Local Elections

ComradeDavo

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No election round these parts, so no vote for me, but I am very intrested to see what the result is going to be. It appears turn out is acually up, which is surprising!

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/4970794.stm

Sunshine brings local voters out

Police keep a watching brief in the West Midlands
Early signs suggest turnout will be above average in the local elections in England, as voters stream to polling stations in bright sunshine.
Some 144 English authorities and all 32 of London's boroughs are holding votes, as 4,360 council seats are contested. Thirty-six metropolitan authorities and 20 unitary authorities are electing a third of their council members, while 88 districts are also holding polls.

Watford, Hackney, Newham and Lewisham are holding mayoral elections.

And a referendum is taking place in Crewe on whether the Cheshire town should have an elected mayor.

Although 23m people - more than half the UK's electorate - are eligible to take part, turnouts in local elections are historically low, with only about a third bothering to vote.

But there was an early indication of increased turnout in south London's Lambeth Borough, where Labour and the Liberal Democrats are battling for control.

2006 ENGLISH ELECTIONS
32 London boroughs
36 metropolitan authorities
88 district councils
4 mayoral elections


Every council, every election

About 3.5% of the electorate voted in the first two hours at a polling station in key marginal Streatham South ward.

A projection, allowing for the fact that half of those voting traditionally do so after 1700BST - and taking account of postal votes - suggests a final turnout figure of nearly 40% compared with just over 30% last time.

Temparatures in London have reached 26C, making it the warmest day of the year so far.

Late night

Polls will be open until 2200 BST - a change from previous local elections - to bring them into line with the opening hours of polling stations at general elections.

Prime Minister Tony Blair and wife Cherie cast their vote at their local polling station in Westminster.

Conservative leader David Cameron and wife Samantha attended a polling station near their West London home.

Liberal Democrat leader Sir Menzies Campbell does not have a vote, as his home address is in Scotland, where no elections are taking place.


The Blairs arrive at their local polling station in Westminster

The leaders face a long night waiting for results to come in, with a full picture of how their parties have done unlikely to emerge much before dawn.

The first results are due around midnight in the North-West, followed in the early hours of Friday by councils in the Midlands, North and shire counties.

But many London boroughs - where all of the seats are up for grabs, making it a key battleground - are expected to declare between 0300BST and 0600BST.

Police deployed

KEY DECLARATIONS
2200: Voting ends, first exit polls released
0015: Rochdale
0130: Camden
0145: Birmingham
0200: Tower Hamlets
0230: Barking and Dagenham
0245: Hull
0300: Hammersmith and Fulham

Meanwhile, police officers are being deployed at several inner-city polling stations to prevent vote-rigging.

West Midlands Police said officers would be sent to Bordesley Green in Birmingham, where specialist electoral fraud investigators have uncovered alleged irregularities relating to 190 postal votes.

Extra officers are also being deployed in Bradford, where police have launched an investigation into a "small number" of vote fraud claims.


The Camerons cast their vote near their West London home

In the metropolitan council areas, Labour has the most candidates - 821. The Conservatives have 772, Liberal Democrats 708 and others 875.

In the shire districts, the Conservatives are fielding 1,326 candidates, Labour 1,172, the Liberal Democrats 1,052 and others 782.

In total across England, the "others" include 1,251 Green candidates, 363 from the BNP, 319 from UKIP and 162 from Respect - the Unity Coalition.
 
None down here either :(. Seems I will have to wait for my first vote.
 
I just voted. There were three bored looking officials and me in the polling station and not even any Party representatives outside.

I think everyone is enjoying the sunshine (hopefully they'll remember to vote later too).
 
Hotpoint said:
I just voted. There were three bored looking officials and me in the polling station and not even any Party representatives outside.

I think everyone is enjoying the sunshine (hopefully they'll remember to vote later too).
Ah yes, people start to finish work around now so hopefully alot of voters will go to the polls on their way home and vote Lib Dem:)
 
Just voted in Bexley which The times says his a key battle ground going to the vote count later

COME ON THE LIB DEMS
 
I voted absentee for my hometown election a month or so ago.

As my candidate of choice won, it worked out well for me.

May the best office-seeker win!

:beer:
 
You'll be pleased to know that I didn't register; I'd forgot about that when I formulated my 'scare blair' plan. So no unorthodox tactical voting for me this time!

I went to the peak district instead and visited a cave and some great countryside. And I got my visa for China in Manchester so on the 18th it's goodbye Britain. Huraah!
 
I work between 7 and 6:30PM thus I couldn't vote except by mail, but I believe Royal Mail is the Devil's post service. Basically no didn't vote, don't even know who the candidates were.
 
i didnt vote because none of that sort of thing was going on around here, doubt id have voted anyways tbh
 
With only a few results to come, there has been huge losses for Labour and big gains for the Tories.

Tories +250 councillors
Labour -254
Lib Dems +18

Importantly, the Tories have 40% of the popular vote which would be close to a General election victory if this was equally spread out in the whole country.

And what did I hear on the BBC news this morning? “Bong – Blair to reshuffle his cabinet, Bong – Tories fail to make gains in the North”. Yet more obvious bias.

And still the Labour sleaze and incompetence goes on:

1.A foreign prisoner is released and not considered for deportation and is now being held on Terrorist charges :eek:
2. Hain is accused of offering an independent MP a peerage if he agrees to not stand against Labour at the last election. The police are investigating.
3. Blair is now ‘helping the police with their enquiries’ because of his response to poor Welsh election results – “F****** Welsh” he said.
4. Prescott gets a 62 year old woman pregnant. (Ok , ok, believe it or not, I made this one up :) )
 
What amazes me is that
Turnout is estimated at 36% - down three points from 2004
36% thought there was someone worth voting for!

When I quit the LD's for the second time (last year), I told them that they had blown it. Looks like I got that one right!
 
Well, Charles Clarke has gone and I have to say I do have a little sympathy for him. He obviously made some mistakes but I find it hard to lay too much blame on him. I agree with his decision to return to the back benches rather than into a new job.

The Home Office is made an impossible job by this government’s policies of making laws on the hoof; reacting to events only with no forward planning; an impossible to follow immigration policy that is made even harder by all the rules coming at us from the EU.

It is Blair who should have gone, not Clarke.

This reshuffle is the proverbial ‘shuffling the deck chairs in the Titanic’ – or as the editor of the New Statesman said just now ‘somewhere between desperation and desperation’.
 
Seems Lib Dems' victories were indeed cancelled out by their loses. Ming's branding of this as consolidation was not convincing. Great to see Labour getting a thick lip from this. I don't really care if voters confused national politics with their local affairs, Labour are still making life difficult for many local councils. They needed a thick lip, for a number of reasons, both national and local. I was disappointed to see the Tories making advances and taking advantage of Tony Blair's vanity, professed longevity and leadership in the face of some pretty serious mistakes - at the local level, these mistakes are costing citizens.
 
Mega Tsunami said:
3. Blair is now ‘helping the police with their enquiries’ because of his response to poor Welsh election results – “F****** Welsh” he said.
This one is madness, as any English person who's watched rugby Wales v England in a Cardiff pub will tell you. Hell, Plaid Cymru's entire manifesto is basically F****** English.

Anyway, local elections. Thought the LD would do better, and didn't the BNP do well :(
 
The worrying thing for me is this;

BNP doubles number of councillors
...
The biggest gains were in Barking and Dagenham, where it seized 11 of the 13 seats it contested, becoming the second party.

The BNP also won seats in Epping Forest, Stoke-on-Trent and Sandwell.

The party fielded more than 350 candidates and now has 44 seats in England. Before Thursday's local elections it held about 20 of 22,000.

I guess 44 out of 22,000 is not many, but it disturbs me to think that there is a majority who agree with these racists anywhere in the country. I blame the fear generated by the guvment, but hey, what cannot I blame on them? ;)
 
Samson said:
I blame the fear generated by the guvment
..and the lack of opportunity being created amidst the backdrop of these massive manufacturing employers closing down.
 
Samson said:
The worrying thing for me is this;
I guess 44 out of 22,000 is not many, but it disturbs me to think that there is a majority who agree with these racists anywhere in the country. I blame the fear generated by the guvment, but hey, what cannot I blame on them? ;)
south loses tolerance vote then in the great North v south battle?

In seriousness, I didn't vote because I would be voting in a councillor for a town in which I'm only going to be spending a few months, didn't seem fair and thus I didn't vote.
 
Well....the Lib Dems may not have gained anything really (though the BBC is telling me that they have increased their number of council seats by a small amount)....but a higher share of the vote than Labour says something......thats right people, the Lib Dems werre the 2nd largest party in terms of vote share:)

To be honest, I am dissapointed as the Tories did so well, but at least this shows that (apart from Xenocrates;) ) they haven't lost any support after the whole leadership thing.

Charles Clarke is gone:)

And alot of pressure on Blair now....lets hope he's gone soon.

But Margaret Beckett as new foreign secetary?????!!!!!!!!! What is Blair thinking?!! And poor Jack Straw not being able to go visit Condi anymore:lol:
 
Well got back from the cont at bexley Conservatives eased there was through i was disturbed to see how many people in wards with No BNP candidates just wrote in Capital letters BNP although they were spoilt ballots still there seemed a fair few of them
 
ComradeDavo said:
But Margaret Beckett as new foreign secetary?????!!!!!!!!! What is Blair thinking?!! And poor Jack Straw not being able to go visit Condi anymore:lol:
Poor Condi, no more trips to Blackburn :( Where's Beckett from? Please say Hull :)
 
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