United Kingdom local elections, 1977
United Kingdom local elections, 1977
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3 May 1977 (Scotland) 5 May 1977 (England & Wales) 18 May 1977 (Northern Ireland) |
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1 Unicameral area, all 6 metropolitan counties, all 39 non-metropolitan counties, 1 sui generis authority, all 26 Northern Irish districts, all 53 Scottish districts and all 8 Welsh counties |
|
Majority party |
Minority party |
Third party |
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|
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Leader |
Margaret Thatcher |
James Callaghan |
David Steel |
Party |
Conservative |
Labour |
Liberal |
Leader since |
11 February 1975 |
5 April 1976 |
7 July 1976 |
Councillors |
12,370 |
7,115 |
950 |
Councillors +/- |
1,293 |
1,098 |
163 |
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|
Colours denote the winning party, as shown in the main table of results. |
Local elections were held in the United Kingdom in 1977. The results were a major mid-term setback for the Labour government, and the Conservatives, the main opposition, comprehensively regained control of the Greater London Council with 64 seats against Labour's 28. Elections were also held in the county councils and in Northern Ireland.[1][2]
The Conservative Party gained 1,293 seats, bringing their number of councillors to 12,370. The Labour Party lost 1,098 seats, leaving them with 7,115 councillors. The Liberal Party lost 163 seats, leaving them with 950 councillors.
Changes were as follows:
- Conservative gain from no overall control - Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Cumbria, Gloucestershire, Hampshire, Hertfordshire, Leicestershire, Lincolnshire, Norfolk, Warwickshire, Wiltshire, Worcestershire
- Conservative gain from Labour - Derbyshire, Northamptonshire, Nottinghamshire, Staffordshire
- Conservative gain from Independent - Isle of Wight
England
Unicameral area
Map of County Council results in England and Wales.
Metropolitan county councils
Non-metropolitan county councils
Sui generis
Northern Ireland
Scotland
District councils
Wales
County councils
References