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2009 Cumbria County Council election

2009 UK local government election


2009 UK local government election

FieldValue
election_name2009 Cumbria County Council election
countryCumbria
typeParliamentary
ongoingno
party_colouryes
previous_election2005 Cumbria County Council election
previous_year2005
next_election2013 Cumbria County Council election
next_year2013
seats_for_electionAll 84 seats to Cumbria County Council
majority_seats43
election_date4 June 2009
party1Conservative Party (UK)
last_election132 seats, 38.7%
seats138
seat_change16
popular_vote162,488
percentage140.1%
swing11.4%
party2Labour Party (UK)
last_election239 seats, 36.1%
seats224
seat_change215
popular_vote233,281
percentage221.4%
swing214.7%
party3Liberal Democrats (UK)
last_election311 seats, 19.6%
seats316
seat_change35
popular_vote338,250
percentage324.6%
swing35.0%
party4Independent (politician)
last_election42 seats, 4.7%
seats45
seat_change43
popular_vote47,626
percentage44.9%
swing4%
party5Socialist People's Party (Furness)
last_election50 seats, 0.4%
seats51
seat_change51
popular_vote51,395
percentage50.9%
swing50.5%
map_imageCumbria wards 2009.svg
map_caption2009 local election results in Cumbria
titleCouncil control
posttitleCouncil control after election
before_electionNo Overall Control
after_electionNo Overall Control

An election to Cumbria County Council took place on 2 May 2009 as part of the 2009 United Kingdom local elections. All 84 councillors were elected from various electoral divisions, which returned one or two county councillors each by first-past-the-post voting for a four-year term of office. They coincided with an election for the European Parliament. All 84 seats in the Council were up for election, and a total of 301 candidates stood. The total number of people registered to vote was 392,931. Prior to the election local Conservatives were leading a coalition with the Liberal Democrats with the Labour party as the council's official opposition.

All locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections. It is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.

Background

In the previous election, held on 5 May 2005, the Labour Party won 39 seats, the Conservative Party 32, the Liberal Democrats 11, and independents two. By the end of this term, the Liberal Democrats had lost one councillor, and there were three independents. As in the 2001 election, the Council was left hung. For most of these eight years, the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats formed a coalition, although Labour is running a minority administration going into the election. On a national level, the Conservative Party are polling well and have targeted Carlisle and Barrow-in-Furness, although Richard Moss, BBC Political Editor for the North East and Cumbria, has said that an absolute majority is unlikely. It is considered to be a "safer area" than some of the other councils up for election in 2009, but the Liberal Democrats have also been making a push in the region.

In 2008, the Council rejected the idea of having a directly elected mayor, instead opting for a cabinet-style administration that resembled the previous system. The new model will be adopted after this election. A proposal for the Council to become a unitary authority was made in 2007, and Cumbria went into consultation stage, although the idea was rejected. The plan was opposed by the district councils—which would have disappeared under the arrangement—of Carlisle, Allerdale, Eden, Copeland, South Lakeland, and Barrow-in-Furness, and Carlisle MP Eric Martlew, who believed that a referendum should have been held on the same day as the district council elections of 3 May 2007.

Other parties fielding candidates in the election included the British National Party (BNP), the Green Party, the United Kingdom Independence Party (UKIP), and the People's Party, which had seen success in Barrow previous years, where all six of its candidates were standing. The BNP is set to stand in 42 wards, after fielding none in the 2005 election. The leaders of the Council's Conservative, Labour, Liberal Democrat and People's Party groups all said that they felt the BNP would be unsuccessful. Christian church leaders also criticised the BNP for appealing to Christians in its campaigns, saying that the party was trying to stir up "racial and religious hatred." Mike Ashburner, Barrow and South Lakeland organiser for the BNP and the party's Hawcoat candidate, denied that the BNP was a racist party, and said that the reason for standing in Cumbria was "simply that our policies are so popular with people." In a 2007 by-election for the Kells and Sandwith (Whitehaven) ward, the party's candidate gained 40.1% of the vote, narrowly losing to the Labour candidate. Coming into the European elections, the BNP was perceived as having the best chance, nationally, to win a seat in the North West England constituency, where party leader Nick Griffin is running.

In the Labour Party's manifesto, plans were set out to cap council tax increases at three per cent in each of the next four years; Council leader Stewart Young justified this by saying that people were not prepared to pay above the rate of inflation any more. The party promised improvements to schooling and roads, and Young said that he hoped the party would be judged on its record in office, and not by the performances for the incumbent UK Labour government. The Conservatives pledged to have a blanket 30 mph speed limit in any village big enough to display a name sign, improved roads, and said that they would "remodel" Cumbria Care so that fewer elderly people felt the need to move into care homes. The Liberal Democrats said that they would introduce cheaper bus fees for young people, a clampdown on speeding, a review of road maintenance and the introduction of four new transport schemes, and schemes designed to give communities greater access to the Council.

2005 Cumbria County Council electionPartySeats
Labour
Conservative
Liberal Democrats
Independent

Results

|seats % = 45.2 |votes % = 40.1 |plus/minus = 6.5 |seats % = 28.6 |votes % = 21.4 |plus/minus = 14.7 |seats % = 19.0 |votes % = 24.6 |plus/minus = 5.0 |seats % = 6.0 |votes % = 4.9 |plus/minus = 0.2 |seats % = 1.2 |votes % = 0.9 |plus/minus = 0.5 |seats % = 0.0 |votes % = 5.2 |plus/minus = New |seats % = 0.0 |votes % = 2.2 |plus/minus = 2.0 |seats % = 0.0 |votes % = 0.8 |plus/minus = 0.7 |}

References

References

  1. "Election 2013 Results".
  2. Julian Whittle. (15 May 2009). "Battle lines are drawn ahead of the Cumbria council elections". [[Cumberland]] News.
  3. "Number and Breakdown of Registered Voters". [[Cumbria County Council]] website.
  4. (13 October 2011). "The Representation of the People (Form of Canvass) (England and Wales) Regulations 2006, Schedule Part 1". Legislation.gov.uk.
  5. "I have two homes. Can I register at both addresses?". The Electoral Commission.
  6. (13 May 2009). "Council elections 2009: Cumbria". [[BBC News]].
  7. Moss, Richard. (13 May 2009). "Political parties eye up Cumbria". BBC News.
  8. (1 June 2009). "Analysis: Local elections 2009". politics.co.ukauthor=Alex Stevenson.
  9. (14 September 2008). "Council rules out elected mayor". BBC News.
  10. (26 January 2007). "Twenty-six councils bid to become unitary authorities". webmaster.
  11. (27 March 2007). "Woolas announces sixteen successful bids for unitary status to improve local services". eGove monitor.
  12. Julian Whittle. (30 March 2007). "Big step forward for unitary authority bid". The Whitehaven News.
  13. Jennifer Gold. (28 April 2009). "Use vote for hope not hate, say Cumbrian church leaders". [[Christian Today]].
  14. (4 May 2009). "Fury at BNP's Cumbria County Council election stance". [[North West Evening Mail]].
  15. Alan Irving. (13 May 2009). "Leaders urge big poll turnout". The Whitehaven News.
  16. Andrew Grice. (4 May 2009). "'Best way to beat the BNP is to vote Green'". [[The Independent]].
  17. (3 May 2013). "Elections 2013 results". Cumbria County Council.
  18. "County Summary". Cumbria County Council.
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