1968 Leeds City Council election

The 1968 Leeds municipal election was held on 9 May 1968.[1] Following extensive boundary changes, the whole council was up for election. The re-warding increased the number of wards by two, up to 32 wards, raising in-turn the councillor total by six, to 90, and the aldermen total up two to 30.[2][3]

In total ten wards were abolished, twelve created and eighteen remained.

The election followed national patterns[1] of the Conservatives inflicting resounding defeats upon the Labour party, winning representation in all but five wards with a crushing 75 seats at the hand of their highest vote since 1951 and a record vote share.[2] Labour representation was confined to City, East Hunslet, Holbeck and Middleton (although coming within a straw for the third seat in Whinmoor) as they picked up their lowest post-war vote and vote share. The Labour collapse also seen the smaller party make gains, as the Liberals won representation on the council for the first time in the post-war period[4] via comfortably winning the three newly created Castleton seats and the Communists, who fielded a full-slate for the first and only time, more than tripled their previous records in both vote share and vote figure.[2]

As a result, the Conservatives gained control of the council for the first time since 1952, with a whopping majority of 80.[4]

  1. ^ a b "British Markets in Nervous State". The New York Times. 13 May 1968. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  2. ^ a b c "Municipal results: Leeds". The Yorkshire Post. 10 May 1968.
  3. ^ Whitaker, Joseph (1968). Whitaker's Almanack 1968.
  4. ^ a b Sharpe, L.J. (1967). Voting in cities: the 1964 borough elections.