Banbridge District Council

Banbridge District Council was the local authority of Banbridge in Northern Ireland. It was created in 1973 when the Local Government (Boundaries) Act (Northern Ireland) 1971 came into force. In May 2015, it merged with Armagh City and District Council and Craigavon Borough Council to form one of 11 new local government units. The new council area was named Armagh, Banbridge and Craigavon District Council.

Banbridge District Council
Type
Type
District Council
of Banbridge (district)

District council

The district was divided into three electoral areas: Banbridge, Knockiveagh and Dromore, which between them returned 17 members. Elections of the whole council were usually held every four years and were conducted under the proportional representation single transferable vote system. Notably, Banbridge District Council was the only council controlled by one party (the UUP) from its creation in 1973 until the year 2000[1] when the DUP gained a seat in a by-election in Dromore.[2] Following the May 2011 local-government elections, the UUP retook its position from the DUP as the largest party on the council, winning seven of the 17 seats available. This was one of the few gains made by the UUP in either the local or Assembly elections of that year. Six of the 17 councillors elected in 2011 were women. At 56 percent, turnout in the 2011 elections was the lowest it had been since Banbridge Council was formed in 1973.

In the civic year 2011–2012 UUP councillors Joan Baird and Carol Black served as the head and deputy head of the council. This was the first time in the history of Banbridge Council that the positions of chairman and vice-chairman had been held by women.[3]

Election results

Elections of the entire council were held every four years. The number of seats won by each party is shown below.[4] An election was due in 2009, but this was delayed until 2011 so as to accommodate the completion of a local-government reform programme aimed at reducing the number of council areas from 26 to 11.[5] The proposed amalgamation was abandoned in 2010, and so the 2011 elections returned members for the original 26 councils.[6]

Party 1973 1977 1981 1985 1989 1993 1997 2001 2005 2011
UUP88889109757
DUP0343223565
SDLP1223333332
SF0000000002
Alliance0000010111
Other Unionist3100000010
Independent3111112110
Total seats15151515151717171717
Female councillors-------376
Turnout (incl. spoilt ballots)71.3463.6272.4367.1765.7862.0557.5769.6063.4556.42

Dromore by-election, 2008

In late 2007 UUP Councillor Tyrone Howe resigned due to work commitments.[7] The resulting by election was the first electoral test for Traditional Unionist Voice.[8] Against expectations,[9] the UUP held the seat.[10]

Dromore By-Election – 14 February 2008
Party Candidate Count 1 Count 2 Count 3 Count 4 Count 5
DUP Paul Stewart 1069 1074 1127 1178 1508
UUP Carol Black 912 937 1119 1194 1571
TUV Keith Harbinson 739 742 801 828 -828
Alliance David Griffin 357 479 -479
Sinn Féin Paul Gribben 350 507 567 -567
SDLP John Drake 290 -290
Green (NI) Helen Corry 59 -59
Electorate=9688, valid=3776, spoiled=17, quota=1889

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.