A game of two halves
To borrow a cliché from sports commentary, this year’s local elections can be interpreted as a ‘game of two halves’.
To borrow a cliché from sports commentary, this year’s local elections can be interpreted as a ‘game of two halves’.
The vaccine rollout provided a spring electoral bounce for the governments of all three nations of Britain.
Our ‘first past the post’ electoral system has two key characteristics when translating votes into seats.
It is nearly half a century since the last wholesale review of English local government in 1973 created a pattern of county and constituent district councils. Much has happened since then, of course.
The unprecedented decision to stage two cycles of English local elections at the same time means that we need to focus on the contrasting past outcomes in two separate years to make any sense of what might happen this May.
The vaccine rollout provided a spring electoral bounce for the governments of all three nations of Britain.
A long-standing issue for local government has been the recruitment of women councillors, with the LGA’s 2018 councillor census showing 36 per cent were female.
In recent years it has become more common for members of Parliament to quit the party under whose banner they were elected and sit either as Independents or for one of their former rivals.
The Electoral Commission has reported that the Hersham Village Society received more than £200,000 left to it in a local resident’s will. Various other residents’ associations in Elmbridge must be envious of such largesse.
Local electoral administrators, unsung heroes of democracy, have become used to conducting combined elections in recent years. But May 2021 will present many of them in England with their biggest challenge yet.