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2021 Tees Valley mayoral election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Local election in England

2021 Tees Valley mayoral election

← 20176 May 20212024 →
Turnout34%
 
CandidateBen HouchenJessie Joe Jacobs
PartyConservativeLabour Co-op
Popular vote121,96445,641
Percentage72.8%27.2%
SwingIncrease33.3ppDecrease11.7pp

Result by local authorities

Mayor before election

Ben Houchen
Conservative

ElectedMayor

Ben Houchen
Conservative

The2021 Tees Valley mayoral election was held on 6 May 2021 to elect theTees Valley Mayor on the same day asother local elections across the country. The mayor was elected by thesupplementary vote. The election was originally due to take place in May 2020, but was postponed due to theCOVID-19 pandemic.[1]

Conservative incumbent mayorBen Houchen was seeking re-election, withLabour candidate Jessie Joe Jacobs challenging him.

Background

[edit]

The mayor serves as the directly elected leader of theTees Valley Combined Authority and has powers considered lesser than those of other mayors such asGreater Manchester and theWest of England. The mayor has power over an annual £15 million investment from the national government over a 30-year period, as well as control over adult skills training, social care and a consolidated transport budget- giving the ability to acquire bus services.[2] The mayor does not supersede or overrule the five boroughs within theTees Valley city-region.[3][4]

At the previous and first election for the mayor of Tees Valley in 2017, theConservative Party candidateBen Houchen won with 51.2% of the vote in the second round, with a turnout of 21%.[5] This victory was seen as a surprise since Tees Valley has traditionally been seen as a Labour stronghold.[6][7] Some saw Houchen's victory as evidence that the Conservatives were going to do well in the following election,[8][9] others described it as a "warning shot" at Labour from their voter base.[10]

The urban think-tankCentre for Cities looked at the results of local elections in Tees Valley for2018 and2019 to make a prediction of the result and found Labour had suffered considerable losses, giving the Conservatives an advantage.[11] Following the2019 general election, the Centre for Cities also assessed the Tees Valley constituencies results and found the Conservatives polled 44% across all Tees Valley constituencies, whilst Labour polled 41%.[12]

It was announced in March 2020 that the mayoral election was delayed to May 2021 due to theCOVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom.[13]

Electoral system

[edit]

The election used asupplementary vote system, in which voters express a first and a second preference for candidates.[5]

  • If a candidate receives more than 50% of the first preference vote, that candidate wins.
  • If no candidate receives more than 50% of first preference votes, the top two candidates proceed to a second round and all other candidates are eliminated.
  • The first preference votes for the remaining two candidates stand in the final count.
  • Voters' ballots whose first and second preference candidates are eliminated are discarded.
  • Voters whose first preference candidates have been eliminated and whose second preference candidate is one of the top two have their second preference votes added to that candidate's count.

This means that the winning candidate has the support of a majority of voters who expressed a preference among the top two.[14]

Allregistered electors (British,Irish,Commonwealth andEuropean Union citizens) living in Tees Valley aged 18 or over on 7 May 2020 were entitled to vote in the mayoral election. Those who are temporarily away from Tees Valley (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the mayoral election. The deadline toregister to vote in the election will be announced nearer the election.[15]

Candidates

[edit]

Conservative Party

[edit]

Ben Houchen, the incumbent mayor, launched his re-election campaign on 6 January 2020.[16]

Labour Party

[edit]

Jessie Joe Jacobs was announced as the Labour Party candidate for the city-region. Jacobs is the founder of the charity A Way Out in Stockton[17][18] and created a media project that taught ordinary people skills to report news called “We Are Our Media”, which created a citizen newspaper called the Eclipse.[19] Jacobs received endorsement from all seven local parties in the area, five trade unions and theCo-operative party.[20]

Dan Smith, an engineer and staffer forPaul Williams, Labour's former MP forStockton South, also applied; however, he was not shortlisted.[20][9]

Liberal Democrats

[edit]

TheLiberal Democrats decided not to stand a candidate in the 2021 election,[21] despite declaring an intention to do so prior to the election's postponement.[10]

Campaign

[edit]

The incumbent mayorBen Houchen launched his initial campaign for this election – prior to its delay – in January 2020, emphasising on investment in the steel industry in Tees Valley.[22] On 9 February it was revealed Houchen was in talks to purchase theformer steelworks site in Redcar, which closed in 2015 whenSahaviriya Steel Industries's UK wing went out of business.[23]

Labour's candidate Jessie Joe Jacobs launched her campaign at theHartlepool College of Further Education. Her core pledges for this election are to tackle mental health across the city-region where suicide rates are high, to build a new vocation centre in all five boroughs, to start a high street innovation fund to help fill closed down retail spaces[24] and to improve transport. She advocated expanding bus and rail services in the city-region over the next ten years. This includes restarting theTees Valley Metro project, which was stopped in 2010.[25] Additionally, she is supportive of building a new bridge to improve transport between Hartlepool and South Teesside to help relieve pressure on the A19 and A66.[26][27] Jacobs has planned to bid to host theFestival of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, a government proposed festival with £125 million prepared for it, in 2022, branding it as the "Festival of Teesside".[28]

On 10 November 2019, Jacobs was critical of the price Houchen arranged forTeesside Airport, which Houchen's administration had taken into public ownership, saying that the previous owner received much more than she would have allowed, considering they wanted to get rid of it.[18] Furthermore, on 11 February 2020, Jacobs was critical of Ben Houchen's lack of transparency over subsiding flight routes out of Teesside Airport rather than expanding bus routes around the city region.[29]

A hustings organised byCentre for Cities, theInstitution of Civil Engineers andTeesside University was due to take place on 23 April 2020 but was cancelled due to theCOVID-19 pandemic.

In January 2021, internal party polling by the Labour Party found that Houchen had a strong lead over Labour, withThe Guardian reporting that the poll showed Houchen winning outright with 66% of the vote.[30]

Opinion polls

[edit]
This graph was using thelegacy Graph extension, which is no longer supported. It needs to be converted to thenew Chart extension.
Graph of opinion polls conducted
PollsterClientDate(s)
conducted
Sample
size
HouchenJacobsOthersLead
ConLab
Election6 May 202172.8%27.2%45.6%

Opinium

The Times19–26 Apr 202197163%37%26%
YouGovLabour1–8 Jan 2021?66%34%32%
Election4 May 201739.5%39%21.5%0.5%

Result

[edit]

The Conservative Party held the mayoralty overwhelmingly.

2021 Tees Valley Mayoral Election vote share map by local authority.
2021 Tees Valley Combined Authority Mayor
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeBen Houchen121,96472.8Increase33.3
Labour Co-opJessie Joe Jacobs45,64127.2Decrease11.8

By local authority

[edit]

Darlington

[edit]
2021 Tees Valley Combined Authority Mayor
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeBen Houchen19,87674.5Increase32.6
Labour Co-opJessie Joe Jacobs6,79925.5Decrease7.2

Hartlepool

[edit]
2021 Tees Valley Combined Authority Mayor
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeBen Houchen21,25772.6Increase45.8
Labour Co-opJessie Joe Jacobs8,02327.4Decrease7.8

Middlesbrough

[edit]
2021 Tees Valley Combined Authority Mayor
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeBen Houchen17,74868.6Increase33.7
Labour Co-opJessie Joe Jacobs8,14131.4Decrease16.1

Redcar and Cleveland

[edit]
2021 Tees Valley Combined Authority Mayor
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeBen Houchen24,66375.0Increase39.6
Labour Co-opJessie Joe Jacobs8,23625.0Decrease19.4

Stockton-on-Tees

[edit]
2021 Tees Valley Combined Authority Mayor
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeBen Houchen38,42072.7Increase25.0
Labour Co-opJessie Joe Jacobs14,44227.3Decrease8.3

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Local elections postponed for a year over coronavirus".BBC News. 13 March 2020. Retrieved13 March 2020.
  2. ^"Tees Valley".Centre for Cities. Retrieved15 October 2019.
  3. ^"What the Mayor Does".Tees Valley Combined Authority. Retrieved15 October 2019.
  4. ^"Directly elected mayors".Local Government Association. Retrieved15 October 2019.
  5. ^ab"Mayor of the Tees Valley".BBC News. Retrieved15 October 2019.
  6. ^"Labour just lost a previously unthinkable mayoral election to the Tories".The Independent. 5 May 2017.Archived from the original on 5 May 2017. Retrieved16 October 2019.
  7. ^"Conservatives win Tees Valley mayor race".BBC News. 5 May 2017. Retrieved16 October 2019.
  8. ^Lynch, Russell (2 February 2020)."Tees Valley mayor Ben Houchen: 'Become an MP? I've got much more influence'".The Telegraph. Retrieved2 February 2020.
  9. ^abCain, James (2 January 2020)."Details on the two elections being held on Teesside in 2020".Teesside live.Reach plc.
  10. ^abCain, James."Elections for Tees Valley Mayor and Cleveland Police Commissioner this spring".The Northern Echo.Newsquest. Retrieved13 February 2020.
  11. ^Jeffrey, Simon; Bell, Owen (10 October 2019)."What do the local elections tell us about the upcoming metro mayor elections?".Centre for Cities. Retrieved13 August 2019.
  12. ^Jeffery, Simon (17 December 2019)."2020 vision — What does Thursday's vote mean for May's Metro Mayor elections".Centre for Cities. Retrieved18 December 2019.
  13. ^Metcalfe, Alex (13 March 2020)."Coronavirus sees Teesside mayoral and police chief elections delayed".TeessideLive.Reach plc. Retrieved11 August 2020.
  14. ^Elledge, Jonnk (2 May 2012)."London Elections: How The Voting System Works". The Londonist. Retrieved21 August 2015.
  15. ^"What is the Supplementary Vote? | Nudge Factory".Nudge Factory. Retrieved16 October 2019.
  16. ^Staff Reporter (6 January 2020)."Tees Valley Mayor Ben Houchen launches campaign for re-election". The Northern Echo. Retrieved6 January 2020.
  17. ^Brown, Mike (21 July 2019)."Charity leader wants to be Labour's opponent for Mayor Ben Houchen".TeessideLive. Retrieved10 October 2019.
  18. ^abBrown, Mike (10 November 2019)."How Jessie Joe Jacobs became political after meeting sex worker, 15".TeessideLive.Reach plc. Retrieved11 August 2020.
  19. ^Pidd, Helen (6 February 2020)."Labour selects Liam Byrne as West Midlands mayoral candidate".The Guardian. Retrieved7 February 2020.
  20. ^abRodgers, Sienna (9 October 2019)."Jessie Joe Jacobs selected as Labour's Tees Valley mayor candidate".Labour List. Retrieved10 October 2019.
  21. ^Arnold, Stuart (20 March 2021)."Liberal Democrats explain lack of involvement in Tees Valley mayoral election".Teesside Live. Retrieved1 April 2021.
  22. ^"Tees Valley Mayor launches re-election campaign vowing to bring back steelmaking to Teesside".ITV News. 6 January 2020. Retrieved2 February 2020.
  23. ^Pidd, Helen (9 February 2020)."Tees Valley confronts Thailand over future of Redcar steelworks".The Guardian. Retrieved10 February 2020.
  24. ^Payne, Mark (15 February 2020)."How Labour's Tees Valley Mayor candidate plans to save our high streets".Hartlepool Mail. Retrieved5 March 2020.
  25. ^Cain, James (2 March 2020)."Labour candidate promises Tees Metro rail and bus system if elected".Teesside live. Retrieved5 March 2020.
  26. ^Metcalfe, Alex (22 January 2020)."Trio of pledges as Jessie Joe Jacobs launches campaign to be mayor".Teesside live. Retrieved2 February 2020.
  27. ^Scott, Jim (22 January 2020)."Labour Mayor hopeful pledges better transport links and 'opportunities'".The Northern Echo. Retrieved2 February 2020.
  28. ^Metcalfe, Alex."Plans to draw a million visitors to new Teesside festival".The Northern Echo.Newsquest. Retrieved13 February 2020.
  29. ^Metcalfe, Alex (11 February 2020)."Teesside Airport: Dublin, Belfast and London flights are being subsidised by taxpayers".The Northern Echo.Newsquest. Retrieved13 February 2020.
  30. ^"Labour failing to win back enough Tory voters, officials warn".The Guardian. 27 January 2021. Retrieved4 May 2021.
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