词条 | 2010 Merton London Borough Council election |
释义 |
| election_name = Merton London Borough Council election, 2010 | type = parliamentary | party_colour = | previous_election = Merton London Borough Council election, 2006 | previous_year = 2006 | election_date = 6 May 2010 | next_election = Merton London Borough Council election, 2014 | next_year = 2014 | seats_for_election = All 60 council seats on Merton London Borough Council | turnout = 66.3% ({{increase}}23.4%)[1][1] | colour1 = | party1 = Labour Party (UK) | last_election1 = 27 seats, 34.8% | seats1 = 28 | popular_vote1 = 101,959 | seat_change1 = {{increase}}1 | percentage1 = 39.0% | swing1 = {{increase}}4.2% | colour2 = | party2 = Conservative Party (UK) | seats2 = 27 | popular_vote2 = 94,893 | seat_change2 = {{decrease}}3 | last_election2 = 30 seats, 44.6% | percentage2 = 36.3% | swing2 = {{decrease}}8.3% | colour4 = | party4 = Merton Park Ward Residents Association | last_election4 = 3 seats, 3.0% | popular_vote4 = 7,572 | seats4 = 3 | seat_change4 = {{steady}} | percentage4 = 2.9% | swing4 = {{decrease}}0.1% | colour5 = | party5 = Liberal Democrats (UK) | seats5 = 2 | seat_change5 = {{increase}}2 | last_election5 = 0 seats, 12.0% | popular_vote5 = 47,291 | percentage5 = 18.1% | swing5 = {{increase}}6.1% | map_image = Merton London UK local election 2010 map.svg | map_size = 300px | map_caption = Map of the results of the 2010 Merton council election. Conservatives in blue, Labour in red, Liberal Democrats in yellow and Merton Park Ward Residents Association in white. | title = Council leader | posttitle = Council leader after election | before_election = David Williams | before_party = Conservative Party (UK) | after_election = Stephen Alambritis | after_party = Labour Party (UK) }}Elections for the London Borough of Merton were held on 6 May 2010. This was on the same day as other local elections in England and a national general election.[2] ResultsLabour became the largest party in Merton, defeating the incumbent minority Conservative administration. However, Labour fell three seats short of a majority, so the council remained under no overall control. The Liberal Democrats regained two seats in West Barnes from the Conservatives and the Merton Park Ward Residents' Association maintained its three councillors in Merton Park.[2] {{Election Summary Begin|title = Merton Local Election Result 2010[3]}}{{Election Summary Party||party = Labour Party (UK) |government = yes |candidates = 60 |seats = 28 |gain = 1 |loss = 0 |net = {{decrease}}1 |seats % = 46.7% |votes % = 39.0% |votes = 101,959 |plus/minus = {{increase}}4.2% }}{{Election Summary Party| |party = Conservative Party (UK) |candidates = 60 |seats = 27 |gain = 0 |loss = 3 |net = {{decrease}}3 |seats % = 45.0% |votes % = 36.3% |votes = 94,893 |plus/minus = {{decrease}}8.3% }}{{Election Summary Party| |party = Merton Park Ward Residents Association |candidates = 3 |seats = 3 |gain = 0 |loss = 0 |net = 0 |seats % = 5.0% |votes % = 2.9% |votes = 7,572 |plus/minus = {{decrease}}0.1% }}{{Election Summary Party| |party = Liberal Democrats (UK) |candidates = 44 |seats = 2 |gain = 2 |loss = 0 |net = {{increase}}2 |seats % = 3.3% |votes % = 18.1% |votes = 47,291 |plus/minus = {{increase}}6.1% }}{{Election Summary Party| |party = Green_Party_of_England_and_Wales |candidates = 9 |seats = 0 |gain = 0 |loss = 0 |net = 0 |seats % = 0% |votes % = 1.7% |votes = 4,331 |plus/minus = {{decrease}}2.2% }}{{Election Summary Party| |party = British National Party |candidates = 6 |seats = 0 |gain = 0 |loss = 0 |net = 0 |seats % = 0% |votes % = 0.9% |votes = 2,439 |plus/minus = {{increase}}0.3% }}{{Election Summary Party| |party = Independent (politician) |candidates = 4 |seats = 0 |gain = 0 |loss = 0 |net = 0 |seats % = 0% |votes % = 0.6% |votes = 1,445 |plus/minus = n/a }}{{Election Summary Party| |party = UK Independence Party |candidates = 5 |seats = 0 |gain = 0 |loss = 0 |net = 0 |seats % = 0% |votes % = 0.5% |votes = 1,206 |plus/minus = {{increase}}0.2% }}{{Election Summary Party| |party = Christian Peoples Alliance |candidates = 1 |seats = 0 |gain = 0 |loss = 0 |net = 0 |seats % = 0% |votes % = 0.1% |votes = 149 |plus/minus = n/a }} |} UKIP defectionsOn 15 May 2013, four Conservative councillors defected to the UK Independence Party (UKIP). This included Suzanne Evans, who later became a national UKIP spokeswoman.[4] No by-elections were called as a result of the defections. References1. ^{{Cite web|url=https://data.london.gov.uk/dataset/borough-council-election-results-2010|title=London Datastore|last=|first=|date=|website=data.london.gov.uk|language=en-US|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=24 May 2018}} {{London elections}}{{Greater London elections}}{{United Kingdom local elections, 2010}}2. ^1 2 {{Cite web|url=http://www.londoncouncils.gov.uk/elections2010/boroughs/merton/default.htm|title=Merton|date=7 May 2010|publisher=London Councils|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100510020058/http://www.londoncouncils.gov.uk/elections2010/boroughs/merton/default.htm|archivedate=10 May 2010|deadurl=yes|accessdate=9 May 2010}} 3. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.andrewteale.me.uk/leap/results/2010/28/|title=Merton Council Election Results 2010|date=|publisher=Local Elections Archive Project|deadurl=|accessdate=14 June 2018}} 4. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.yourlocalguardian.co.uk/news/10423642.Councillors_left__open_mouthed__by_shock_resignation_of_four_senior_Tories/|title=Councillors left 'open mouthed' by shock resignation of four senior Tories|last=May|first=Lauren|date=16 May 2013|website=Your Local Guardian|language=en|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=22 May 2018}} 3 : Council elections in the London Borough of Merton|2010 London Borough council elections|May 2010 events |
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