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London Liberal Democrats

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
London Liberal Democrats
Leader in the London AssemblyHina Bokhari
Preceded byProgressive Party (1888 - 1926)
Liberal Party (1926 - 1988)
Headquarters8–10 Great George Street,
London, SW1[1]
Youth wingLondon Young Liberals
Ideology
Political positionCentre[7][8] to
centre-left[3][9][10]
National affiliationLiberal Democrats
Colours  Yellow[11]
London House of Commons seats
6 / 75
London Assembly
2 / 25
Local councillors in London
181 / 1,817
Council control in London
3 / 32
Website
londonlibdems.org.uk/

The London Liberal Democrats are the regional party of the Liberal Democrats that operates in Greater London. The organisation is a part of the English Liberal Democrats.

Mayoral candidates

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In 2008, Brian Paddick became the first openly LGBT candidate to run for a mainstream political party for the role of Mayor of London.[12]

Election Candidate Results
2000 Susan Kramer Red XN Not Elected
2004 Simon Hughes Red XN Not Elected
2008 Brian Paddick Red XN Not Elected
2012 Brian Paddick Red XN Not Elected
2016 Caroline Pidgeon Red XN Not Elected
2021 Luisa Porritt Red XN Not Elected
2024 Rob Blackie Red XN Not Elected

Current representatives

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Members of Parliament

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Since the 2024 United Kingdom general election in London:

London Assembly members

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Councillors

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Council Councillors Leaders
Barking and Dagenham
0 / 51
Barnet
0 / 63
Bexley
0 / 63
Brent
3 / 57
Anton Georgiou
Bromley
5 / 58
Julie Ireland
Camden
4 / 55
Tom Simon
Croydon
1 / 70
Ealing
6 / 70
Gary Malcolm
Enfield
0 / 63
Greenwich
0 / 55
Hackney
0 / 57
Hammersmith and Fulham
0 / 50
Haringey
7 / 57
Luke Cawley-Harrison
Harrow
0 / 55
Havering
0 / 55
Hillingdon
0 / 53
Hounslow
0 / 62
Islington
0 / 51
Kensington and Chelsea
2 / 50
Linda Wade
Kingston upon Thames
41 / 48
Andreas Kirsch
Lambeth
3 / 63
Donna Harris
Lewisham
0 / 54
Merton
17 / 57
Anthony Fairclough
Newham
0 / 66
Redbridge
0 / 61
Richmond upon Thames
49 / 54
Gareth Roberts
Southwark
11 / 63
Victor Chamberlain
Sutton
29 / 55
Ruth Dombey
Tower Hamlets
0 / 45
Waltham Forest
0 / 60
Wandsworth
0 / 58
Westminster
0 / 54

Electoral performance

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UK general elections

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The table below shows the London Liberal Democrats results at UK general elections since the area of Greater London was created.

Year % of
Vote
Number of
MPs
2001 17.1
6 / 74
2005 21.9
8 / 74
2010 22.1
7 / 73
2015 7.7
1 / 73
2017 8.8
3 / 73
2019 14.9
3 / 73
2024 11.1
6 / 75

Greater London Council elections

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The table below shows the results obtained by the London Liberal Party in elections to the Greater London Council. The GLC was abolished by the Local Government Act 1985.

Date Leader Votes won % of Votes Change Councillors Change Result
1964 N/A
0 / 100
N/A Labour win
1967
0 / 100
Steady Conservative win
1970
0 / 100
Steady Conservative win
1973 Stanley Rundle
2 / 92
Increase2 Labour win
1977
0 / 92
Decrease2 Conservative win
1981 Adrian Slade
1 / 92
Increase1 Labour win

Mayoral elections

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The table below shows the London Liberal Democrats results in London Mayoral elections since 2000.

Election Candidate 1st Round vote % Position
2000 Susan Kramer 203,452 11.9%
4th
2004 Simon Hughes 284,647 15.3%
3rd
2008 Brian Paddick 235,585 9.8%
3rd
2012 Brian Paddick 91,774 4.2%
4th
2016 Caroline Pidgeon 120,005 4.6%
4th
2021 Luisa Porritt 111,716 4.4%
4th
2024 Rob Blackie 145,184 5.8%
3rd

Assembly elections

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The table below shows the London Liberal Democrats results in London Assembly elections since 2000.

Election Leader Votes (constituency) Votes (region) Seats
# % # %
2000 Graham Tope 299,998 18.9 245,555 14.8
4 / 25
2004 Graham Tope 332,237 18.4 316,218 16.9
5 / 25
2008 Mike Tuffrey 330,018 13.7 252,556 11.2
3 / 25
2012 Caroline Pidgeon 193,842 8.8 150,447 6.8
2 / 25
2016 Caroline Pidgeon 195,820 7.5 165,580 6.3
1 / 25
2021 Caroline Pidgeon 266,595 10.26 189,522 7.3
2 / 25

Local elections

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Year % of
Vote
Number of
Councillors
Number of
Councils
1964
16 / 1,859
0 / 32
1968
10 / 1,863
0 / 32
1971
9 / 1,863
0 / 32
1974 13.1
27 / 1,867
0 / 32
1978 7.1
30 / 1,908
0 / 32
1982 24.6
124 / 1,914
0 / 32
1986 24.0
249 / 1,914
3 / 32
1990 14.2
229 / 1,914
3 / 32
1994 22.0
323 / 1,917
3 / 32
1998 20.8
301 / 1,917
2 / 32
2002 20.6
307 / 1,861
3 / 32
2006 20.7
316 / 1,861
3 / 32
2010 22.4
246 / 1,861
2 / 32
2014 10.6
116 / 1,861
1 / 32
2018 13.0
152 / 1,861
3 / 32
2022 14.4
177 / 1,817
3 / 32
Best historic result by borough
Borough Election Best seats Role in council Current seats
Barking and Dagenham 1986
5 / 48
Opposition
0 / 51
Barnet 1964
6 / 63
3rd Party
0 / 63
Bexley 1994
14 / 62
3rd Party
0 / 62
Brent 2006
27 / 63
Joint control
with Conservatives
3 / 57
Bromley 1998
27 / 60
Joint control
with Labour
5 / 58
Camden 2006
20 / 54
Joint control
with Conservatives
4 / 55
Croydon 2002
1 / 70
3rd Party
1 / 70
Ealing 2022
6 / 70
Opposition
6 / 70
Enfield 1974
1 / 60
3rd Party
0 / 54
Greenwich 1986
5 / 62
3rd Party
0 / 51
Hackney 1998
17 / 60
3rd Party
0 / 57
Hammersmith and Fulham 1982
2 / 50
3rd Party
0 / 46
Haringey 2006
27 / 57
Opposition
7 / 57
Harrow 1994
29 / 63
Minority
0 / 63
Havering 1990
6 / 63
4th Party
0 / 54
Hillingdon 1986
6 / 63
3rd Party
0 / 65
Hounslow 1994
5 / 60
3rd Party
0 / 60
Islington 2002
38 / 48
Overall control
0 / 48
Kensington and Chelsea 2010
2 / 50
3rd Party
1 / 50
Kingston upon Thames 2018
39 / 48
Overall control
41 / 48
Lambeth 2002
28 / 63
Joint control
with Conservatives
3 / 63
Lewisham 2002
17 / 54
Opposition
0 / 54
Merton 2022
17 / 57
Opposition
17 / 57
Newham 1982
6 / 60
Opposition
0 / 60
Redbridge 2006
9 / 62
Opposition
0 / 63
Richmond upon Thames 1986
49 / 52
Overall control
48 / 54
Southwark 2002
30 / 63
Joint control
with Conservatives
11 / 63
Sutton 2002
47 / 56
Overall control
29 / 55
Tower Hamlets 1990
30 / 50
Overall control
0 / 45
Waltham Forest 2006
19 / 60
Opposition
0 / 60
Wandsworth 1982
1 / 61
3rd Party
0 / 60
Westminster City 2010
0 / 61
No presence
0 / 60

References

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  1. ^ "Revealed: The Liberal Democrats' new HQ". Lib Dem Voice. 21 May 2011. Archived from the original on 24 May 2013. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
  2. ^ Hans Slomp (2011). Europe, A Political Profile: An American Companion to European Politics [2 volumes]: An American Companion to European Politics. ABC-CLIO. p. 343. ISBN 978-0-313-39182-8.
  3. ^ a b Alistair Clark (2012). Political Parties in the UK. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 86–93. ISBN 978-0-230-36868-2.
  4. ^ Andrew Heywood (2011). Essentials of UK Politics. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 126–128. ISBN 978-0-230-34619-2.
  5. ^ "Brexit". Liberal Democrats. 17 April 2018.
  6. ^ Elgot, Jessica (28 May 2017). "Tim Farron: Lib Dems' pro-European strategy will be proved right". The Guardian.
  7. ^ Mark Kesselman; Joel Krieger; William A. Joseph (2018). Introduction to Comparative Politics: Political Challenges and Changing Agendas. Cengage Learning. p. 71. ISBN 978-1-337-67124-8.
  8. ^ Mance, Henry (13 March 2016). "Lib Dems aim for centrist voters with tax platform". Financial Times. Retrieved 18 February 2017.
  9. ^ Thomas Quinn; Judith Bara; John Bartle (2013). "The UK Coalition Agreement of 2010: Who Won?". In Justin Fisher; Christopher Wlezien (eds.). The UK General Election of 2010: Explaining the Outcome. Routledge. p. 180. ISBN 978-1-317-96554-1.
  10. ^ Peter King (2011). The New Politics: Liberal Conservatism Or Same Old Tories?. Policy Press. p. 1. ISBN 978-1-84742-853-0.
  11. ^ "Style guide".
  12. ^ Duffy, Nick (26 September 2015). "UKIP picks gay candidate Peter Whittle to run for Mayor of London". PinkNews.
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