2015 Guildford Borough Council election

The 2015 Guildford Borough Council election took place on 7 May 2015 to elect members of Guildford Borough Council in England as one of the 2015 local elections, held simultaneously with the General Election.[1]

2015 Guildford Borough Council election
← 20117 May 20152019 →

All 48 seats on the Guildford Borough Council
25 seats needed for a majority
 First partySecond partyThird party
 
Con
LD
GGG
PartyConservativeLiberal DemocratsGGG
Last election34 seats12 seatsNew party
Seats won3593
Seat changeIncrease 1Decrease 3Increase 3
Popular vote74,06835,34420,614
Percentage47%22%13%

 Fourth party
 
Lab
PartyLabour
Last election2 seats
Seats won1
Seat changeDecrease 1
Popular vote17,540
Percentage11%

Map showing the results of the election in each ward

Council control before election

Conservative

Council control after election

Conservative

Results

edit

The result saw the Conservatives win 35 of the 48 seats on Guildford Borough Council, one more than the 34 seat which they won in the previous elections in 2011.

Towards the north and east of the Borough of Guildford, a new party the Guildford Greenbelt Group won three seats, two in Send ward and one in Clandon & Horsley ward. All three of these gains were from the Conservatives. Also in the north and east of the Borough of Guildford, the Liberal Democrats retained their 2014 by-election gain, which they had made from the Conservatives, in Lovelace ward.

Moving from the east and north east of the borough to the town of Guildford itself, the Conservatives made five gains. They gained one of the three Liberal Democrat seats on Friary & St Nicolas ward, plus one of the three Liberal Democrat seats on Stoughton ward, plus the Liberal Democrat seat on Stoke ward. They also gained two of the three seats on Westborough ward, taking one from the Liberal Democrats and one from Labour.[2][3]

The summary table below shows changes relative to the 2011 Guildford Borough Council election results. It does not take account of the interim by-election change in Lovelace ward.

Guildford Borough Council Election, 2015
PartySeatsGainsLossesNet gain/lossSeats %Votes %Votes+/−
 Conservative3554+1724774068[4]
 Liberal Democrats914-3192235344
 GGG330+361320614
 Labour101-121117540
 Green0000034488
 UKIP0000034323
 Independent0000011425
 Peace000000.4555
edit

This article compares the votes obtained in the 2015 election with those obtained in 2011. The percentages obtained per candidate can be found in the full list of ward by ward results further down this page. The source and methodology for calculating percentages are discussed in the reference notes at the foot of the page.

The 2015 Guildford Borough Council election coincided with the United Kingdom general election. This resulted in a significantly increased turnout.

The wards to the west of Guildford town saw the Conservatives win every single seat, by a comfortable margin. In five of the six rural wards to the west of Guildford where there was both a Liberal Democrat candidate and a Guildford Greenbelt Group candidate, it was the Greenbelt candidate, rather than the Liberal Democrat, who was the runner up to the Conservatives.

The voting behaviour in the town of Guildford itself was different from the rural areas. In a clear majority of the rural wards the top two parties were the Conservatives and the Guildford Greenbelt Group. By contrast in the town of Guildford itself, the Greenbelt Group were not in the top two in any of the wards.

The west side of the town had a number of wards where the total number of votes cast for Conservative candidates in that ward and cast for Liberal Democrats in that ward were nearly equal. The closest was in Stoughton which had a total combined vote for Conservative candidates of 4421, versus 4424 for the Liberal Democrats. In Friary & St Nicolas ward, the total combined vote for the three Conservative candidates was 4265. The total combined vote for the three Liberal Democrat candidates was 4254.

In the east side of the town, other than Stoke ward, the Conservative won comfortably in all the wards, with the Liberal Democrats a distant second.

The Labour percentage vote in the town of Guildford itself, if one considers the wards as a whole, was up. However the Labour vote was down in percentage terms in those wards which had a Labour councillor going into the election.

The most dramatic voting change occurred in the eastern rural wards. Traditionally these have contained the Conservative's safest seats. In 2011, the Conservatives won all six of the council seats in Clandon & Horlsey ward, Lovelace ward and Send ward towards the east and north east of the Borough. In 2015, the Conservative only retained two of those six seats; losing three seats to the Guildford Greenbelt Group and seeing the Liberal Democrats retain their 2014 by election gain in Lovelace ward. The long-term future of the Wisley Airfield site, in Lovelace ward, was one of the issues particular to this part of Guildford Borough.[5]

Ash South & Tongham

edit

Ash is to the west of Guildford Borough Council and borders Aldershot further to its west. Ash South and Tongham ward is the southerly one of the three Ash wards. It elects three councillors.

The 2011 elections had seen three Conservative candidates face only 2 Labour candidates and no one else. As a results the three Conservatives had been returned very easily with each candidate getting around 80% of the vote. The 2015 elections were more competitive. Three Conservatives, two Liberal Democrats, one Labour and one Guildford Greenbelt candidate stood for this ward. The three Conservatives won between 63% and 69% of the vote. Two new councillors for the area, Nigel Kearse and Paul Spooner, were amongst those elected. The two Liberal Democrat, one Labour and one Guildford Green Belt candidates each obtained votes in the 20% to 30% region.

Ash Vale

edit

Ash Vale is the northerly of the three Ash wards. It elects two councillors.

The Liberal Democrats had not put up candidates in either the Ash South & Tongham ward or the Ash Vale ward in the 2011 elections. In 2015 two Liberal Democrats and two Conservatives competed in this ward. The Conservatives won.

There was a noticeable difference between the vote of the top Conservative candidate (71%) and that of the second candidate (60%). By contrast the two Liberal Democrat candidates, in Ash Vale ward, were only 2 vote apart from one another.

Ash Wharf

edit

Ash Wharf is the central of the three Ash wards. It elects two candidates.

In both the 2011 elections and the 2015 elections, four years later, the top Conservative candidate, in Ash Wharf, obtained 63.3% of the vote.

West Rural Guildford

edit

Normandy

edit

Normandy elects one councillor. It is the ward between Guildford (the town) and Ash.

The Conservatives held Normandy ward, in 2015, with a majority of 644 over the second placed Guildford Greenbelt candidate. The Liberal Democrats fell back to fourth, behind the Labour candidate. The Liberal Democrats only obtaining around 7% of the vote in a seat they (and their SDP-Liberal Alliance predecessors) had held between 1987 and 1999. New councillor for the area David Bilbe was elected.

Pilgrims

edit

Pilgrims ward covers a number of small villages along the North Downs. It elects one councillor.

Conservative Tony Rooth was re-elected with 61.9% of the vote, with the Guildford Greenbelt candidate, on 14.6%, in second place.

Pirbright

edit

Pirbright elects one councillor.

The previous three contests in Pirbright have been straight Conservative versus Liberal Democrat fights. This time in addition to Conservative and Liberal Democrat candidates, there was a Guildford Greenbelt candidate.

The Conservative share of the vote has remained within a fairly consistent range, in Pirbright, over the last decade. It was roughly 66% in 2007, 64% in a by election in 2010 and 71% in 2011. In 2015, it was 66%. Existing councillor, Gordon Jackson, was re-elected.

Shalford

edit

Shalford borders Guildford town to its south west. It elects two councillors. The ward includes Artington and Compton as well as Shalford.

Shalford was one of a number of wards in Guildford where the Conservatives retained the seat in 2015, but with new candidates. Michael Illman and Michael Parsons were elected with a majority that fell slightly from the Conservatives 2011 majority of 746, to 669. The runner up was the Guildford Greenbelt Group.

Worplesdon

edit

Worplesdon ward borders the town to the north and north west of Guildford. It elects three councillors. It includes a substantial amount of town overspill in addition to villages like Worplesdon and Wood Street village.

The Conservatives retained their three seats in Worplesdon ward. Their majority increased slightly from 399, in 2011, to 426 in 2015. Existing councillors for the area David Elms, Bob McShee and Iseult Roche were re-elected. The Guildford Greenbelt Group were the runners up. The Liberal Democrat vote fell to around 15% (in 2011 it had been in the 32-35% range).

Guildford Town - West Side

edit

Friary & St Nicolas

edit

Friary & St Nicolas ward elects three councillors. The Friary bit of this ward covers most of the town centre, stretching slightly to its north. The St Nicolas bit of the ward is on the other side (the west side) of the River Wey and covers the south west part of the town.

Prior to the 2015 elections all the councillors, since 1983, for Friary & St Nicolas had been Liberal Democrats (or their predecessors). However the Liberal Democrat majorities had been consistently falling through a number of elections. In 2003 the Liberal Democrat majority had been 1014, in 2007 it was 553, and in 2011 it fell to 241. In 2015, the Conservatives took one of the three Liberal Democrats seats on Friary & St Nicolas ward.

Onslow

edit

Onslow include Onslow Village, Guildford Park and the University of Surrey. The ward elects three councillors.

In the previous eight full council elections in Onslow, half the time three Liberal Democrats had been elected and the other half of the time two Liberal Democrats and one Conservative had been elected. In 2015, the result in Onslow was, once again, two Liberal Democrats and one Conservative.

The top Labour, Green and Guildford Greenbelt candidates all obtained between 21% and 23% of the vote

The gap between the top Conservative candidate in Onslow and the bottom one was around 14% of the total vote. The gap between the top Greenbelt candidate and the bottom one was between 9 and 10% of the total vote. The gap between the top Labour candidate and the bottom one was between 8 and 9% of the total vote; which tends to indicate that there was a lot of voting splitting between the parties, or plumping for just one candidate.

Stoughton

edit

Stoughton is to the north west of Guildford. It elects three councillors.

Stoughton was one of three wards to the west of Guildford in which a Conservative topped the poll, followed by two Liberal Democrats. The other two wards were Friary & St Nicolas and Onslow wards.

The Liberal Democrat in third place beat the Conservative in fourth by six votes. Third gets elected, fourth doesn't.

Westborough

edit

Westborough ward includes Westborough and Park Barn. Park Barn was largely built as a council estate. Westborough ward elects three councillors.

Throughout most of its history, as a council ward, Labour have held all three of the Westborough council seats.

Westborough became a ward on Guildford Municipal Borough Council in 1933, as the boundaries of the town were extended to the west around that time, necessitating a new ward in that area. Between 1933 and 2014, the Conservatives won only once in Westborough ward, in 1968,[6] a year where Labour did very poorly in local elections throughout England and the Conservative gained a lot of their seats as a result.

In 2015 the Conservatives gained two of the three seats on Westborough ward, one at the expense of Labour and one at the expense of the Liberal Democrats. Existing Liberal Democrat councillor Julia McShane was the other person elected.

Guildford Town - East Side

edit

Burpham

edit

Burpham is towards the north west of the town of Guildford. It elects two councillors.

In the previous three local elections in Burpham (2003, 2007 and 2011), the ward had been a Conservative - Liberal Democrat marginal, where the largest majority had been 137. In 2015, Conservatives Christian Holliday and Mike Piper increased their majority over the top Liberal Democrat candidate, in third place, to 689 votes.

Christchurch

edit

Christchurch ward covers the area east of Guildford from Cross Lanes in the west to Boxgrove Park and Abbotswood in the east. The ward elects two councillors.

Conservatives Matt Furniss and Nikki Nelson-Smith were re-elected with respectively 67.7% and 56.8% of the vote. The top Liberal Democrat, in third place, won 18.2% of the vote.

Holy Trinity

edit

Holy Trinity ward include most of the south part of the town on the east side of the River Wey.

Three new Conservatives candidates were elected to represent Holy Trinity ward in 2015. Their majority over the Liberal Democrat in fourth increasing from the 145 majority the Conservatives obtained in 2011, to 438 in 2015.

Merrow

edit

Merrow elects three councillors.

Other than a period in the 1990s when the Liberal Democrats captured Merrow & Burpham, this has been a safe Conservative ward since the mid 1950s.[6] The Conservative majority over the top placed Liberal Democrat grew from 855 in 2011, to 1348 in 2015.

Stoke

edit

Stoke ward largely consists of Bellfields and Slyfield Green. Much of Bellfields was originally built as a council estate.

Historically Stoke ward, along with Westborough ward, have been the wards in Guildford most likely to vote Labour. In 2011 Stoke ward had a close result which saw one Labour and one Liberal Democrat elected, with the top Conservative 35 votes off second place. In 2015, longstanding Labour councillor Angela Gunning was re-elected. Also elected was Conservative William Chesterfield; who became the first Conservative to be elected for Stoke ward since 1969.

East Rural Guildford

edit

Clandon & Horsley

edit

Clandon & Horsley elects three councillors. It is traditionally the Conservatives safest ward on Guildford Borough Council. 2015 saw two Conservatives and one Greenbelt candidate elected in Clandon & Horsley ward. There was a 40% swing from the Conservatives to the Greenbelt candidates in Clandon & Horsley ward.

Effingham

edit

Effingham is the most easterly of the wards in Guildford Borough. It elects one councillor.

Liberal Democrat Liz Hogger saw her vote increase form 54.7% in 2011 to 60.5% in 2015. In both 2011 and 2015, Liz Hogger got the highest percentage vote of any Liberal Democrat candidate for Guildford Borough Council.

Lovelace

edit

Lovelace consists of the villages of Ripley, Ockham and Wisley. It elects one councillor.

2014, Liberal Democrat, by election winner Colin Cross retained the seat with a 432 majority over the Guildford Greenbelt candidate in second. The Conservatives were pushed into third. Lovelace was the only ward in Guildford where the Conservatives did not finish in the top two political parties in 2015.

Send

edit

Send elects two councillors. Two Guildford Greenbelt candidates topped the poll with a 242 majority over the Conservative in third place. As in Clandon & Horsley ward, there was a 40% swing from the Conservatives to the Greenbelt candidates in Send.

There are twenty two wards on Guildford Borough Council. 36.2% of the votes which the Greenbelt Group got throughout Guildford Borough in 2015 came from just one ward - Clandon & Horsley. A further 13.2% of the Greenbelt's Guildford vote, in 2015, came from Send ward.

Tillingbourne

edit

Tillingbourne includes Shere, Albury and St Martha's. Conservatives Richard Billington and David Wright were re-elected with a 799 majority over the Greenbelt candidate in third place.

Ward by ward

edit
Ash South & Tongham (3 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeStephen Mansbridge 2,299 69.1[7]
ConservativeNigel Kearse 2,199 66.1
ConservativePaul Spooner 2,104 63.3
GGGDiego Colombo99930.0
Liberal DemocratsRebecca White90027.1
LabourBernard Collins74622.4
Liberal DemocratsSandra Robinson66520.0
Majority110533.2
Turnout
Conservative holdSwing
Conservative holdSwing
Conservative holdSwing
Ash Vale (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeNigel Manning 1,767 70.9
ConservativeMarsha Moseley 1,491 59.9
Liberal DemocratsCaroline Johnson81432.7
Liberal DemocratsRosaleen Morgan81232.6
Majority67727.2
Turnout
Conservative holdSwing
Conservative holdSwing
Ash Wharf (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeMurray Grubb 1,761 63.3
ConservativeJo Randall 1,698 61.0
Liberal DemocratsAlan Hilliar98635.4
Liberal DemocratsCarolyn Hilliar95334.2
Majority71225.6
Turnout
Conservative holdSwing
Conservative holdSwing
Burpham (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeChristian Holliday 1,647 55.6
ConservativeMike Piper 1,623 54.8
Liberal DemocratsTed Mayne93431.5
Liberal DemocratsNicole Kale82828.0
LabourAdrian Newton43214.6
LabourBarry Glassberg39713.4
Majority68923.3
Turnout
Conservative holdSwing
Conservative holdSwing
Christchurch (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeMatt Furniss 1,989 67.7
ConservativeNikki Nelson-Smith 1,669 56.8
Liberal DemocratsPaul Hienkens53418.2
Liberal DemocratsNicholas Belfitt50117.0
GreenSam Peters36912.6
LabourJohn Moore2679.1
GGGAndrea Paton2659.0
LabourRajanathan Rajasingham2608.8
Majority113538.6
Turnout
Conservative holdSwing
Conservative holdSwing
Clandon & Horsley (3 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeJenny Wicks 2,345 46.5
ConservativeMatthew Sarti 2,308 45.7
GGGDavid Reeve 2,304 45.7
ConservativeIan Symes228745.3
GGGChris Tailby228045.2
GGGDavid Parker213942.4
Liberal DemocratsIngrid Molossi4518.9
Liberal DemocratsArnold Pindar3356.6
LabourCarolyn Fiddles2785.5
LabourJohn Brown2585.1
IndependentJonathan Hill1102.2
Majority170.4
Turnout
Conservative holdSwing
Conservative holdSwing
GGG gain from Conservative
Effingham (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Liberal DemocratsLiz Hogger 996 60.5 +5.6
ConservativeChristopher Iles51731.4-10.4
UKIPDonna Walker1207.3N/A
Majority47929.1
Turnout1646
Liberal Democrats holdSwing
Friary & St Nicolas (3 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeAlex Chesterfield 1,660 40.3
Liberal DemocratsAngela Goodwin 1,582 38.4
Liberal DemocratsCaroline Reeves 1,461 35.5
ConservativeAlexa Chiltern-Hunt138033.5
ConservativeEwan Mactaggart122529.8
Liberal DemocratsMike Hutnik121129.4
GreenSelina Cartledge90221.9
LabourElizabeth Bullock76018.5
GreenMark Parry60114.6
GGGAnna-Marie Davis49212.0
LabourJennifer Mason48611.8
LabourChris Pegman47811.6
Majority812.0
Turnout
Conservative gain from Liberal DemocratsSwing
Liberal Democrats holdSwing
Liberal Democrats holdSwing
Holy Trinity Ward (3 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeGeoff Davis 2,068 51.8
ConservativeNils Christiansen 2,025 50.7
ConservativeDennis Paul 1,655 41.4
Liberal DemocratsJillian Doran121730.4
Liberal DemocratsSheena Chawatama99124.8
Liberal DemocratsMarike Denyer96724.2
LabourJoe Bullock60615.2
LabourJoan O'Byrne55313.8
LabourLiam Humble47812.0
GGGDaisy Fannin44711.2
GGGCatherine Young41210.3
UKIPJanet Featherstone2716.8
UKIPDavid Sheppard1303.3
UKIPPeter Turvey1082.7
Majority43811.0
Turnout
Conservative holdSwing
Conservative holdSwing
Conservative holdSwing
Lovelace (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Liberal DemocratsColin Cross 735 53.3 +39.0
GGGHelen Jeffries30322.0N/A
ConservativeJulie Iles29021.0-50.0
LabourKeith Chesterton463.3-11.4
Majority43231.3
Turnout1379
Liberal Democrats gain from ConservativeSwing
Merrow (3 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeGraham Ellwood 2,322 56.9
ConservativePhilip Brooker 2,149 52.7
ConservativeJennifer Jordan 2,143 52.5
Liberal DemocratsDeanna Davis79519.5
Liberal DemocratsMarilyn Merryweather75618.5
GGGMike Bruton64515.8
Liberal DemocratsAlexander Thompkins60014.7
LabourMalcolm Hill52412.8
LabourJanet Gosling50912.5
GGGGary Walton47111.5
GreenAna Lynn-Smith43810.7
GreenMorgan Gooch41010.1
LabourTim Wolfenden3779.2
Majority134833.0
Turnout
Conservative holdSwing
Conservative holdSwing
Conservative holdSwing
Normandy (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeDavid Bilbe 1,068 59.9 +22.3
GGGLisa Wright42423.8N/A
LabourRoger Wintfield1598.9+1.8
Liberal DemocratsBruce McLaren1236.9-9.8
Majority64436.1
Turnout1783
Conservative holdSwing
Onslow (3 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeAdrian Chandler 1,293 36.3
Liberal DemocratsDavid Goodwin 1,012 28.4
Liberal DemocratsTony Phillips 984 27.6
ConservativePhilip Hooper91525.7
LabourJames Heaphy81923.0
ConservativeChris Varveris79722.4
Liberal DemocratsGeorge Potter76321.4
GGGRaymond Briggs75021.1
GreenPeter Sims74721.0
LabourDominic Stone60717.1
GGGKaren Stevens58116.3
LabourAlistair Tolan51214.4
GGGPeter Shaw41711.7
IndependentHoward Moss2045.7
PeaceTrevor Jones1724.8
Majority691.9
Turnout
Conservative holdSwing
Liberal Democrats holdSwing
Liberal Democrats holdSwing
Pilgrims (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeTony Rooth 910 61.9 -16.8
GGGRamsey Nagaty21514.6N/A
UKIPGeoff Graham18112.3N/A
Liberal DemocratsSusan Howard16010.9-4.1
Majority69547.3
Turnout1469
Conservative holdSwing
Pirbright (1 seat)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeGordon Jackson 857 66.0 -6.2
Liberal DemocratsMags McLaren24819.1-8.7
GGGRichard Charman17613.6N/A
Majority60946.9
Turnout1298
Conservative holdSwing
Send (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
GGGMike Hurdle 1,524 61.8
GGGSusan Parker 1,187 48.1
ConservativeJulia Osborn94538.3
ConservativeRuss Green77631.5
Liberal DemocratsAnthony Martinelli1777.2
LabourRob Woof1566.3
LabourSue Wayland1325.6
Majority2429.8
Turnout
GGG gain from Conservative
GGG gain from Conservative
Shalford (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeMichael Illman 1,521 53.7
ConservativeMichael Parsons 1,504 53.1
GGGFiona Curtis83529.5
GGGTom Stevens54119.1
Liberal DemocratsTom Sharp50217.7
LabourRose Seber37313.2
LabourMichael Jeram34812.3
Majority66923.6
Turnout
Conservative holdSwing
Conservative holdSwing
Stoke (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeWilliam Chesterfield 855 34.0
LabourAngela Gunning 780 31.0
ConservativeJoshua Martin74429.6
Liberal DemocratsHannah Thompson67827.0
LabourMichael Hassell62624.9
Liberal DemocratsStephen Wright47518.9
UKIPMaureen Craig45918.3
UKIPMalik Azam36414.5
Majority361.4
Turnout
Conservative gain from Liberal DemocratsSwing
Labour holdSwing
Stoughton (3 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeDavid Quelch 1,812 42.4
Liberal DemocratsPauline Searle 1,533 35.9
Liberal DemocratsGillian Harwood 1,466 34.3
ConservativeAndrew Whitby-Collins145834.1
Liberal DemocratsLizzie Griffiths142533.4
ConservativeMalachy Ujam115126.9
IndependentTony Ferris111126.0
LabourRichard Eggleton67315.8
LabourGeorge Dokimakis60014.0
LabourNick Trier55513.0
UKIPTerry Wadman51011.9
UKIPNgaire Wadman42810.0
Majority60.2
Turnout
Conservative gain from Liberal DemocratsSwing
Liberal Democrats holdSwing
Liberal Democrats holdSwing
Tillingbourne (2 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeRichard Billington 2,072 67.1
ConservativeDavid Wright 1,694 54.9
GGGStephen Parker89529.0
Liberal DemocratsVicky Barlow47915.5
Liberal DemocratsAnne Meredith38012.3
LabourJulie Dudley32910.7
LabourEdward Williams2758.9
Majority79925.9
Turnout
Conservative holdSwing
Conservative holdSwing
Westborough (3 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Liberal DemocratsJulia McShane 1,238 35.1
ConservativeElizabeth Hooper 1,235 35.0
ConservativeSheila Kirkland 1,170 33.1
ConservativeChristine Young101628.8
LabourJames Walsh93226.4
Liberal DemocratsFiona White91325.9
Liberal DemocratsSean Packman87524.8
LabourBrian Walter82423.3
LabourAlexander Wilks82123.3
GreenRobert Hardy57716.3
GreenAlan Pavia44412.6
PeaceJohn Morris1915.4
PeaceVali Drummond1022.9
PeaceMohammed Kabir902.5
Majority1544.3
Turnout
Liberal Democrats holdSwing
Conservative gain from Liberal DemocratsSwing
Conservative gain from LabourSwing
Worplesdon (3 seats)
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeDavid Elms 2,069 50.7
ConservativeBob McShee 1,957 48.0
ConservativeIseult Roche 1,628 39.9
GGGNeville Bryan120229.5
GGGJohn Rowland111027.2
UKIPHarry Aldridge77719.0
Liberal DemocratsVictor Seale66716.3
Liberal DemocratsDonna Avory63715.6
Liberal DemocratsKate Creagh58514.3
LabourBrenda Hill56413.8
UKIPMike Pitman50912.5
UKIPGeorge Johnson46611.4
Majority42610.4
Turnout
Conservative holdSwing
Conservative holdSwing
Conservative holdSwing

By-Elections

edit

A by-election was held on 5 May 2016 in Stoke ward following the resignation of William Chesterfield.

Stoke
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourJames Walsh 528 34.8 +9.9
ConservativeBarry Keane49732.8-1.2
Liberal DemocratsHannah Thompson49232.4+5.4
Majority312.0
Turnout1,517
Labour gain from ConservativeSwing

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Upcoming elections & referendums". The Electoral Commission. Archived from the original on 15 March 2015. Retrieved 12 April 2015.
  2. ^ "Guildford Borough Council election : Guildford Borough Council". Archived from the original on 18 May 2015. Retrieved 25 May 2015.
  3. ^ Guildford results Get Surrey, website of the Surrey Advertiser/Herald/Guardian group of newspapers. 8 May 2015. Accessed 22 May 2015.
  4. ^ Councillors by Party, those with four year membership terms commencing 11 May 2015 Guildford Borough Council. Published 11 May 2015.
  5. ^ For example see http://www2.guildford.gov.uk/publicaccess/applicationDetails.do?activeTab=summary&keyVal=_GUILD_DCAPR_148758
  6. ^ a b See Twentieth Century Local Election Results vol 5 Guildford Borough Council compiled by Roger Ottewill, published by University of Plymouth
  7. ^ Ideally one would calculate the percentage figure using the vote for a particular candidate divided by the voter turnout number for that ward. However as the turnout figures were not published in early May 2015 with the results, the closest approximation available to the turnout figure has been used. Percentage figures have been calculated using the votes per candidate number divided by (the total number of votes for all the candidates divided by the number of candidates, then adding the number of spoilt ballot papers to this figure). Where there is only one elected candidate this will produce the correct percentage figure as it produces a figure equal to votes per candidate divided by the maximum number of votes which that candidate could have obtained on that turnout. However where there are two or three elected candidates per ward the figure used herein can produce a percentage figure fractionally higher than the true percentage as it does not account for voters who do not vote for their full quota of candidates. This approximation of turnout gives useful comparison between the percentage votes per candidate obtained, however it would not be appropriate to quote it as the actual turnout figure and consequently the turnout figure has been omitted from this table of results at present other than for wards only electing one member.