2014 United Kingdom local elections

The 2014 United Kingdom local elections were held on 22 May 2014. Usually these elections are held on the first Thursday in May but were postponed to coincide with the 2014 European Parliament Elections. Direct elections were held for all 32 London boroughs, all 36 metropolitan boroughs, 74 district/borough councils, 19 unitary authorities and various mayoral posts in England and elections to the new councils in Northern Ireland.

2014 United Kingdom local elections

← 2013 22 May 2014 2015 →

All 32 London boroughs, all 36 metropolitan boroughs,
19 out of 55 unitary authorities, 74 out of 201 district councils,
all 11 Northern Irish councils, and 5 directly elected mayors
  First party Second party
  Ed Miliband David Cameron
Leader Ed Miliband David Cameron
Party Labour Conservative
Leader since 25 September 2010 6 December 2005
Projected vote-share[a] 31% 29%
Swing[b] Increase2% Increase4%
Councils 82 41
Councils +/– Increase6 Decrease11
Councillors 2,121 1,364
Councillors +/– Increase324 Decrease236

  Third party Fourth party
  Nick Clegg Nigel Farage
Leader Nick Clegg Nigel Farage
Party Liberal Democrats UKIP
Leader since 18 December 2007 5 November 2010
Projected vote-share[a] 13% 17%
Swing[b] Decrease1% Decrease5%
Councils 6 0
Councils +/– Decrease2 Steady
Councillors 427 166[c]
Councillors +/– Decrease310 Increase163[c]

Map showing results of English and Northern Irish local elections, 2014. Council control in England and in Northern Ireland the largest parties are shown (where all councils had no overall control). Black represents No Overall Control, white represents areas that did not hold an election, blue represents the Conservative Party, red represents the Labour Party and gold represents the Liberal Democrats. Areas in light red represent the Democratic Unionist Party. Dark green represents Sinn Féin and light green represents the SDLP. Areas shown in grey are outside England and Northern Ireland

All registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on the day of the election were entitled to vote in the local elections.

The BBC's projected national vote share (PNV) put Labour on 31%, the Conservatives on 29%, UKIP on 17%, and the Liberal Democrats on 13%.[1] Rallings and Thrasher of Plymouth University's national equivalent vote share (NEV) estimated 31% for Labour, 30% for the Conservatives, 18% for UKIP, and 11% for the Liberal Democrats.[2]

For the fourth year running, the Labour Party enjoyed the largest share of the vote in local elections, but its share of the vote was its smallest since 2010. UKIP, which topped the same day's European Parliament elections, finished third in vote share, claiming council seats from Labour, the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats.

Overview of results

edit

UK-wide results

edit
Party Councillors Councils
Number Change Number Change
Labour 2,121  324 82  5
Conservative 1,364  236 41  11
Liberal Democrats 427  310 6  2
UKIP 166  163 0  
DUP 130  15 0  
Sinn Féin 105  10 0  
UUP 88  11 0  
Independent 71  18 0  
SDLP 66  1 0  
Residents 53  14 0  
Green 38  18 0  
Alliance 32  2 0  
Tower Hamlets First 18  18 0  
TUV 13  10 0  
Green (NI) 4  1 0  
PUP 4  1 0  
NI21 1  1 0  
Liberal 2  2 0  
BNP 1  1 0  
Health Concern 1  2 0  
No overall control n/a n/a 43  8

England results

edit
Party Councillors Councils
Number Change Number Change
Labour 2,121  324 82  5
Conservative 1,364  236 41  11
Liberal Democrats 427  310 6  2
UKIP 163  161 0  
Independent 71  18 0  
Residents 53  14 0  
Green 38  18 0  
Tower Hamlets First 18  18 0  
Liberal 2  2 0  
BNP 1  1 0  
Health Concern 1  2 0  
No overall control n/a n/a 32  8

The Respect Party lost both their remaining councillors.[3]

English Councils - shift of control

edit

This table depicts how the control of local councils shifted in this election.

The data along the diagonal represents no shift in control in that number of councils: for example, Chorley was among the solid colour no change 73 Labour controlled councils. The other cells represent the shifts of control: for example, Harrow was one of five councils of which Labour gained control from No Overall Control. The intensity of the colour in a table cell other than the diagonal reflects the relative number of losses in council control suffered by each party.

after election N.O.C. Labour Cons. Lib.
Dem.
Old
total
losses
before election
No Overall Control 19 5 - - 24 − 5
Labour 4 73 - - 77 − 4
Conservative 8 4 40 - 52 −12
Liberal Democrats 1 - 1 6 8 − 2
New total 32 82 41 6 161 -
gains +13 + 9 + 1 - - -
Net change + 8 + 5 −11 − 2 - -

Last updated at 11:30:10 on 27 May 2014[4]

Northern Ireland results

edit
Party Councillors % of councillors First preference votes % of FP votes
2011[5] 2014 +/- 2011[5] 2014 +/- 2011[6] 2014[7] +/- 2011 2014 +/-
DUP 145 130  15 31.4% 28.1%  3.3% 179,436 144,928   27.2% 23.1%  4.1%
Sinn Féin 115 105  10 24.9% 22.7%  2.2% 163,712 151,137   24.8% 24.1%  0.7%
UUP 77 88  11 16.7% 19.0%  2.3% 100,643 101,385   15.2% 16.1%  0.9%
SDLP 67 66  1 14.5% 14.2%  0.3% 99,325 85,237   15.0% 13.6%  1.4%
Alliance 34 32  2 7.4% 6.9%  0.5% 48,859 41,769   7.4% 6.7%  0.7%
TUV 3 13  10 0.6% 2.8%  2.2% 13,079 28,310   2.0% 4.5%  2.5%
PUP 1 4  3 0.2% 0.8%  0.6% 3,858 12,753   0.6% 2.0%  1.4%
Green (NI) 1 4  3 0.2% 0.8%  0.6% 6,317 5,515   1.0% 0.8%  0.2%
UKIP 1 3  2 0.2% 0.6%  0.4% 2,550 9,311   0.4% 1.4%  1.0%
NI21 0 1  1 0.0% 0.2%  0.2% 0 11,495   0.0% 1.8%  1.8%
People Before Profit 0 1  1 0.0% 0.2%  0.2% 1,721 1,923   0.3% 0.3%  0.0%
NI Conservatives 0 0   0.0% 0.0%   1,321 2,527   0.2% 0.4%  0.2%
éirígí 0 0   0.0% 0.0%   2,062 1,756   0.3% 0.3%  0.0%
Workers' Party 0 0   0.0% 0.0%   760 985   0.1 0.2%  0.1%
Fermanagh Against Fracking 0 0   0.0% 0.0%   0 555   0.0% 0.1%  0.1%
Republican Network for Unity 0 0   0.0% 0.0%   0 502   0.0% 0.1%  0.1%
Community Partnership 0 0   0.0% 0.0%   800 388   0.1 0.1%  0.0%
Socialist Party 0 0   0.0% 0.0%   682 272   0.1% 0.0%  0.1%
BNP 0 0   0.0% 0.0%   491 174   0.1% 0.0%  0.1%
Democracy First 0 0   0.0% 0.0%   0 173   0.0% 0.0%  0.0%
Others 0 0   0.0% 0.0%   2,142 0   0.3% 0.0%  0.3%
Independent 18 15   3 3.9% 3.2%  0.7% 32,151 26,682   4.9% 4.2%  0.7%
Total 462 462   100% 100%   660,631 627,777   100% 100%  

London boroughs

edit

All seats in the 32 London Borough Councils were up for election.

Summary of results

edit
Party[8] Votes won % votes Change Seats % seats Change Councils Change
Labour 944,967 37.6 +5.1 1,060 57.3 +185 20 +3
Conservative 663,847 26.4 −5.3 612 33.1 −105 9 −2
Liberal Democrats 267,769 10.6 −11.8 116 6.3 −130 1 −1
Green 246,805 9.8 +3.2 4 0.2 +2 0 ±0
UKIP 239,001 9.5 +8.4 12 0.6 +12 0 ±0
Others 152,684 6.1 +0.4 47 2.5 +26 0 ±0
No overall control 2 −6

Individual council results

edit
Council Previous control Result
Con Lab LD UKIP Green Ind Others
Barking and Dagenham Labour Labour 51
Barnet Conservative Conservative 32 27 1
Bexley Conservative Conservative 45 15 3
Brent Labour Labour 6 56 1
Bromley Conservative Conservative 51 7 2
Camden Labour Labour 12 40 1 1
Croydon Conservative Labour 30 40
Ealing Labour Labour 12 53 4
Enfield Labour Labour 22 41
Greenwich Labour Labour 8 43
Hackney Labour Labour 4 50 3
Hammersmith and Fulham Conservative Labour 20 26
Haringey Labour Labour 48 9
Harrow No overall control Labour 26 34 1 2
Havering Conservative No overall control 22 1 7 24
Hillingdon Conservative Conservative 42 23
Hounslow Labour Labour 11 49
Islington Labour Labour 47 1
Kensington and Chelsea Conservative Conservative 37 12 1
Kingston upon Thames Liberal Democrats Conservative 28 2 18
Lambeth Labour Labour 3 59 1
Lewisham Labour Labour 53 1
Merton No overall control Labour 20 36 1 3
Newham Labour Labour 60
Redbridge No overall control Labour 25 35 3
Richmond upon Thames Conservative Conservative 39 15
Southwark Labour Labour 2 48 13
Sutton Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats 9 45
Tower Hamlets Labour No overall control 4 20 18
Waltham Forest Labour Labour 16 44
Wandsworth Conservative Conservative 41 19
Westminster Conservative Conservative 44 16
Totals 612 1,052 118 12 4 2 45
Councils whose control changed hands highlighted thus

Harrow's Council was elected in 2010 with a Labour majority but divisions within this majority in 2013 led to a coalition struck between the Conservatives and the Independent Labour Group (formed of eight ex-Labour councillors). Conservatives withdrew their support for Independent Labour on 16 September 2013 leading to a brief Conservative minority administration.

Metropolitan boroughs

edit

One third of the seats in all 36 Metropolitan Boroughs were up for election (showing those elected and each party's total in the new council).

Council Previous control Result
Con Lab LD UKIP Others
Barnsley Labour Labour 1, 4 18, 52 2, 7
Birmingham Labour Labour 13, 31 22, 77 5, 12
Bolton Labour Labour 5, 15 13, 40 1, 3 2, 2
Bradford Labour Labour 7, 21 17, 46 3, 8 1, 1 1,3Grn
2,11Ind
Bury Labour Labour 2, 11 15, 38 0, 1 0, 1
Calderdale No overall control No overall control
(Lab minority, then
Con-Ind minority)
6, 19 9, 25 1, 6 1, 1
Coventry Labour Labour 6, 11 13, 43
Doncaster Labour Labour 3, 8 15, 48 1, 1 2, 6
Dudley Labour Labour 7, 20 10, 40 7, 9 0,1Grn
0,2Ind
Gateshead Labour Labour 18, 55 4, 11
Kirklees No overall control No overall control
(Lab minority)
6, 18 10, 32 5, 11 1,5Grn
1,3Ind
Knowsley Labour Labour 21, 63
Leeds Labour Labour 6, 19 20, 62 4, 9 1,3Grn
2,6Ind
Liverpool Labour Labour 27, 79 0, 3 2,4Grn
1,4Ind
Manchester Labour Labour 33, 95 1, 1
Newcastle upon Tyne Labour Labour 18, 52 8, 24 0, 2
North Tyneside Labour Labour 3, 12 15, 44 1, 4
Oldham Labour Labour 0, 2 14, 45 3, 10 2, 2 1, 1
Rochdale Labour Labour 3, 11 16, 48 1, 1
Rotherham Labour Labour 0, 2 11, 50 10, 10 0, 1
St Helens Labour Labour 1, 3 14, 43 1, 2
Salford Labour Labour 3, 8 17, 52
Sandwell Labour Labour 0, 1 23, 70 1, 1
Sefton Labour Labour 2, 7 13, 40 6, 17 1, 2
Sheffield Labour Labour 18, 60 6, 17 3, 3 2,4Grn
Solihull Conservative Conservative 9, 29 0, 2 3, 8 1, 1 4,10Grn
South Tyneside Labour Labour 0, 1 17, 49 0, 1 1, 3
Stockport No overall control No overall control
(Lib Dem minority)
4, 10 7, 22 9, 28 1, 3
Sunderland Labour Labour 3, 8 21, 63 1, 4
Tameside Labour Labour 2, 6 17, 51
Trafford Conservative Conservative 12, 33 9, 27 1, 3
Wakefield Labour Labour 1, 6 17, 54 2, 2 1, 1
Walsall No overall control No overall control
(Lab minority)
6, 21 9, 30 0, 3 3, 3 1, 3
Wigan Labour Labour 1, 2 23, 62 1, 11
Wirral Labour Labour 8, 22 11, 37 2, 6 1,1Grn
Wolverhampton Labour Labour 4, 12 15, 45 0, 2 1, 1
Totals 117,
373
563,
1,741
62,
189
33,
37
28,
104

Unitary authorities

edit

Two unitary authorities had all of their seats up for election following boundary changes.

Council Previous control Result
Con Lab LD UKIP
Milton Keynes No overall control No overall control (Lab minority) 18 25 13 1
Slough Labour Labour 8 33 1

One third of the council seats were up for election in 17 unitary authorities (elected and totals shown).

Council  Previous control Result
Con Lab LD UKIP Ind Others
Blackburn with Darwen   Labour won the most seats 4 16 1
Labour Labour 12 48 4
Bristol     6 10 6 1 - 3 Green
No overall control No overall control 15 31 16 1 1 6 Green
Derby     6 8 3 1 -
Labour Labour 14 27 7 2 1
Halton   Labour won the most seats 16 1
Labour Labour 2 51 3
Hartlepool   Labour won the most seats 1 6 2 2
Labour Labour 3 19 2 9
Kingston upon Hull   Labour won the most seats 1 12 7 - -
Labour Labour 2 37 15 1 4
North East Lincolnshire     3 3 2 7
Labour No overall control
(Labour minority)
10 21 3 8
Peterborough     10 2 3 3 2
Conservative No overall control
(Conservative minority)
28 12 4 3 10
Plymouth     9 7 3
Labour Labour 24 30 3
Portsmouth     5 - 3 6 -
Liberal Democrats No overall control (Con
with UKIP & Lab support)
12 4 19 6 1
Reading   Labour won the most seats 2 11 1 2 Green
Labour Labour 10 31 2 3 Green
Southampton     8 8 1
Labour Labour 18 28 2
Southend-on-Sea     4 4 1 5 4 -
Conservative No overall control
(Ind/Lab/LD coalition)
19 9 5 5 10
Swindon   Conservatives won most seats 11 8 1
Conservative Conservative 30 23 4
Thurrock     5 6 5 -
Labour No overall control
(Labour minority)
18 23 6 2
Warrington   Labour won the most seats 1 15 5
Labour Labour 3 43 11
Wokingham   Conservatives won most seats 15 1 2 -[9]
Conservative Conservative 44 1 7 2
Totals   seats won in May 2014 91 133 36 33 9 5 Green
Total membership of new councils 264 438 100 37 42 9 Green
source: BBC News, retrieved June 2014 Cons Lab LD UKIP Ind others

Non-metropolitan districts

edit

Whole council

edit
  • Two district councils had all of their seats up for election following boundary changes
Council Previous control Result
Con Lab LD Others
Hart No overall control No overall control 14 9 10
Three Rivers Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats 10 3 23

Half of council

edit
  • Seven district councils had half of their seats up for election (showing those elected and the new council)
Council Previous control Result
Con Lab LD UKIP Others
Adur Conservative Conservative 9, 20 0, 1 4, 6 1, 2
Cheltenham Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats 4, 11 13, 24 2, 5
Fareham Conservative Conservative 11, 23 3, 5 1, 1 1, 2
Gosport Conservative Conservative 12, 21 2, 6 2, 6 0, 1
Hastings Labour Labour 5, 8 11, 24
Nuneaton and Bedworth Labour Labour 2, 3 14, 28 1,2Grn
0,1Ind
Oxford Labour Labour 17, 33 5, 8 3,6Grn
0,1Ind
Totals 43, 86 44, 92 23, 43 5, 8 7, 19

Third of council

edit
  • 65 district councils had one third of their seats up for election
Council Previous control Result
Con Lab LD UKIP Others
Amber Valley Conservative Labour 4, 21 11, 23 0, 1
Basildon Conservative No overall control Con minority 4, 17 0, 10 0, 1 11, 12 0, 2
Basingstoke and Deane No overall control No overall control Con minority 8, 28 8, 17 3, 9 1, 2 2, 4
Bassetlaw Labour Labour 3, 11 12, 34 1, 3
Brentwood Conservative No overall control LibDem/Ind/Lab coalition 6, 18 1, 3 5, 11 0, 5
Broxbourne Conservative Conservative 9, 26 1, 3 1, 1
Burnley Labour Labour 1, 5 10, 28 4, 12
Cambridge No overall control Labour 0, 1 10, 25 4, 14 1, 2
Cannock Chase Labour Labour 1, 6 6, 25 1, 2 4, 6 1, 2
Carlisle Labour Labour 7, 19 9, 29 0, 2 1, 2
Castle Point Conservative No overall control Con minority 20, 20 5, 5 0, 16
Cherwell Conservative Conservative 12, 40 4, 7 1, 2 0, 1
Chorley Labour Labour 3, 13 13, 32 1, 2
Colchester No overall control No overall control LibDem/Lab/Ind coalition 8, 23 2, 8 9, 25 1, 4
Craven Conservative Conservative 7, 18 0, 2 2, 10
Crawley Conservative Labour 5, 16 8, 20 0, 1
Daventry Conservative Conservative 10, 28 0, 4 0, 1 2, 3
Eastleigh Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats 2, 4 13, 40
Elmbridge Conservative Conservative 12, 33 2, 6 4, 21
Epping Forest Conservative Conservative 0, 37 0, 1 2, 3 0, 2 0,1Grn
5,14Ind
Exeter Labour Labour 2, 10 10, 27 1, 3
Gloucester No overall control No overall control Con minority 8, 18 3, 9 4, 9
Great Yarmouth Labour No overall control Lab minority 2, 14 1, 15 10, 10
Harlow Labour Labour 3, 11 4, 17 5, 5
Harrogate Conservative Conservative 9, 34 8, 15 2, 5
Havant Conservative Conservative 10, 31 1, 4 1, 1 2, 2
Hertsmere Conservative Conservative 11, 34 2, 5
Huntingdonshire Conservative Conservative 11, 34 0, 1 1, 6 3, 7 0,4Grn
2,3Ind
Hyndburn Labour Labour 2, 8 7, 23 0, 2 2, 2
Ipswich Labour Labour 4, 10 12, 35 1, 3
Lincoln Labour Labour 2, 6 9, 27
Maidstone Conservative No overall control Con minority 5, 25 1, 2 9, 19 4, 4 1, 5
Mole Valley No overall control No overall control 6, 19 4, 15 1, 1 3, 6
Newcastle-under-Lyme Labour Labour 5, 16 11, 32 5, 6 0,5 0,1Grn
North Hertfordshire Conservative Conservative 12, 33 5, 12 0, 3 0, 1
Norwich Labour Labour 8, 21 1, 3 5,15Grn
Pendle No overall control No overall control 5, 19 7, 18 3, 11 1, 1
Preston Labour Labour 6, 19 7, 32 2, 5 0, 1
Purbeck No overall control No overall control Con minority 6, 12 2, 11 0, 1
Redditch Labour Labour 3, 9 6, 17 2, 2 0, 1
Reigate and Banstead Conservative Conservative 12, 37 1, 2 1, 1 1,3Grn
2,8Ind
Rochford Conservative Conservative 6, 26 1, 1 1, 3 3, 3 1,2Grn
1,4Ind
Rossendale Labour Labour 5, 10 6, 24 1, 2
Rugby Conservative Conservative 7, 23 3, 10 3, 7 2, 2
Runnymede Conservative Conservative 12, 35 0, 1 2, 6
Rushmoor Conservative Conservative 8, 24 4, 12 1, 3
St Albans No overall control No overall control Con minority 12, 29 3, 10 7, 17 0,1Grn
0,1Ind
South Cambridgeshire Conservative Conservative 10, 35 0, 1 7, 13 2, 8
South Lakeland Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats 2, 15 0, 3 15, 33
Stevenage Labour Labour 2, 2 34, 34 3, 3
Stratford-on-Avon Conservative Conservative 15, 35 0, 1 3, 12 0, 5
Stroud No overall control No overall control Lab/Green/LibDem coalition 10, 22 6, 20 0, 2 2,6Grn
0,1Ind
Tamworth Conservative Conservative 6, 16 3, 12 1, 1 0, 1
Tandridge Conservative Conservative 13, 34 1, 6 0, 2
Tunbridge Wells Conservative Conservative 14, 38 1, 3 1, 3 0, 2 0, 2
Watford Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats 1, 1 4, 11 7, 23 1,1Grn
Welwyn Hatfield Conservative Conservative 13, 31 4, 14 1, 2 0, 1
West Lancashire Conservative No overall control Con minority 11, 27 8, 27
West Oxfordshire Conservative Conservative 15, 40 1, 5 1, 3 0, 1
Weymouth and Portland No overall control No overall control Lab/LibDem coalition 4, 11 5, 15 1, 6 1, 1 1, 1
Winchester No overall control No overall control Con minority 11, 28 1, 3 7, 25 0, 1
Woking Conservative Conservative 7, 23 1, 1 3, 11 1, 1
Worcester No overall control No overall control Con minority 6, 17 6, 16 0, 1 0,1Grn
Worthing Conservative Conservative 9, 27 1, 7 1, 1 1,1Grn
0,1Ind
Wyre Forest No overall control No overall control 5, 15 2, 9 5, 5 1, 13
Totals 446, 1,348 283, 796 163, 421 66, 88 47, 211

† Elected councillors will hold office for one year only as Purbeck District will adopt whole council elections from 2015.[10][11]

Mayoral elections

edit

There were five mayoral elections.

Local Authority Previous Mayor New Mayor
Hackney Jules Pipe (Labour) Jules Pipe (Labour)
Lewisham Sir Steve Bullock (Labour) Sir Steve Bullock (Labour)
Newham Robin Wales (Labour) Robin Wales (Labour)
Tower Hamlets Lutfur Rahman (Independent) Lutfur Rahman (Tower Hamlets First)
Watford Dorothy Thornhill (Liberal Democrat) Dorothy Thornhill (Liberal Democrat)

In Copeland, there was a referendum to establish a post of directly elected mayor, which passed.

Northern Ireland

edit

These were the first elections to the 11 new 'super-councils' in Northern Ireland, following a reorganisation. These will operate in shadow form for one year, with the current 26 councils existing in parallel.[12]

Sinn Féin (dark green) won more seats than any other party in (1) Belfast, (9) Mid-Ulster, (10) Derry & Strabane and (11) Fermanagh & Omagh. Sinn Féin and the SDLP elected more councillors (14 each) than did any other party in (5) Newry, Mourne & Down . The Democratic Unionist Party (dark orange) won more seats than any other party in each of the other six councils, and won as many as all the other parties combined in (4) Lisburn & Castlereagh.

 
The eleven new districts
 
Leading party in each new council

Party composition of new councils

edit

The party abbreviations in this table are explained in the total-vote table that follows it.

Seats won[7]
Council Total
seats
SF SDLP Alliance UUP DUP TUV Ind Others
3 Antrim and Newtownabbey 40 3 4 4 12 15 2
6 Armagh, Banbridge & Craigavon 41 8 6 12 13 1 1 UKIP
1 Belfast City 60 19 7 8 7 13 1 5 *
8 Causeway Coast and Glens 40 7 6 1 10 11 3 1 1 PUP
10 Derry and Strabane 40 16 10 2 8 4
11 Fermanagh and Omagh 40 17 8 9 5 1
4 Lisburn and Castlereagh 40 3 7 8 20 1 1 NI21
7 Mid and East Antrim 40 3 1 3 9 16 5 2 1 UKIP
9 Mid-Ulster 40 18 6 7 8 1
5 Newry, Mourne and Down 41 14 14 2 3 4 3 1 UKIP
2 North Down and Ards 40 1 7 9 17 1 2 3 Green(NI)
Total 462 105 66 32 88 130 13 15 13
1 * Belfast other: 3 Progressive Unionist, 1 Green Party Northern Ireland & 1 People Before Profit
source:[7]

Votes cast

edit

These elections used the Single Transferable Vote method of proportional representation. Votes and percentages for each party reflect the first preference on each ballot.

Party Councillors % of councillors First preference votes % of FP votes
2011 (notional)[13] 2014 +/- 2011 (notional) 2014 +/- 2011[6] 2014[7] +/- 2011 2014 +/-
DUP 145 130  15 31.4% 28.1%  3.3% 179,436 144,928   27.2% 23.1%  4.1%
Sinn Féin 115 105  10 24.9% 22.7%  2.2% 163,712 151,137   24.8% 24.1%  0.7%
UUP 77 88  11 16.7% 19.0%  2.3% 100,643 101,385   15.2% 16.1%  0.9%
SDLP 67 66  1 14.5% 14.2%  0.3% 99,325 85,237   15.0% 13.6%  1.4%
Alliance 34 32  2 7.4% 6.9%  0.5% 48,859 41,769   7.4% 6.7%  0.7%
TUV 3 13  10 0.6% 2.8%  2.2% 13,079 28,310   2.0% 4.5%  2.5%
PUP 1 4  3 0.2% 0.8%  0.6% 3,858 12,753   0.6% 2.0%  1.4%
Green (NI) 1 4  3 0.2% 0.8%  0.6% 6,317 5,515   1.0% 0.8%  0.2%
UKIP 1 3  2 0.2% 0.6%  0.4% 2,550 9,311   0.4% 1.4%  1.0%
NI21 0 1  1 0.0% 0.2%  0.2% 0 11,495   0.0% 1.8%  1.8%
People Before Profit 0 1  1 0.0% 0.2%  0.2% 1,721 1,923   0.3% 0.3%  0.0%
NI Conservatives 0 0   0.0% 0.0%   1,321 2,527   0.2% 0.4%  0.2%
éirígí 0 0   0.0% 0.0%   2,062 1,756   0.3% 0.3%  0.0%
Workers' Party 0 0   0.0% 0.0%   760 985   0.1 0.2%  0.1%
Fermanagh Against Fracking 0 0   0.0% 0.0%   0 555   0.0% 0.1%  0.1%
Republican Network for Unity 0 0   0.0% 0.0%   0 502   0.0% 0.1%  0.1%
Community Partnership 0 0   0.0% 0.0%   800 388   0.1 0.1%  0.0%
Socialist Party 0 0   0.0% 0.0%   682 272   0.1% 0.0%  0.1%
BNP 0 0   0.0% 0.0%   491 174   0.1% 0.0%  0.1%
Democracy First 0 0   0.0% 0.0%   0 173   0.0% 0.0%  0.0%
Others 0 0   0.0% 0.0%   2,142 0   0.3% 0.0%  0.3%
Independent 18 15   3 3.9% 3.2%  0.7% 32,151 26,682   4.9% 4.2%  0.7%
Total 462 462   100% 100%   660,631 627,777   100% 100%  

Electoral administration

edit

Eligibility to vote

edit

All registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on the day of the election 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,[14] although those who have moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections. Those who were registered to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who has a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) were entitled to vote in the local elections at each address, as long as they were not in the same local government area.[15][16]

Enacting legislation

edit

These elections were held on 22 May 2014 as provided by 'The Local Elections (Ordinary Day of Elections in 2014) Order 2013' (S.I.Tooltip Statutory Instrument (UK) 2013/2277).[12][17][18][19]

See also

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ All vote shares in the infobox are projected national vote shares calculated by the BBC.
  2. ^ Swing figures are between the BBC national projected vote share extrapolation from 2013 local elections, and the BBC equivalent vote share projection from these local elections held in different areas
  3. ^ a b England: 163 councillors (+161 net). Northern Ireland: 3 councillors (+2 net)

References

edit
  1. ^ "BBC Projected National Share of Vote 2014". Elections Etc. Steve Fisher and Jonathan Jones. 24 May 2014. Retrieved 30 April 2018.
  2. ^ Elise Uberoi; Chris Watson; Richard Keen (19 May 2016). "Local elections 2016" (PDF). House of Commons Library. UK Parliament. Retrieved 8 April 2020.
  3. ^ "England Council Results". Vote 2014. BBC News. 28 May 2014. Retrieved 28 May 2014.
  4. ^ "Council Elections 2014". The Guardian. Retrieved 8 April 2020.
  5. ^ a b (Notional)
  6. ^ a b "Northern Ireland Council Elections". Vote 2011. BBC News. 11 May 2011. Retrieved 8 April 2020.
  7. ^ a b c d "Northern Ireland council results". Vote 2014. BBC News. 25 May 2014. Retrieved 8 April 2020.
  8. ^ "Year Tables". The Elections Centre. 19 December 2015.
  9. ^ "Wokingham Borough election results for 22 May 2014". Wokingham Borough Council. 22 May 2014. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 16 November 2014.
  10. ^ Riglar, Kirsty (3 March 2014). "District Council Elections in Purbeck". Purbeck District Council Central Services. Archived from the original on 26 May 2024. Retrieved 3 March 2014.
  11. ^ "Minutes of the special meeting of the Purbeck District Council". Dorset for You. Dorset Council. 21 February 2012. Retrieved 3 March 2014.
  12. ^ a b "European Parliament and council polls on same day". Belfast Telegraph. Independent News & Media. Archived from the original on 20 August 2013. Retrieved 22 August 2013.
  13. ^ Whyte, Nicholas (6 April 2014). "The 11 new district councils – projecting the 2011 votes". Slugger O'Toole. Retrieved 23 April 2014.
  14. ^ "The Representation of the People (Form of Canvass) (England and Wales) Regulations 2006, Schedule Part 1". Legislation.gov.uk. 13 October 2011. Retrieved 7 December 2012.
  15. ^ "Students". About my Vote. Electoral Commission. Archived from the original on 22 August 2013. Retrieved 22 August 2013.
  16. ^ "I have two homes. Can I register at both addresses?". Electoral Commission. Archived from the original on 28 September 2008. Retrieved 5 January 2011.
  17. ^ "The Local Elections (Ordinary Day of Elections in 2014) Order 2013". Legislation.gov.uk. Open Government. Retrieved 19 May 2014.
  18. ^ "Ukip chances of 2014 euro election win 'strengthened by polling date change'". The Daily Telegraph. 26 June 2013. Retrieved 27 June 2013. (subscription required)
  19. ^ "England local elections 2014". Local Government Information Unit. Archived from the original on 10 November 2013. Retrieved 12 March 2013.