Gosport Borough Council

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Kirsten Bradley,
Independent
since 14 May 2025[1]
Peter Chegwyn,
Liberal Democrat
since 19 May 2022[2]
Debbie Gore
since 2023
Gosport Borough Council
Logo
Type
Type
Leadership
Kirsten Bradley,
Independent
since 14 May 2025[1]
Peter Chegwyn,
Liberal Democrat
since 19 May 2022[2]
Debbie Gore
since 2023
Structure
Seats28 councillors
Political groups
Administration (14)
  Liberal Democrat (13)
Other parties (15)
  Conservative (11)
  Labour (2)
  Reform (1)
  Independent (1)
Length of term
4 years
Elections
Last election
2 May 2024
Next election
7 May 2026
Meeting place
Town Hall, High Street, Gosport, PO12 1EB
Website
www.gosport.gov.uk

Gosport Borough Council is the local authority for the borough of Gosport, in the county of Hampshire, England. The council consists of 28 councillors, two or three for each of the 14 wards in the town.[3] The council has been under no overall control since a by-election in January 2026. It is led by the Liberal Democrats, who hold exactly half the council's seats. The borough council is based at Gosport Town Hall.[4]

Gosport was historically part of the parish of Alverstoke. Gosport's first form of local government was a body of improvement commissioners known as the "Gosport Town Trustees", established in 1763.[5] In 1874 the town trustees were replaced by a Local Board (also known as the Urban Sanitary Authority) and the local government district was enlarged to cover the whole parish of Alverstoke, and so the new body was called the "Alverstoke Local Board".[6] The loss of the Gosport name from its governing body was a subject of ongoing debate in the area for some years afterwards, and in 1891 the local board was renamed the "Gosport and Alverstoke Local Board".[7][8]

Under the Local Government Act 1894, such local government districts were reconstituted as urban districts, and so the council became the "Gosport and Alverstoke Urban District Council". On 9 November 1922 the urban district was made a municipal borough and the Alverstoke name was removed from its title.[9][10][11] On 1 April 1974 the district became a non-metropolitan district, altering its powers and responsibilities but keeping the same area and name.[12]

Governance

Gosport Borough Council provides district-level services. County-level services are provided by Hampshire County Council.[13] There are no civil parishes in the borough.[14]

Political control

The council has been under no overall control since a by-election in January 2026, with the Liberal Democrats holding exactly half the council's seats.[15] Prior to that by-election, the council had been under Liberal Democrat majority control since 2022.[16]

Political control of the council since the 1974 reforms has been as follows:[17][18]

Party in controlYears
Labour1974–1976
Conservative1976–1990
No overall control1990–1991
Liberal Democrats1991–1997
No overall control1997–2004
Conservative2004–2006
No overall control2006–2010
Conservative2010–2022
Liberal Democrats2022–2026
No overall control[15]2026–present

Leadership

The role of mayor is largely ceremonial in Gosport. Political leadership is instead provided by the leader of the council (formally the chair of the policy and organisation board). The leaders since 2007 have been:

CouncillorPartyFromTo
Shaun Cully[19]Labourpre-2007May 2008
David Smith[20][21]Liberal Democrats15 May 2008May 2009
Mark Hook[22][23]Conservative14 May 200919 May 2021
Graham Burgess[24][25]Conservative19 May 2021May 2022
Peter Chegwyn[26][27]Liberal Democrats19 May 2022

Composition

Following the 2024 election and a subsequent by-elections up to January 2026, the composition of the council was:[28][29]

Party Councillors
Liberal Democrats14
Conservative11
Labour2
Reform1
Total 28

The next election is due in May 2026.[29]

Elections

Since the last boundary changes in 2022 the council has comprised 28 councillors elected from 14 wards, with each ward electing two councillors. Elections are held in alternate years with half the council being elected each time (one councillor for each ward) for a four year term of office.[30]

Premises

References

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