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Conservative victory in Wirral by-elections (From Wirral Globe)
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Conservative victory in Wirral by-elections
9:59am Friday 18th January 2013 in News By Stephanie Cureton
Conservative victory in Wirral by-elections
WIRRAL Tories came out on top at last night’s by-elections.
Residents in Heswall and Leasowe and Moreton East voted for Conservative councillors following the deaths of Cllr Peter Johnson and Cllr Anne McArdle.
The by-elections leave Labour with 36 seats and still in overall control of Wirral Council, Conservatives have 22 and the Liberal Democrats seven.
Ian Lewis, who lost his Leasowe and Moreton East seat last May, was re-elected in the area while former mayoress Kathryn Hodson pulled in the most votes in Heswall ward.
Heswall saw a turn-out of just 19.7% with Conservatives scoring a majority of 794.
UKIP candidate David Scott received 460 votes; Labour’s Mike Holliday 289; Green Party’s Barbara Burton, 110 and Trade Unionists and Socialists Against Cuts Greg North polled 19 votes.
Councillor Kathryn Hodson said she was now looking forward to working for Heswall residents.
She said: “I am absolutely delighted with the result but am of course saddened by the circumstances in which the by-election took place as Cllr Johnson was a good friend.
“The turn-out was low but that was to be expected due to the weather and the percentage of people voting Conservative has gone up.
“I have been involved in local politics for a long time with my husband Andrew who is also Heswall councillor and as mayoress.
"But my job now is to make a very strong team in Heswall ward and do our utmost to make sure that Heswall get good value for their council tax as they are highest payers in the borough.”
Turn-out in Leasowe and Moreton East was higher at 30.5% with Cllr Lewis getting 1,620 votes while actress and comedienne Pauline Daniels, who stood for Labour, followed closely behind with 1,355.
UKIP candidate Susan Whitham polled 148 votes; Trade Unionists and Socialists Against Cuts candidate, 31; while Green Party’s Jim McGinley and Lib Dem Daniel Clein both received 28 votes.
Councillor Lewis said: “In a general election, most people in Leasowe and Moreton vote Labour but a council by-election is very different from a general election.
“On the doorsteps, people were telling us how they would vote for me, whatever the party, because I was committed to putting the needs of the community first and party politics second.
"Labour fought this campaign on national issues when people wanted a councillor to deal with local problems, and they used negative campaigning when people want positive reasons to vote for someone.
"In what are difficult economic and political times, locally as well as nationally, winning Leasowe and Moreton East was always going to be an uphill struggle.
"However, thanks to a brilliant team of volunteers from the local community and beyond, and fighting this election on local issues, we managed to pull off a fantastic win."
Comments(15)
David Scott
says...
11:35am Fri 18 Jan 13
Wood61
says...
2:58pm Fri 18 Jan 13
Hugo1008
says...
5:53pm Fri 18 Jan 13
If the electors would have had enough sense, they could have spread the trough of plenty into some different location and got more for their money, instead of just more of the same, that has proved to be so ineffectual for the past twenty years.
David Scott
says...
8:41pm Fri 18 Jan 13
Dantealighieri
says...
10:21am Sat 19 Jan 13
PaulCa
says...
11:52am Sat 19 Jan 13
That's what propels and motivates them - along with Tory, LibDem and Torylite Labour.
Be very afraid.
Dantealighieri
says...
1:24pm Sat 19 Jan 13
PaulCa
says...
2:08pm Sat 19 Jan 13
Dantealighieri wrote:Suggest you read and research a lot more of my posts to these comments pages.
PaulCa- Read your post. Not really a great deal one can say to counter such a erudite contribution to the debate over the UK's future. Still, it's a little better than your last effort on UKIP.That UKIP is a party that appeals to cerebrally challenged terminally stupid right wing nut jobs. I always find that sort of thing highly amusing, mainly because it says more about the limited political intellect of people like yourself, and others, than it ever says about UKIP and its supporters.
All the same, thanks for "Retweeting" my prior contribution.
best regards,
johnhardaker
says...
4:25pm Sat 19 Jan 13
Spy from above
says...
4:15pm Sun 20 Jan 13
Mr Bollo
says...
1:01pm Wed 23 Jan 13
David Scott wrote:Yes 'well done'. 21.6% of a 19.7% turnout makes that.....
My thanks to the UKIP voters in Heswall. At 21.6% of the vote that is UKIP's best result in Wirral ever by a long way.
4.3% of the voting population.
So even in an area like Heswall, where you would expect UKIP to do well, this is seen a good result?
Stunning!
bickyboy
says...
1:34pm Wed 23 Jan 13
The turnouts were lamentable, which says as much about the doppelganger politics of the Big Two as the cliche-strewn, diligently meaningless speeches favoured by their red or blue rosette-wearing tailor's dummies.
David Scott
says...
2:17pm Thu 24 Jan 13
Mr Bollo wrote:Point taken about the turn-out, and yes many people carry on voting simply to 'keep Labour out' or 'keep the Tories out', which means we get more of the same from the old parties.
David Scott wrote:Yes 'well done'. 21.6% of a 19.7% turnout makes that.....
My thanks to the UKIP voters in Heswall. At 21.6% of the vote that is UKIP's best result in Wirral ever by a long way.
4.3% of the voting population.
So even in an area like Heswall, where you would expect UKIP to do well, this is seen a good result?
Stunning!
However, the figures for UKIP in Heswall suggest that something is happening: 2008, 2.1%; 2009, 2.5%; 2011, 5.0%; 2012, 9.3%; 2013, 21.6%.
David Scott
says...
2:25pm Thu 24 Jan 13
bigfoot says...
11:18am Fri 18 Jan 13