SP retains two, loses one
The Socialist Party fought 36 council seats on June 10, the most
notable battles being in Lewisham and Coventry. Unfortunately only
two of its three sitting councillors in Coventry St Michael's, Dave
Nellist and Karen McKay, were re-elected. Rob Windsor was narrowly
beaten into fourth place by the leading Labour candidate. The SP
contested 13 of the 14 wards in the city and won more than 4,000
votes in addition to the average of 1,400 for its three St Michael's
candidates. In Lewisham, Jessica Leech's 374 votes (13.2%) saw her
finish third in Evelyn ward.
The SP also polled reasonably well in Bootle and Netherton on Merseyside,
as well as in Rugby, Lincoln and Stoke, picking up more than 10%.
However, councillor Ian Page's result as a Respect GLA candidate
in Lewisham and Greenwich was disappointing - well down on his score
when he stood as London Socialist Alliance in 2000.
In Oxford, the Independent Working Class Association took its total
of seats up to three, adding Churchill and Northfield Brook to sitting
councillor Lee Cole's Blackbird Leys. However, its anti-crime activist
localism is difficult to replicate over a larger area, as Lorna
Reid's showing in the London mayor contest demonstrated (9,542;
0.5%).
Another group to pick up a seat was John Marek's Forward Wales,
which contested every ward in Marek's base of Wrexham. In addition
to winning Johnstown, FW came second in six other wards. The Alliance
for Green Socialism contested widely in Leeds (a large section of
the AGS membership previously made up the ex-Labour Leeds Left Alliance).
Despite picking up some useful votes, the AGS did not come near
winning.
As far as I am aware, the remnants of Arthur Scargill's Socialist
Labour Party stood only in 10 seats, in Merseyside and Manchester.
Alan Fox
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