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2022 City of London Corporation election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2022 City of London Corporation election
← 2017 24 March 2022 2025 →

100 seats to the Court of Common Council
51 seats needed for a majority
  First party Second party
 
Blank
Blank
Party Independent Temple & Farringdon Together
Last election 85 10
Seats won 78 10
Seat change Decrease7 Steady

  Third party Fourth party
 
Blank
Blank
Party Castle Baynard Independents Labour
Last election 0 5
Seats won 7 5
Seat change Increase7 Steady

Map of results.

Council control before election

No overall control

Council control after election

No overall control

The 2022 City of London Corporation election took place on 24 March 2022 to elect members of the Court of Common Council in the City of London Corporation, England. The election was postponed for a year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Transcription

The City of London is a unique place -- it's the city in a city (in a country in a country) that runs its government with perhaps the most complicated elections in the world involving medieval guilds, modern corporations, mandatory titles and fancy hats, all of which are connected in this horrifying org chart. Why so complicated? Though the new Skyscrapers might make you think the City of London is relatively young, it's actually the oldest continuous government on the Island of Great Britain. The City of London predates the Empire that Victoria ruled, the Kingdoms Anne united and the Magna Carta that John, reluctantly, signed. While the London which surrounds the city only got to electing its first Mayor in 2000, the list of Mayors who've governed the City of London is almost 700 people long going back more than a thousand years. The City of London's government is so old there's no surviving record of when it was born -- there are only documents, like the Magna Carta, which mention the pre-existing powers the City of London already had at that time. While a government like the United States's officially gets its power from the people, and Parliament gets its power from the Crown, (which in turn gets it from God), the City of London gets its power from 'time immemorial' meaning that the City is so old, it just is. And that age brings with it unusual and complicated traditions, the most notable of these, perhaps, is that in city of London elections, companies get votes. Quite a lot actually, about 3/4th of the votes cast in City elections are from companies with the remaining 1/4th from residents. The way it works is that the bigger a company is the more votes it gets from the City of London. The companies then give their votes to select employees who work, but do not live, within the city and it's these employees who do the actual voting at election time. The result is that the Common Council, the bureaucratic beating heart of the City of London, has about 20 common councilors elected by residents of the city and about 80 elected by companies of the city. The reasoning behind this unusual tradition is that for every 1 person who lives in the City of London, 43 people commute in every day. In total that's 300,000 commuters using City services and whose employment depends on the City of London being business friendly. The man in charge of the common council and who heads The City's government is The Right Honorable, the Lord Mayor of London. Now, suppose *you* want to be Lord Mayor, Surely, just as in that other London all you'll need do is a) Be a British, Commonwealth, or EU citizen, who has b) lived in the city for a year, and who c) wins the election Right? No, in The City of London, that's not nearly enough. Ready for the qualifications list? Before you even run for Lord Mayor you need have been a Sheriff of The City of London. But before you can be Sheriff, you need to be an Aldermen. What's an Aldermen? Well, the City of London is divided into 25 wards, and each Ward elects one Aldermen to represent it on the Court of Aldermen -- a sub-section of the common council. Before you can run for Alderman, you need to gain Freeman Status... and who gives out freeman status? Why none other than the very Court of Aldermen you're trying to get elected to. Which might just seem like a conflict of interest. Luckily there is another way to get the freeman status -- join one of the City's Guilds -- sadly, they aren't called guilds, they're called Livery Companies (a name which is both more boring and less descriptive), but the remnants of medieval guilds many of them are and within the City there are 108 of them to choose from including, but not limited to, The Apothecaries The Fishmongers The Masons The Mercers The Scientific Instrument Makers The Bankers The Shipwrights The Wheelwrights The Butchers, The bakers, *Two* different candlestick makers, and the most exciting of all: The Chartered Accountants! Many of these guilds, like the Fletchers, have become charities, but some are still active, such as the Goldsmiths who test the quality of British coinage and the Hackney carriage drivers who license taxi drivers. To join one of these guilds you'll either need to meet the professional requirements, or for the charities like the Haberdashers you'll need the approval of two existing members, others won't tell you how to become a members. If, you meet none of the Livery Companies membership requirements, but you think you'll be a clever clogs and start your *own* Livery Company and grant *yourself* freeman status, tough luck because new Livery Companies need to be approved by, you guessed it, the Court of Aldermen. But let's assume one way or another you get the official freeman status certificate, now you can finally run for Aldermen of a Ward -- after the Lord Chancellor’s Advisory Committee also approves of you. But, that small barrier passed, you can win election as Aldermen in either one of the 4 wards where people live or the 21 wards where companies live. Once on the court of aldermen to continue your path to the Mayor's Office in Guildhall, you must now be elected as sheriff, but this time it's the members of the Livery Companies who pick the sheriffs. So *if* the Livery Company members elect you as Sheriff, *after* you have successfully completed your term *then* you can finally run for Mayor. But, surprisingly the, residents of the City of London don't vote for the Mayor, our old friends on the Court of Aldermen do. So in summary, once you get freeman status from either the court of aldermen or the livery companies and after your ward elected you as alderman and then the livery companies elect you as sheriff and after your term as sheriff ends but while you're still on the court of aldermen then you can run for Mayor. And -- assuming the other aldermen select you, finally take your place as **The Right Honorable, The Lord Mayor of London** -- for one year, with no salary. And you have to cover your own expenses, which will be quite considerable as your new job consists mostly of making hundreds of speeches a year around the world promoting city business. But you do get that fancy hat, which just might make it all worth while.

Background

Elections to the Court of Common Council, the main decision-making body of the City of London Corporation which governs the City of London, take place every four years.[1] In the previous election in 2017, 95 seats were won by independent candidates and the remaining five by the Labour Party.

The election was originally scheduled for 18 March 2021, but was delayed for a year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[2]

It had been proposed that, due to the pandemic, the elections be combined with the 2021 United Kingdom local elections in the rest of England on 6 May. The City's Policy and Resources Committee recommended against this, and suggested July 2021 as an alternative date should the elections need to be postponed.[3][4]

Electoral system

Most residents of the twenty-five wards of the City of London live in the Aldersgate, Cripplegate, Portsoken and Queenhithe. Residents have one vote each, and businesses have a number of votes that scales with the number of employees. Businesses can appoint one employee as a voter for every five staff up to ten voters, with an additional voter per fifty staff beyond that.[5]

Councillors are elected by multi-member first-past-the-post.

Campaign

The Russian state-owned VTB Bank, which had been sanctioned by the UK government over the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, nonetheless received a share of votes.[6]

Overall results

The election resulted in Temple and Farringdon Together and the Labour Party winning the same number of seats as they had done in the previous election, with Temple and Farringdon Together on ten seats and Labour on five. The new Castle Baynard Independents won seven seats, with the remaining seats being won by independent candidates. The Women's Equality Party stood candidates but none were successful.[7] One of the victorious independent candidates was Emily Benn, whose grandfather was the Labour MP Tony Benn.[8]

2022 City of London Corporation election
Party Seats Votes
Count Gains Losses Net Of total (%) Of total (%) Count Change
  Independent 78 2 9 Decrease7 78.0 63.0 12,979 Decrease9.8
  Temple & Farringdon Together 10 0 0 Steady 10.0 13.4 2,752 Decrease7.2
  Castle Baynard Independents 7 7 0 Increase7 7.0 7.9 1,633 New
  Labour 5 2 2 Steady 5.0 15.4 3,172 Increase8.8
  Women's Equality 0 0 0 Steady 0.0 0.3 68 New
Total 100

Ward results

Statements of persons nominated were published on 1 March.[9] Incumbent councillors are marked with an asterisk (*).

Aldersgate

Aldersgate (6 seats)[10]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Helen Fentiman* 499 18.4 N/A
Labour Stephen Goodman 443 16.4 N/A
Independent Annet Rideg 373 13.8 N/A
Independent Naresh Sonpar 351 13.0 N/A
Independent Deborah Oliver 350 12.9 N/A
Independent Randall Anderson* 317 11.7 N/A
Independent Jeremy Mayhew* 260 9.6 N/A
Independent Adam Richardson 113 4.2 N/A
Turnout 2,706 N/A
Labour hold
Labour gain from Independent
Independent hold
Independent hold
Independent hold
Independent hold

Aldgate

Andrien Meyers, Tim McNally, David Sales, Mandeep Thandi and Shailendra Umradia stood together under the name "Aldgate Team".[11]

Aldgate (5 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Andrien Meyers* 203 17.9 N/A
Independent Timothy McNally 195 17.2 N/A
Independent David Sales 194 17.1 N/A
Independent Mandeep Thandi 192 17.0 N/A
Independent Shailendra Umradia 178 15.7 N/A
Independent Camilia Kaerts 88 7.8 N/A
Independent Hugh Morris* 82 7.2 N/A
Turnout 1,132 N/A
Independent hold
Independent gain from Independent
Independent gain from Independent
Independent gain from Independent
Independent gain from Independent

Bassishaw

Bassishaw (2 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Madush Gupta 133 43.3
Independent Ian Bishop-Laggett 114 37.1 N/A
Independent Rajiv Vyas 60 19.5 N/A
Turnout 307 N/A
Independent gain from Independent
Independent gain from Independent

Billingsgate

Nighat Qureishi and Luis Tilleria stood together under the slogan "Build a Better Billingsgate".[12]

Billingsgate (2 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Luis Tilleria 77 28.2 N/A
Independent Nighat Qureishi 75 27.5 N/A
Independent John Allen-Petrie* 62 22.7 N/A
Independent Jamie Ingham Clark* 59 21.6 Decrease19.6
Turnout 273
Independent gain from Independent
Independent gain from Independent

Bishopsgate

Bishopsgate (6 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Simon Duckworth*
Independent Wendy Hyde*
Independent Shavran Joshi
Independent Andrew Mayer*
Independent Benjamin Murphy
Independent Tom Sleigh*
Turnout
Independent hold
Independent hold
Independent gain from Independent
Independent hold
Independent gain from Independent
Independent hold

Bread Street

Emily Benn stood jointly with Giles Shilson.[13]

Bread Street (2 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Emily Benn 105 37.5 N/A
Independent Giles Shilson* 84 30.0 Decrease10.1
Independent Stephen Hodgson 60 21.4 N/A
Women's Equality Harini Iyengar 31 11.1 N/A
Turnout 280
Independent gain from Independent
Independent hold

Bridge

Bridge and Bridge Without (2 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Keith Bottomley*
Independent Timothy Levene*
Turnout
Independent hold
Independent hold

Broad Street

Shahnan Bakth, Christopher Hayward and Antony Manchester stood jointly.[14]

Broad Street (3 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Christopher Hayward* 148 29.4 N/A
Independent Shahnan Bakth 127 25.2 N/A
Independent Antony Manchester 113 22.4 N/A
Independent Elizabeth Corrin 65 12.9 N/A
Independent John Scott* 51 10.1 N/A
Turnout 504 N/A
Independent hold
Independent gain from Independent
Independent gain from Independent

Candlewick

The incumbent councillors James de Sausmarez and Kevin Everett stood jointly; the other candidates, Christopher Boden and James Bromiley-Davis likewise stood as a pair.

Candlewick (2 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent James Bromiley-Davis 75 29.2 N/A
Independent Christopher Boden 67 26.1 N/A
Independent James de Sausmarez* 58 22.6 Decrease26.1
Independent Kevin Everett* 57 22.2 Decrease22.6
Turnout 257 N/A
Independent gain from Independent
Independent gain from Independent

Castle Baynard

Candidates for the Castle Baynard Independents Party are marked CB Independents. Change in voteshare for CB Independents candidates reflect their previous voteshare when running as independents.

Castle Baynard (8 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Martha Grekos 271 14.2 N/A
CB Independents Henrika Priest* 237 12.4 Increase1.1
CB Independents Joan Mary Durcan 224 11.8 N/A
CB Independents Alpa Raja 218 11.4 Increase5.4
CB Independents Graham Packham* 215 11.3 Increase0.6
CB Independents Catherine McGuinness* 211 11.1 Increase0.4
CB Independents John Griffiths 206 10.8 N/A
CB Independents Glen Witney 205 10.8 N/A
CB Independents Michael Hudson* 117 6.1 Decrease3.7
Turnout 1,904 N/A
Independent gain from Independent Swing
CB Independents gain from Independent Swing
CB Independents gain from Independent Swing
CB Independents gain from Independent Swing
CB Independents gain from Independent Swing
CB Independents gain from Independent Swing
CB Independents gain from Independent Swing
CB Independents gain from Independent Swing

Cheap

Cheap (3 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Nick Bensted-Smith*
Independent Tijs Broeke*
Independent Alastair Moss*
Turnout
Independent hold
Independent hold
Independent hold

Coleman Street

Coleman Street (4 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Sophie Fernandes* 142 25.3 Decrease0.7
Independent Dawn Wright* 125 22.3 N/A
Independent Andrew McMurtrie* 113 20.1 Decrease1.9
Independent Michael Cassidy* 98 17.5 Decrease3.8
Independent Saif Masood 83 14.8 N/A
Turnout 561
Independent hold
Independent hold

Cordwainer

The three candidates, elected unopposed, stood jointly.[15]

Cordwainer (3 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Jamel Banda
Independent Alex Barr*
Independent Michael Snyder*
Turnout
Independent gain from Independent
Independent hold
Independent hold

Cornhill

Cornhill (3 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Joanna Abeyie
Independent Peter Dunphy*
Independent Ian Seaton*
Turnout
Independent gain from Independent
Independent hold
Independent hold

Cripplegate

Simon Walsh and Ceri Wilkins stood together jointly.[16]

Cripplegate (8 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Susan Pearson* 686 14.1 Increase0.5
Labour Natasha Lloyd-Owen 617 12.6 Increase2.6
Labour Anne Corbett 616 12.6 Increase2.8
Independent Mark Bostock* 587 12.0 Increase4.1
Independent Elizabeth King 581 11.9 N/A
Labour Frances Leach 549 11.2 N/A
Independent Paul Singh 393 8.1 N/A
Independent Ceri Wilkins 378 7.7 N/A
Independent Shazaah Masood 252 5.2 N/A
Independent Simon Walsh 222 4.5 N/A
Turnout 4,881
Independent hold
Labour hold
Labour hold
Independent hold
Independent gain from Independent
Labour gain from Independent
Independent gain from Independent
Independent gain from Independent

Dowgate

The incumbent councillors Henry Pollard and Mark Wheatley stood jointly.[17]

Dowgate (2 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Henry Pollard* 83 38.8 Decrease1.8
Independent Mark Wheatley* 79 36.9 Decrease0.1
No description Flora Hamilton 52 24.3 N/A
Turnout 214
Independent hold
Independent hold

Farringdon Within

Farringdon Within (8 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent John Edwards* 245 13.8 Increase7.9
Independent Ann Holmes* 240 13.5 Increase4.1
Independent Brendan Barns 204 11.5 N/A
Independent Matthew Bell* 159 8.9 Increase1.0
Independent John Foley 153 8.6 N/A
Independent Eamonn Mullally 148 8.3 N/A
Independent Florence Keelson-Anfu 106 6.0 N/A
Independent Graeme Doshi-Smith* 100 5.6 Decrease1.0
Labour Harry Stratton 87 4.9 N/A
No description Arne Mielken 84 4.7 N/A
Labour Gordon Nardell 83 4.7 N/A
Independent Gillian Kaile 60 3.4 N/A
Independent John Gill 45 2.5 N/A
Independent Joseph Cawley 34 1.9 N/A
Independent Gerard O'Sullivan 29 1.6 N/A
Turnout 1,777
Independent hold
Independent hold
Independent gain from Independent
Independent hold
Independent gain from Independent
Independent gain from Independent
Independent gain from Independent
Independent hold

Farringdon Without

The ten incumbents stood for the Temple and Farringdon Together party, the label they had been elected as in the 2017 election.

Farringdon Without (10 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
T&F Together Wendy Mead* 289 10.1 Increase2.9
T&F Together Greg Lawrence* 286 10.0 Increase3.1
T&F Together Oliver Sells* 283 9.9 Increase3.3
T&F Together Ruby Sayed* 282 9.9 Increase2.7
T&F Together Paul Martinelli* 281 9.8 Increase2.9
T&F Together Edward Lord* 278 9.7 Increase2.9
T&F Together Caroline Kordai Addy* 275 9.6 Increase2.2
T&F Together William Upton* 267 9.3 N/A
T&F Together George Abrahams* 262 9.2 Increase2.4
T&F Together John Absalom* 249 8.7 Increase2.0
Labour Ellen Goodwin 108 3.8 N/A
Turnout 2,860
T&F Together hold Swing
T&F Together hold Swing
T&F Together hold Swing
T&F Together hold Swing
T&F Together hold Swing
T&F Together hold Swing
T&F Together hold Swing
T&F Together hold Swing
T&F Together hold Swing
T&F Together hold Swing

Langbourn

Alexander Craggs, Judith Pleasance and Philip Woodhouse stood together jointly.[18]

Langbourn (3 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Judith Pleasance* 55 22.3 Decrease1.0
Independent Timothy Butcher 50 20.2 Increase4.0
Independent Philip Woodhouse* 49 19.8 Decrease7.2
Independent Alexander Craggs 36 14.6 Decrease0.7
Independent John Chapman* 34 13.8 Decrease4.4
Independent Timothy Wright 23 9.3 N/A
Turnout 247
Independent hold
Independent gain from Independent
Independent hold

Lime Street

Lime Street (4 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Dominic Christian* 134 27.7 Decrease0.6
Independent Irem Yerdelen 108 22.3
Independent Henry Colthurst* 106 21.9 Increase0.8
Independent Anthony Fitzpatrick 95 19.6 N/A
Independent Sam Batstone 41 8.5 N/A
Turnout 484
Independent hold
Independent gain from Independent
Independent hold
Independent gain from Independent

Portsoken

The election that took place in Portsoken Ward recorded the highest turnout in the entire 2022 Common Council Elections with 57.6% of the electorate casting their vote. The average turnout across the City of London was 36.5%. Two incumbent councillors, Munsur Ali and Jason Paul Pritchard, who were elected as Labour candidates in 2017, stood jointly.[19] John Fletcher and Henry Jones stood jointly.[20] Changes in voteshare are by party for the Labour candidates and by candidate for independent candidates who previously stood as independents.

Portsoken (4 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent John Fletcher* 255 21.8 Increase4.6
No description Munsur Ali* 254 21.7 N/A
No description Jason Paul Pritchard* 239 20.5 N/A
Independent Henry Jones* 213 18.2 Increase1.9
Labour Lana Joyce 114 9.8 Decrease10.2
Labour Dominic Hauschild 56 4.8 Decrease14.1
Women's Equality Alison Smith 37 3.2 N/A
Turnout 1,168 57.6 Increase6.9
Independent hold
No description gain from Labour Swing
No description gain from Labour Swing
Independent hold

Queenhithe

Queenhithe (2 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Caroline Haines*
Independent Brian Mooney*
Turnout
Independent hold
Independent hold

Tower

Roger Chadwick, Marianne Fredericks, James Tumbridge and Jason Groves stood jointly as the "Tower Ward Team".[21]

Tower (4 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Marianne Fredericks* 219 24.2 N/A
Independent James Tumbridge* 184 20.4 N/A
Independent Aaron D'Souza 183 20.2 N/A
Independent Jason Groves 176 19.5 N/A
Independent Roger Chadwick* 142 15.7 N/A
Turnout 904 N/A
Independent hold
Independent hold
Independent gain from Independent
Independent gain from Independent

Vintry

Rehana Ameer and Richard Burge stood jointly.[22]

Vintry (2 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Rehana Ameer* 62 42.8 Increase9.8
Independent Jaspreet Hodgson 45 31.0 N/A
Independent Richard Burge 38 26.2 N/A
Turnout 145
Independent hold
Independent gain from Independent

Walbrook

The incumbent councillors, Peter Bennett and James Thomson, stood jointly.[23]

Walbrook (2 seats)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent James Thomson* 126
Independent Alethea Silk 113
Independent Peter Bennett* 105
Turnout
Independent hold
Independent gain from Independent

References

  1. ^ "Ward elections - City of London". www.cityoflondon.gov.uk. City of London Corporations. Archived from the original on 12 November 2017. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  2. ^ "Forthcoming elections". City of London Corporation. Retrieved 14 December 2021.
  3. ^ Gordon, Charlotte (7 May 2020). "COVID-19 Implications – possible postponement of the City-Wide elections in March 2021" (PDF). City of London Corporation's Policy and Resources Committee. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  4. ^ Gregory, Julia (5 May 2020). "City of London voters may go to polls twice in 2021". City Matters. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  5. ^ "The place where businesses and their office workers vote". BBC News. 21 March 2017. Retrieved 18 July 2021.
  6. ^ "Exclusive: Sanctioned Russian bank to vote in City of London Corporation election". CityAM. 22 March 2022. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
  7. ^ "Full results of City of London elections after Tony Benn's granddaughter wins seat". 25 March 2022.
  8. ^ "Tony Benn's granddaughter wins seat at City of London election". 25 March 2022.
  9. ^ "Statements of Persons Nominated". City of London. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  10. ^ "Aldersgate - Statement of persons nominated" (PDF).
  11. ^ "Your chance to shape the City's future City of London Corporation Elections 2022". www.speakforthecity.com. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  12. ^ "Your chance to shape the City's future City of London Corporation Elections 2022". www.speakforthecity.com. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  13. ^ "Your chance to shape the City's future City of London Corporation Elections 2022". www.speakforthecity.com. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  14. ^ "Your chance to shape the City's future City of London Corporation Elections 2022". www.speakforthecity.com. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  15. ^ "Your chance to shape the City's future City of London Corporation Elections 2022". www.speakforthecity.com. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  16. ^ "Your chance to shape the City's future City of London Corporation Elections 2022". www.speakforthecity.com. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  17. ^ "Your chance to shape the City's future City of London Corporation Elections 2022". www.speakforthecity.com. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  18. ^ "Your chance to shape the City's future City of London Corporation Elections 2022". www.speakforthecity.com. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  19. ^ "Your chance to shape the City's future City of London Corporation Elections 2022". www.speakforthecity.com. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  20. ^ "Your chance to shape the City's future City of London Corporation Elections 2022". www.speakforthecity.com. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  21. ^ "Your chance to shape the City's future City of London Corporation Elections 2022". www.speakforthecity.com. Retrieved 17 March 2022.
  22. ^ "Your chance to shape the City's future City of London Corporation Elections 2022". www.speakforthecity.com. Retrieved 17 March 2022.
  23. ^ "Your chance to shape the City's future City of London Corporation Elections 2022". www.speakforthecity.com. Retrieved 17 March 2022.
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