2021 Oxfordshire County Council election

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2021 Oxfordshire County Council election

 2017 May 6, 2021 (2021-05-06) 2025 

All 63 seats to Oxfordshire County Council
32 seats needed for a majority
Turnout40.4%
  First party Second party Third party
  Blank Blank Blank
Party Conservative Liberal Democrats Labour
Seats before 27 13 13
Seats won 21 21 16
Seat change Decrease10 Increase8 Increase2
Popular vote 80,993 56,675 46,997
Percentage 36.9% 25.8% 21.4%

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
  Blank Blank Blank
Party Green Independent Henley Residents
Seats before 1 8 1
Seats won 3 1 1
Seat change Increase3 Decrease3 Steady
Popular vote 26,302 5,238 2,295
Percentage 12.0% 2.4% 1.0%

Map showing the results of the 2021 Oxfordshire County Council elections.

Council control before election

No Overall Control

Council control after election

No Overall Control

The 2021 Oxfordshire County Council election took place on 6 May 2021 alongside the other local elections. All 63 seats of the Oxfordshire County Council were contested.[1] The council is composed of 61 divisions, each electing either one or two councillors, all elected by FPTP.

Since the last election in 2017, there had been some changes in seat composition. In April 2018, Cllr. Pete Handley was suspended from the Conservatives after calling another councillor a derogatory term.[2] In November 2019, there was a by-election to replace the outgoing Independent councillor in Wallingford; Dr Pete Sudbury of the Green Party won the ensuing contest,[3] providing the party representation after being wiped out at the last election. Three other Conservative councillors resigned the whip and became independents.[4]

The elections took place at the same time as the Thames Valley Police and Crime Commissioner Election, which was due to have been held in 2020, but was delayed[5] by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Although initial counts suggested the Conservatives were on 22 seats, and Labour on 15, there were errors in the Banbury Ruscote division where the Labour vote was mistaken for the Conservative vote and vice versa; this was successfully challenged in the High Court by Labour, and so the final result is 21 seats for the Conservatives and 16 for Labour.[6][7]

Election result

2021 Oxfordshire County Council election
Party Candidates Seats Gains Losses Net gain/loss Seats % Votes % Votes +/−
  Conservative 63 21 0 6 Decrease 10 33.3 36.9 80,993 –4.4
  Liberal Democrats 54 21 8 0 Increase 8 33.3 25.8 56,675 +1.3
  Labour 62 16 3 0 Increase 2 25.4 21.4 46,997 –0.8
  Green 41 3 2 0 Increase 3 4.8 12.0 26,302 +4.8
  Independent 11 1 0 7 Decrease 3 1.6 2.4 5,238 –1.0
  Henley Residents 1 1 0 0 Steady 1.6 1.0 2,295 +0.2
  Reform UK 4 0 0 0 Steady 0.0 0.2 449 N/A
  Freedom Alliance (UK) 6 0 0 0 Steady 0.0 0.2 370 N/A
  SDP 1 0 0 0 Steady 0.0 <0.1 74 N/A
  For Britain 1 0 0 0 Steady 0.0 <0.1 63 N/A
  Burning Pink 1 0 0 0 Steady 0.0 <0.1 34 N/A

Aftermath

The Conservatives suffered big losses in the election, including the County Council leader Ian Hudspeth. The Liberal Democrats, Labour and Greens formed a coalition after the election, therefore ousting the Conservatives for the first time since the Council's formation in 1973.[8][9]

Previously, from '01-'05 the Conservatives had governed in coalition with the Liberal Democrats,[10] '05-'13 in a majority and since '13 working with independent councillors.

Initially, the newly minted leader of the Conservative group proposed a coalition with Labour alongside the one remaining independent councillor, Les Sibley, and Stefan Gawrysiak of the Henley Residents Group.[11] Cllr. Reeves said: "If you look at two things: council tax and the approach to housing and growth, there is actually far more, if we are honest, in common between Labour and the Conservatives than between Lib Dems and Conservatives."

At the same time, talks continued between the Liberal Democrats and the Labour groups.[12] While the Liberal Democrats also formed an alliance with the Green group to form a single group on the council, which will hold 24 councillors.[13]

Eventually, later in May, it was revealed that the Liberal Democrat, Labour and Green councillors had formed an agreement, termed "The Oxfordshire Fair Deal Alliance" which would run the council in a coalition.[14]

The new leader of the council will be Cllr. Liz Leffman (Lib Dem) while the deputy leader will be Cllr. Liz Brighouse (Labour). The cabinet will be split between four Liberal Democrats, three Labour and one Green councillor. The new Chair of the county council will be Cllr. John Howson (Lib Dem) with the Vice-Chair being Cllr. Susannah Pressel (Labour).[15]

Results by division

Changes 2021–2025

References

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