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1973 Greater London Council election

Local election in England


Local election in England

FieldValue
election_name1973 Greater London Council election
countryUnited Kingdom
flag_imageFlag of Greater London.svg
typeparliamentary
ongoingno
party_colouryes
previous_election1970 Greater London Council election
previous_year1970
next_election1977 Greater London Council election
next_year1977
seats_for_election92 councillors
majority_seats47
election_date12 April 1973
image1colour1 =
leader1Reg Goodwin
leaders_seat1Bermondsey
party1Labour Party (UK)
seats1**58**
seat_change1**23**
popular_vote1**928,034**
percentage1**47.4%**
swing1**7.5%**
leader2Desmond Plummer
leaders_seat2St Marylebone
party2Conservative Party (UK)
seats232
seat_change233
popular_vote2743,123
percentage238.0%
swing212.6%
leader3Stanley Rundle
leaders_seat3Richmond
party3Liberal Party (UK)
seats32
seat_change32
popular_vote3244,703
percentage312.5%
swing37.1%
map_imageGreater London Council election, 1973.svg
map_captionResults by electoral division
titleLeader
posttitleLeader after election
before_electionDesmond Plummer
before_partyConservative
after_electionReg Goodwin
after_partyLabour

The fourth election to the Greater London Council (GLC) was held on 12 April 1973. Labour won a large majority of 58 seats to 32 for the Conservatives; the Liberals also won their first two seats on the council.

Electoral arrangements

As there had been a boundary commission report with new Parliamentary constituencies which coincided with the border of Greater London, the electoral system was changed (as had always been intended) so that the GLC was elected from single member electoral divisions which were identical with the Parliamentary constituencies.

Councillors were elected for a three-year term. This was extended for an extra year in 1976 when the electoral cycle was switched to four-yearly.

Results

General election of councillors

The Labour Party won a majority of seats at the election.

With an electorate of 5,313,470, there was a turnout of 36.8%.

Among those who were first elected to the GLC in 1973 were Ken Livingstone (Labour, Lambeth, Norwood), later to lead it, Andrew McIntosh (Labour, Haringey, Tottenham) who was his brief moderate rival for the Labour leadership, and Serge Lourie (Labour, Havering, Hornchurch), who became a founder member of the SDP and leader of Richmond upon Thames London Borough Council in 2001.

PartyVotesSeatsNumber%+/-StoodSeats%+/-
**928,034****47.4****7.5****92****58****63.0****23**
743,12338.012.6923234.833
244,70312.57.16022.22
11,9540.61.22800.0
9,5360.5*New*600.0
Residents' or Ratepayers'5,5160.3*New*300.0
4,2110.20.11500.0
3,0630.20.4600.0
2,9240.1*New*100.0
2,3930.1*New*200.0
1,6120.11100.0
2270.0*New*100.0

Aldermanic election

In addition to the 92 elected councillors, there were fifteen aldermen elected by the council. Eight aldermen elected in 1970 continued to serve until 1976 and the eight elected in 1967 retired before the 1973 election. Seven aldermen were elected by the council on 4 May 1973 to serve until 1979.

Aldermen elected in 1973, to retire in 1979:

PartyAlderman

The aldermen divided 9 Labour and 6 Conservative, so that Labour had 67 members to 38 for the Conservatives following the aldermanic election. It would be the final election of aldermen to the council, with those elected in 1970 and 1973 having their terms altered to all end in 1977.

Constituency results

Members of the old council*

Barking

Barnet

Bexley

Brent

Bromley

Camden

  • Fierz - Anti-Redevelopment
  • Goulstone - Great Joint Happiness Homes for All

Croydon

Ealing

Enfield

Greenwich

Hackney

Curtis - Parent Action Group for Education

Hammersmith

Ashworth - Centre Party

Haringey

Harrow

Havering

Hillingdon

Hounslow

Islington

Kensington and Chelsea

Kingston upon Thames

Scruby - Surbiton Residents & Ratepayers

Lambeth

  • Jackson - Anti-Motorway, Support Community Involvement in Planning
  • Solomon - Lambeth Residents for Democratic Local Government Boaks - Air Road Public Safety White Resident

Lewisham

Merton

Newham

Ower - Ratepayers & Citizens Association

Redbridge

Richmond upon Thames

Southwark

Sutton

Tower Hamlets

Waltham Forest

Wandsworth

Westminster and the City of London

Wilson - Anti-Mass Redevelopment

By-elections 1973–1977

The first by-election of the term was caused by the court voiding the election in Croydon North East (see Morgan v Simpson). The former Conservative member Billie Morgan regained the seat she had narrowly lost in Croydon North East on 5 September 1974. Labour retained seats in Greenwich on 24 October 1974 and Dagenham on 30 January 1975 caused by the deaths of sitting councillors. The Conservatives kept their seat in Finchley on 15 May 1975 caused by the resignation of Roland Freeman and St Marylebone on 8 April 1976 caused by the resignation of former GLC leader Desmond Plummer.

There was one aldermanic by-election caused by the resignation of Oliver Piers Stutchbury (Labour) in 1976. Alfred Frederick Joseph Chorley (Labour) was elected by the council on 21 September 1976, to serve until 1977.

Notes

References

References

  1. (17 February 1976). "The London Councillors Order 1976".
  2. (12 April 1973). "Greater London Council Election".
  3. "GLC Election Results Summaries".
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