
LabourArthur Leslie Neil1,68411.52
ConservativeLynda Jones1,58910.87
ConservativeMargaret Dolphin1,4409.85
UKIPKerrie Jane Fawley-Hopkins1,0597.24
Liberal DemocratsBob Barton7965.45
Liberal DemocratsCharlie Parkinson6594.51
Liberal DemocratsBrandon Parkey5453.73
GreenSue Quormby3502.39
GreenAlice Rebecca Brown3462.37
Turnout5,84759.3
Labourhold
Labourhold
Conservativehold

Winsford Swanlow and Dene

[edit]
Winsford Swanlow and Dene (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourStephen Burns1,67723.20
LabourDavid Armstrong1,30618.07
Liberal DemocratsMalcolm Ian Gaskill94513.07
ConservativePhil Rimmer86111.91
Liberal DemocratsBev Theron76710.61
ConservativeLesley Greenwood74410.29
UKIPDavid Michael Kendrick7059.75
GreenMarc William Vincent Hatton2243.10
Turnout4,12060.4
Labourhold
Labourhold

Winsford Wharton

[edit]
Winsford Wharton (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourBrian Michael Clarke1,92028.08
LabourPamela Booher1,78526.10
ConservativeCharles Hardy92613.54
ConservativePeter Jones90313.21
Liberal DemocratsChris Bore4376.39
Liberal DemocratsJanet Fitzmaurice3515.13
GreenLyndsay Barwell2884.21
GreenIan Molton2283.33
Turnout4,18158.1
Labourhold
Labourhold

Witton

[edit]
Witton (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%
LabourTony Lawrenson2,01134.22
LabourVal Armstrong1,35523.06
ConservativeGeorge McDowell1,22220.79
ConservativeLinda Nelson92415.72
Liberal DemocratsKeith Hinde3656.21
Turnout3,66557.2
Labourhold
Labourhold

Changes between 2015 and 2019

[edit]

Ellesmere Port Town by-election 2018

[edit]

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.

Ellsmere Port Town by-election, 3 May 2018
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourMike Edwardson1,44782.9Increase22.6
ConservativeRobert Griffiths23913.7Increase3.5
GreenMathew Roberts603.4Decrease4.4
Majority1,20869.2Increase29.2
Turnout1,74824.5Decrease31.2
Rejected ballots20.1
LabourholdSwingIncrease14.6

[52]

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^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]
  2. ^abcdefghijklmnopqDid not stand for election.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Upcoming elections & referendums".The Electoral Commission.Archived from the original on 15 March 2015. Retrieved28 March 2015.
  2. ^abcRotten Boroughs (26 May 2015). "Dickhead Alert".Private Eye. No. 1393.
  3. ^abc"Labour take control of Cheshire West and Chester Council".Northwich Guardian. 9 May 2015. Retrieved13 May 2015.
  4. ^abcdDavid Holmes (20 May 2015)."Chester Labour MP Chris Matheson back from his first week at Parliament".Chester Chronicle. Retrieved27 May 2015.
  5. ^abcdefMichael Green (8 May 2015)."Election 2015: Cheshire West and Chester Council on a knife-edge as count is suspended overnight".Chester Chronicle. Retrieved22 May 2015.
  6. ^abcdeDavid Holmes (9 May 2015)."WATCH Election 2015: Labour take control of Cheshire West and Chester Council".Chester Chronicle. Retrieved22 May 2015.
  7. ^abcdeCarmella de Lucia, David Holmes and Frances Barrett (9 May 2015)."Election 2015: Cheshire West and Chester Council set for first woman leader".Chester Chronicle. Retrieved22 May 2015.
  8. ^abcdeDavid Holmes (27 May 2015)."Chester Tory leadership challenger launches damaging attack on Conservative CWaC chief Mike Jones".Chester Chronicle. Retrieved27 May 2015.
  9. ^abc"A Conservative councillor: Why was Cheshire West and Chester a Labour gain?".ConservativeHome. 26 May 2015. Retrieved26 May 2015.
  10. ^abPhil McCann (6 May 2015)."Election 2015: Cheshire's long-awaited council votes".BBC News. Retrieved2 June 2015.
  11. ^"ELECTION: Cheshire West and Chester remains Tory controlled".Chester Chronicle. 6 May 2011. Retrieved22 May 2015.
  12. ^"The Boomtown Reds".The Economist. 28 March 2015. Retrieved22 May 2015.
  13. ^Patrick Wintour and Nicholas Watt (23 May 2014)."Lib Dem local election results suggest party could lose 20 parliamentary seats".The Guardian. Retrieved22 May 2015.
  14. ^ab"England council results".BBC News. 22 May 2014. Retrieved22 May 2015.
  15. ^"Labour returned in Ellesmere Port's Town Ward".Talking West Cheshire. 21 October 2011. Archived fromthe original on 17 June 2015. Retrieved2 June 2015.
  16. ^Frances Barrett (11 July 2014)."Labour celebrate victory in both council by-elections".Chester Chronicle. Retrieved2 June 2015.
  17. ^Frances Barrett (10 April 2015)."Election 2015: Cheshire West and Chester Council candidates revealed".Chester Chronicle. Retrieved22 May 2015.
  18. ^David Holmes (16 April 2015)."General Election 2015: City of Chester Parliamentary candidates".Chester Chronicle. Retrieved2 June 2015.
  19. ^"Weaver Vale Labour Party choose Julia Tickridge to fight general election".Chester Chronicle. 4 July 2013. Retrieved2 June 2015.
  20. ^Michael Green (8 May 2015)."Election 2015: Ellesmere Port and Neston won by Labour".Chester Chronicle. Retrieved2 June 2015.
  21. ^"Statements of Persons Nominated - Local elections".Cheshire West and Chester Council. Archived fromthe original on 30 May 2015. Retrieved30 April 2015.
  22. ^ab"Town and Parish".West Cheshire Elections 2015. Chester West and Chester Council. Archived fromthe original on 26 May 2015. Retrieved26 May 2015.
  23. ^Frances Barrett (23 April 2015)."Cheshire West and Chester ballot papers re-issued due to printing error".Chester Chronicle. Retrieved22 May 2015.
  24. ^David Holmes (6 May 2015)."Election 2015: Postal votes in Cheshire West still not arrived".Chester Chronicle. Retrieved24 May 2015.
  25. ^abDavid Holmes (8 May 2015)."Election 2015: Chester police investigate leaflet attacking Labour leader".Chester Chronicle. Retrieved22 May 2015.
  26. ^abMichael Green (8 May 2015)."Election 2015 Live: Cheshire West and Chester Council election results".Chester Chronicle. Retrieved26 May 2015.
  27. ^abc"Double delight for Labour as party controls Cheshire West and Chester Council".Chester Standard. 11 May 2015. Archived fromthe original on 26 May 2015. Retrieved26 May 2015.
  28. ^Michael Green (9 May 2015)."Local elections live: Cheshire West and Chester Council election count resumes".Chester Chronicle. Retrieved27 May 2015.
  29. ^ab"Local Election Results 2015".BBC News. Retrieved5 June 2015.
  30. ^"Election 2011 - England council elections - West Lancashire".BBC News. 10 May 2011. Retrieved5 June 2015.
  31. ^"Vote 2014 - West Lancashire Borough Council".BBC News. Retrieved5 June 2015.
  32. ^"Derbyshire election 2013: Labour wins back control".BBC News. 3 May 2013. Retrieved5 June 2015.
  33. ^"Nottinghamshire election 2013: Narrow win for Labour".BBC News. 3 May 2013. Retrieved5 June 2015.
  34. ^"Vote 2012 - English Council Results".BBC News. 4 May 2012. Retrieved5 June 2015.
  35. ^"Election 2011 - English council elections".BBC News. Retrieved5 June 2015.
  36. ^abcDavid Holmes (20 May 2015)."Chester Tory chief Mike Jones survives leadership challenge after election defeat".Chester Chronicle. Retrieved22 May 2015.
  37. ^David Holmes (4 May 2015)."Election 2015: Chester UKIP candidate for parliament and council 'proud' to have stood for party".Chester Chronicle. Retrieved26 May 2015.
  38. ^"Local Election Results 2015 Cheshire West and Chester". Local Elections Archive Project.
  39. ^abcdDavid Holmes (26 May 2015)."Cheshire West and Chester Council have bad-tempered first meeting under Labour control".Chester Chronicle. Retrieved10 June 2015.
  40. ^Phil McCann (6 May 2015)."Will fracking decide Chester?".BBC News. Retrieved29 May 2015.
  41. ^"Anti-frackers build for demonstration outside HQ after Tory majority rejects debate".Chester Chronicle. 22 March 2015. Retrieved22 May 2015.
  42. ^ab"Parkgate Electorate Vote Local in Historic Victory for an Independent".AboutMyArea. 9 May 2015. Retrieved25 May 2015.
  43. ^"Candidate Statements - CWAC Elections 2015 : Parkgate Ward".AboutMyArea. 21 April 2015. Archived fromthe original on 27 May 2015. Retrieved25 May 2015.
  44. ^David Holmes (23 May 2013)."Was I sacked over student village vote?' asks ex-chairman of Cheshire West and Chester Council's key planning committee".Chester Chronicle. Retrieved27 May 2015.
  45. ^Jim Green (23 September 2013)."Come clean call in row on Chester village vote".Chester Standard. Archived fromthe original on 27 May 2015. Retrieved27 May 2015.
  46. ^"Probe over d***head comment by council leader".Chester Standard. 23 August 2012. Archived fromthe original on 10 June 2015. Retrieved3 June 2015.
  47. ^David Holmes (3 March 2015)."Cheshire West and Chester Council loses respect (clause)".Chester Chronicle. Retrieved27 May 2015.
  48. ^"Official turnout for borough wards".Cheshire West and Chester Council. Retrieved13 May 2015.[dead link]
  49. ^"Elections 2015 - Results for Tattenhall Ward". Retrieved8 May 2015.
  50. ^Holmes, David (12 February 2018)."Tributes paid to 'passionate' Ellesmere Port councillor".chesterchronicle. Retrieved8 April 2018.
  51. ^"Page Moss: CTRL – DEL | LocalCouncils.co.uk".localcouncils.co.uk. Retrieved8 April 2018.
  52. ^"Election results for Claughton". Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council.

External links

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