Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition election results

This article lists the election results of the Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition (TUSC) in UK elections.

General elections

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Constituency Candidate Votes %
Bootle Peter Glover 472 1.1
Brighton Kemptown Dave Hill 194 0.5
Bristol East Rae Lynch 184 0.4
Bristol South Tom Baldwin 206 0.4
Cambridge Martin Booth[a] 362 0.7
Cardiff Central John Metcalfe 162 0.4
Carlisle Ross Saunders 376 0.9
Colne Valley Jackie Grunsell 741 1.3
Coventry North East Dave Nellist[b] 1,592 3.7
Coventry North West Nicky Downes[b] 370 0.8
Coventry South Judy Griffiths[b] 691 1.5
Doncaster North Bill Rawcliffe 181 0.4
Dundee West Jim McFarlane 357 1.0
Edinburgh East Gary Clark 274 0.7
Edinburgh North & Leith Willie Black 233 0.5
Gateshead Elaine Brunskill 266 0.7
Glasgow North Angela McCormick 287 1.0
Glasgow North East Graham Campbell 187 0.6
Glasgow South Brian Smith 351 0.9
Glasgow South West Tommy Sheridan[c] 931 2.9
Greenwich & Woolwich Onay Kasab 267 0.6
Huddersfield Paul Cooney 319 0.8
Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch & Strathspey George MacDonald[c] 135 0.3
Kingston upon Hull West & Hessle Keith Gibson 150 0.5
Leicester West Steve Score 157 0.4
Lewisham Deptford Ian Page[b] 645 1.6
Liverpool Walton Darren Ireland 195 0.6
Manchester Gorton Karen Reissman 337 0.9
Midlothian Willie Duncan 166 0.4
Motherwell & Wishaw Ray Gunnion 609 1.6
Portsmouth North Mick Tosh 154 0.3
Redcar Hannah Walter 127 0.3
Salford and Eccles David Henry 730 1.8
Sheffield Brightside & Hillsborough Maxine Bowler 656 1.7
Southampton Itchen Tim Cutter 168 0.4
Spelthorne Paul Couchman 176 0.4
Stoke-on-Trent Central Matthew Wright 133 0.4
Swansea West Rob Williams 179 0.5
Tottenham Jenny Sutton 1,057 2.6
Walthamstow Nancy Taaffe 279 0.7
Wellingborough Paul Crofts 249 0.5
Wythenshawe & Sale East Lynn Worthington 268 0.7
Total 42 15,573 0.05
  1. ^ Under the Cambridge Socialists label
  2. ^ a b c d Under the Socialist Alternative label
  3. ^ a b Under the Solidarity (TUSC) label

Source:[1]

Constituency Candidate Votes %
Aberavon Owen Herbert 134 0.4
Aberdeen North Tyrinne Rutherford 206 0.5
Barking Joseph Mambuliya 183 0.4
Barnsley Central Dave Gibson 573 1.6
Barnsley East Ralph Dyson 364 0.9
Batley & Spen Dawn Wheelhouse 123 0.2
Bermondsey & Old Southwark Kingsley Abrams[a] 142 0.3
Bethnal Green & Bow Glyn Robbins 949 1.8
Birmingham Erdington John Vickers 212 0.6
Birmingham Perry Barr Robert Punton 331 0.8
Birmingham Yardley Eamonn Flynn 135 0.3
Bolton West John Vickers 209 0.4
Bootle Peter Glover 500 1.1
Brent Central John Boyle 235 0.5
Bridgend Aaron David 118 0.3
Bristol East Matt Gordon 229 0.5
Bristol North West Anne Lemon 160 0.3
Bristol South Tom Baldwin 302 0.6
Caerphilly Rachel Ball 178 0.4
Camberwell & Peckham Nick Wrack 292 0.6
Cardiff Central Steve Williams 110 0.3
Cardiff South & Penarth Ross Saunders 258 0.6
Cardiff West Helen Jones 183 0.4
Chatham & Aylesford Ivor Riddell 125 0.3
Chesterfield Matt Whale 202 0.4
Chingford & Woodford Green Len Hockey 241 0.6
Cleethorpes Malcolm Morland 215 0.5
Coventry North East Nicky Downes 633 1.5
Coventry North West Dave Nellist 1,769 3.9
Coventry South Judy Griffiths 650 1.5
Croydon Central April Ashley 127 0.2
Croydon North Glen Hart 261 0.5
Darlington Alan Docherty 223 0.5
Derby South Chris Fernandez 225 0.6
Don Valley Steve Williams 437 1.0
Doncaster Central Mev Akram 421 1.0
Doncaster North Mary Jackson 258 0.7
Dudley North David Pitt 139 0.4
Dulwich & West Norwood Steve Nally 248 0.5
Dundee East Carlo Morelli 104 0.2
Dundee West Jim McFarlane 304 0.7
Ealing North David Hofman 214 0.4
East Ham Lois Austin 230 0.4
Eastleigh Declan Clune 114 0.2
Edinburgh East Ayesha Saleem 117 0.2
Edinburgh North & Leith Bruce Whitehead[a] 122 0.2
Edmonton Lewis Peacock 360 0.9
Ellesmere Port & Neston Felicity Dowling 192 0.4
Enfield North Joe Simpson 177 0.4
Exeter Ed Potts 190 0.4
Folkestone & Hythe Seth Cruse 244 0.4
Gillingham & Rainham Jacqui Berry 273 0.6
Glasgow Central Andrew Elliott 119 0.3
Glasgow North Angela McCormick 160 0.4
Glasgow North East Jamie Cocozza 218 0.6
Glasgow South Brian Smith 299 0.6
Gloucester Sue Powell 58 0.1
Gower Mark Evans 103 0.2
Great Grimsby Val O'Flynn 173 0.5
Greenwich & Woolwich Lynne Chamberlain 370 0.8
Hackney South & Shoreditch Brian Debus 302 0.6
Harlow David Brown 174 0.4
Harrow East Nana Asante 205 0.4
Hove Dave Hill 144 0.3
Huddersfield Mike Forster 340 0.8
Islwyn Josh Rawcliffe 151 0.4
Jarrow Norman Hall 385 1.0
Kingston and Surbiton Laurel Fogarty 174 0.3
Kingston upon Hull West & Hessle Paul Spooner 171 0.5
Kingswood Richard Worth 84 0.2
Leeds Central Liz Kitching 330 0.7
Leeds West Ben Mayor 205 0.5
Leicester East Michael Barker 540 1.1
Leicester South Andrew Walton 349 0.8
Leicester West Heather Rawling 288 0.8
Leigh Stephen Hall 542 1.2
Lewisham Deptford Chris Flood 286 0.6
Lewisham West & Penge Martin Powell-Davies 391 0.8
Lincoln Elaine Smith 344 0.7
Liverpool Riverside Tony Mulhearn 582 1.3
Liverpool Wavertree David Walsh 362 0.9
Llanelli Scott Jones 123 0.3
Manchester Central Alex Davidson 270 0.6
Manchester Gorton Simon Hickman 264 0.6
Mansfield Karen Seymour 324 0.7
Milton Keynes North Katie Simpson 163 0.3
Newcastle upon Tyne East Paul Phillips 170 0.4
Newton Abbot Sean Brogan 221 0.5
North Tyneside Tim Wall 304 0.6
North Warwickshire Eileen Hunter 138 0.3
Nottingham North Cathy Meadows 160 0.5
Nottingham South Andrew Clayworth 230 0.5
Nuneaton Paul Reilly 194 0.4
Ogmore Emma Saunders 165 0.5
Oxford East James Morbin 108 0.2
Paisley & Renfrewshire North Jim Halfpenny 193 0.4
Plymouth Moor View Louise Parker 152 0.4
Pontypridd Esther Pearson 98 0.3
Poplar & Limehouse Hugo Pierre 367 0.7
Portsmouth North Jon Woods 231 0.5
Portsmouth South Sean Hoyle 235 0.5
Reading West Neil Adams 83 0.2
Rochester & Strood Dan Burn 202 0.4
Rossendale & Darwen Simon Thomas 103 0.2
Rotherham Pat McLaughlin 409 1.1
Rugby Peter McLaren 225 0.5
Ruislip, Northwood & Pinner Wally Kennedy 302 0.6
Salford & Eccles Noreen Bailey 517 1.2
Selby & Ainsty Ian Wilson 137 0.3
Sheffield Brightside & Hillsborough Maxine Bowler 442 1.1
Sheffield Heeley Alan Munro 238 0.6
Sheffield South East Ian Whitehouse 185 0.4
Southampton Itchen Sue Atkins 233 0.5
Southampton Test Nick Chaffey 403 0.9
Spelthorne Paul Couchman 228 0.5
Stevenage Trevor Palmer 175 0.4
Stoke-on-Trent South Matthew Wright 372 1.0
Streatham Unjum Mirza 164 0.3
Sutton & Cheam Pauline Gorman 79 0.2
Swansea West Ronnie Job 159 0.5
Taunton Deane Stephen German 118 0.2
Tottenham Jenny Sutton 1,324 3.1
Uxbridge & South Ruislip Gary Harbord 180 0.4
Wakefield Mick Griffiths 287 0.7
Walsall North Peter Smith 545 1.5
Walthamstow Nancy Taaffe 394 0.9
Warrington South Kevin Bennett 238 0.4
Washington & Sunderland West Gary Duncan 341 0.9
Watford Mark O'Connor 178 0.3
Weaver Vale Joseph Whyte 94 0.2
Welwyn Hatfield Richard Shattock 142 0.3
Worcester Pete McNally 153 0.3
Worsley & Eccles South Steve North 142 0.3
Wythenshawe & Sale East Lynn Worthington 215 0.5
York Central Megan Ollerhead 288 0.6
Total 135 36,195 0.12
  1. ^ a b Under the Left Unity label

Source:[2]

Constituency Candidate Votes %
Aberdeen North Lucas Grant 214 0.5
Basildon and Billericay Dave Murray 192 0.4
Birmingham Erdington Corinthia Ward 37 0.1
Bristol North East Dan Smart 399 1.0
Cardiff East John Williams 195 0.5
Chorley Martin Powell-Davies 632 1.9
Coventry East Dave Nellist 797 2.2
Crawley Robin Burnham 153 0.3
Croydon West April Ashley 247 0.6
Doncaster North Andy Hiles 212 0.7
Dundee Central Jim McFarlane 600 1.5
Folkestone and Hythe Momtaz Khanom 249 0.6
Gateshead Central and Whickham Norman Hall 369 0.9
Glasgow North East Chris Sermanni 236 0.7
Glasgow South Brian Smith 473 1.1
Great Grimsby and Cleethorpes Mark Gee 222 0.6
Ilford South Andy Walker 376 0.9
Islington South and Finsbury Ethan Saunders 215 0.5
Kingston upon Hull North and Cottingham Michael Whale 262 0.7
Leeds Central and Headingley Louie Fulton 186 0.6
Liverpool Riverside Roger Bannister 622 1.9
Leicester West Steve Score 317 0.9
Mansfield Karen Seymour 123 0.3
Northampton South Katie Simpson 296 0.7
Plymouth Sutton and Devonport Alex Moore 220 0.5
Reading Central Adam Gillman 221 0.5
Sheffield Central Isabelle France 409 1.3
Sheffield Heeley Mick Suter 398 1.0
Smethwick Ravaldeep Bath 163 0.5
Southampton Itchen Declan Clune 264 0.7
Southampton Test Maggie Fricker 366 1.0
Southgate and Wood Green Karl Vidol 785 1.7
South West Devon Ben Davy 141 0.3
Swansea West Gareth Bromhall 337 0.9
Swindon North Scott Hunter 139 0.3
Uxbridge and South Ruislip Gary Harbord 223 0.5
Walthamstow Nancy Taaffe 561 1.2
West Ham and Beckton Lois Austin 190 0.5
Worcester Mark Davies 280 0.6
Worsley and Eccles Sally Griffiths 241 0.6
Total 40 12,562 0.04

Source:[3]

By-elections

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2010–2015 Parliament

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By-election Candidate Votes %
2012 Manchester Central Alex Davidson 220 1.3
2012 Rotherham Ralph Dyson 261 1.2
2012 Middlesbrough John Malcolm 277 1.6
2013 Eastleigh Daz Proctor 62 0.1

Source:[4]

2019–2024 Parliament

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By-election Candidate Votes %
2022 Birmingham Erdington Dave Nellist 360 2.1
2023 Rutherglen and Hamilton West Chris Sermanni 178 0.6

Sources:[5][6]

Scottish Parliament elections

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Constituency Candidate Votes %
Dundee City East Leah Ganley 437 1.5
Dundee City West Jim McFarlane 642 2.3
Glasgow Cathcart Brian Smith 909 3.0
Glasgow Pollok Ian Leech 555 2.0
Glasgow Shettleston Jamie Cocozza 583 2.3
Renfrewshire North & West Jim Halfpenny 414 1.3

Sources:[7][8][9][10][11][12]

Regional

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Region Candidates Votes %
Glasgow Brian Smith, Sinead Daly, Oisin
Duncan, Maddie Jamieson
645 0.2
Highlands & Islands Sean Robertson, Yolanda Piotrowicz,
Luke Ivory
280 0.1
West Scotland Jim Halfpenny, Lynda McEwan, Ian
Kerr
479 0.1

Source:[13]

Constituency

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Constituency Candidate Votes %
Aberdeen Donside Lucas Grant 240 0.7
Dundee City East Wayne Scott 287 0.9
Dundee City West Jim McFarlane 432 1.3

Source:[14]

Welsh Senedd elections

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Region Candidates Votes %
South Wales Central Ross Saunders, Sarah Mayo, Brian Lewis, Helen Jones, Andrew Price, Filipa Machado,
Leanne Francis, Rae Lewis-Ayling, Nagina Kabul, Glyn Matthews, Keiron Hopkins, Rowena Mason
830 0.4
South Wales West Ronnie Job, Owen Herbert, Mark Evans, Les Woodward, Claire Job, Alec Thraves, Caroline Butchers,
Dave Phillips, Helen Shaw, Martin White, Rob Williams, Rob Owen
809 0.5

Source:[15]

Region Candidates Votes %
South Wales Central Ross Saunders, Mia Hollsing, Lianne Francis, Steve Williams, Helen Jones, Matthew Hatton, Catherine
Peace, Seb Robyns
736 0.3
South Wales East Jamie Davies, Clare Gibbs, David Reid, Joshua Rawcliffe, Mohammed Miah, Rhys Pewtner 618 0.3
South Wales West Owen Herbert, Claire Job, John Evans, Aaron David, Ronnie Job, Emma Saunders 686 0.4

Source:[16]

Region Candidates Votes %
Mid and West Wales Carys Phillips 257 0.1
North Wales Michelle Francis 164 0.1
South Wales Central Ross Saunders, Beth Webster, Mia Hollsing, Andrew Wilkes, Kevin Gillen 519 0.2
South Wales East Mariam Kamish, Cammilla Mngaza, Melanie Benedict, Dave Reid 362 0.2
South Wales West John Evans, Karen Geraghty, Gareth Bromhall, Oisin Mulholland, Charlie Wells 362 0.2

Source:[17]

London Assembly elections

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Region Candidates Votes %
London-wide Alex Gordon, Nick Wrack, April Ashley, Sian Griffiths, Steve Hedley, Ian Leahair, Gary McFarlane, Martin Powell-Davies,
Merlin Reader, Joe Simpson, Jenny Sutton, Nancy Taaffe, Jackie Turner, Lee Vernon, Lesley Woodburn, Michael Dooley,
Mark Benjamin
17,686 0.8

Source:[18]

Regional

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Region Candidates Votes %
London-wide Nancy Taaffe, April Ashley, Lewis Baker, Deji Olayinka, Andrew Walker, Thea Everett, Lawanya Ramajayam, Jack Jeffery,
Marvin Hay, Len Hockey, Lois Austin, Bob Law, Ferdy Lyons, Rachel Lyon, Naomi Bryan, Pete Mason, Angharad Hillier,
Hugo Pierre, Brian Debus, Mira Glavardanov, Niall Mulholland, John Viner, Wally Kennedy, Paul Kershaw, Paul Scott
9,004 0.3

Source:[19]

Constituency

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Constituency Candidate Votes %
Havering & Redbridge Andy Walker 1,856 1.1
Lambeth & Southwark April Ashley 2,919 1.6
North East Nancy Taaffe 3,236 1.5

Source: [19]

Mayoral elections

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Authority Election Candidate 1st round votes %
Liverpool City 2017 Roger Bannister 7,881 2.7

Source:[20]

Authority Election Candidate 1st round votes %
Lewisham 2014 Chris Flood 1,354 1.9
Newham 2014 Lois Austin 1,708 2.2
Tower Hamlets 2014[a] Hugo Pierre 871 1.0
2018 728 0.9
Lewisham 2022 Andy Beadle 1,620 2.4
Newham 2022 Lois Auston 2,096 3.3
Tower Hamlets 2022 Hugo Pierre 1,462 1.7
Hackney 2023[b] Anooesjka Valent 1,265[c] 3.4

Sources:[21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28]

Authority Election Candidate 1st round votes %
Liverpool 2012 Tony Mulhearn 4,792 4.9
Doncaster 2013 Mary Jackson 1,916 3.1
Liverpool 2016 Roger Bannister 4,950 5.1
Doncaster 2017 Steve Williams 1,531 2.4
Liverpool 2021 Roger Bannister 2,912 2.9

Sources:[29][30][31][32][33]

Authority Election Candidate 1st round votes %
Bristol 2012 Tom Baldwin 1,412 1.6
Leicester 2015 Barbie Potter 3,028 2.3
Bristol 2016 Tom Baldwin 1,876 1.3
2021 3,194 2.3
Leicester 2023 Steve Score 2,173[c] 2.4[c]

Sources:[34][35][36][37][38]

Authority Election Candidate Votes %
Mansfield 2023 Karen Seymour 420 1.9

Source:[39]

Local elections

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TUSC stood 174 candidates in the May 2011 council elections.[40] In 13 seats TUSC polled over 10% and in over a quarter polled more than 5%.

TUSC stood 132 candidates in 38 councils, with 17 candidates for the London Assembly. Two TUSC-backed candidates were elected, Michael Lavalette in Preston and Peter Smith in Walsall.[41] In the council elections in England and Wales TUSC candidates averaged 6.2% of the poll. Tony Mulhearn, one of the 47 Liverpool Councillors who refused to set a budget for the council, and led a campaign of defiance of the Conservative government in the 1980s stood as the candidate for Mayor of Liverpool, coming fifth with 4.86% of the vote. In Scotland, 38 candidates stood in nine councils as the Scottish Anti-Cuts Coalition (SACC).[42] The TUSC campaign for the London Assembly was launched by Bob Crow of the RMT and Matt Wrack of the FBU,[43] and candidates included Alex Gordon, President of the RMT trade union and April Ashley a member of the UNISON National Executive.

A total of 120 candidates contested the English local elections on 2 May under the TUSC umbrella, 5% of the seats. In addition, TUSC stood a candidate in the Doncaster mayoral contest and two candidates in council by-elections that were held on the same day. It was mainly county councils up for election, largely Conservative controlled. The TUSC candidate for the mayor of Doncaster, Mary Jackson, polled 1,916 votes, achieving sixth place, ahead of the Liberal Democrats.

TUSC announced the 'biggest left-of-Labour electoral challenge in 60 years' in the 2014 local elections, fielding 561 candidates.[44] There were 53 candidates who were members of the RMT transport workers' union, 19 Communication Workers' Union members who were candidates, 18 members of the National Union of Teachers, 16 PCS members, 20 members of the university and College Union. From the big Labour-affiliated unions, there were 74 Unison members standing for TUSC and 130 members of Unite. TUSC gained two seats in Southampton with the defection of Don Thomas from Labour and the re-election of Keith Morrell, also previously Labour, as Councillors Against Cuts,[45] as well as a second seat on Maltby Town Council. The overall popular votes achieved in the campaign exceeded 68,000.[46]

TUSC lost its representation in Maltby in the autumn of 2014 with the removal of their two councillors for non-attendance,[47] and lost its Preston councillor when Michael Lavalette retired his seat.[48] However, TUSC gained two affiliated councillors in the shape of Hull Red Labour, following their expulsion from Labour in 2014.[49] In January 2015, TUSC gained a councillor in Warrington (Fairfield and Howley ward) with the defection of Kevin Bennett from Labour.[50]

TUSC renewed its promise to field the largest left-of-Labour challenge in the parliamentary and local authority elections. It bolstered its 2014 local election candidacy count by 70, bringing the total to 650. As it also fielded 135 PPCs, in every major town and city in England, Wales, and Scotland, TUSC subsequently exceeded the overall number of candidates to satisfy the BBC's fair coverage threshold, qualifying it for distribution of election material via the Royal Mail, as well as time on the major networks for the airing of a Party Election Broadcast.[51]

TUSC gained no seats (and, in one ward, no votes) and lost three anti-cuts councillors in Leicester and Hull. They retain one affiliated councillor each in Warrington, Walsall and Hull, and two in Southampton.[52]

Following the 2016 elections, TUSC had three councillors in Southampton under the banner of Coxford Putting People First,[53] Kevin Bennett having lost his seat in Warrington;[54] Hull Red Labour and Walsall Democratic Labour also lost their remaining seats.

TUSC stood a total of 78 council candidates in 24 councils across England, Scotland and Wales, contesting 71 wards or divisions. TUSC also stood candidates in two of the eight Mayoral elections held on 4 May.[citation needed]

Following the 2018 elections, TUSC retained at least one affiliated councillor in Coxford, Southampton, following the re-election (as Independent - Putting People First) of TUSC national steering committee member Keith Morrell.[55] Two other former Putting People First councillors also retain their seats as Independents, but the group has since dissolved.[56] Morrell resigned in 2019.[57]

TUSC claimed to have put up nearly 300 candidates in the 2021 UK local elections.[58]

References

edit
  1. ^ This election was declared void by an election court.
  2. ^ By-election
  3. ^ a b c Following changes to the election method for mayoral elections in the UK, this election used first-past-the-post voting, rather than a two round alternative vote system.
  1. ^ "Candidates for TUSC". TUSC.org.uk. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
  2. ^ "TUSC parliamentary candidates in May 2015" (PDF). TUSC.org.uk. Retrieved 11 January 2022.
  3. ^ "TUSC candidates in the general election" (PDF). TUSC.org.uk. Retrieved 27 September 2024.
  4. ^ "By-election results from 2010 to 2015". UK Political Info. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  5. ^ "Birmingham Erdington Parliamentary by-election". Birmingham City Council. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  6. ^ "Rutherglen and Hamilton West By-election - Thursday 5 October 2023". South Lanarkshire Council. 12 September 2023. Retrieved 13 September 2023.
  7. ^ "Dundee City East - Scottish Parliament constituency - Election 2016 - BBC News". Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  8. ^ "Dundee City West - Scottish Parliament constituency - Election 2016 - BBC News". Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  9. ^ "Glasgow Cathcart - Scottish Parliament constituency - Election 2016 - BBC News". Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  10. ^ "Glasgow Pollok - Scottish Parliament constituency - Election 2016 - BBC News". Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  11. ^ "Glasgow Shettleston - Scottish Parliament constituency - Election 2016 - BBC News". Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  12. ^ "Renfrewshire North and West - Scottish Parliament constituency - Election 2016 - BBC News". Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  13. ^ Highcock, Chris. "Full votes and seats by party". Electoral Management Board for Scotland. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  14. ^ "2021 Election Results". The Scottish Parliament. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  15. ^ "BBC News - Election 2011 - Wales - Regions". BBC News. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  16. ^ "Election results by region, 6 May 2016". Senedd Cymru. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  17. ^ "Election results by region, 6 May 2021". Senedd Cymru. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  18. ^ "London-wide Assembly Members results 2012". London Elects. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  19. ^ a b "London Assembly Final Results 2021". London Elects.
  20. ^ Liverpool City Region Elects: Results at the Wayback Machine (archived 20 September 2017)
  21. ^ "Election results for 22 May 2014". Lewisham Borough Council. 23 May 2010. Archived from the original on 23 May 2014. Retrieved 30 May 2014.
  22. ^ "Election results for Newham, 22 May 2014". mgov.newham.gov.uk. 22 May 2014. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
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  24. ^ "Election results for Tower Hamlets, 3 May 2018". Tower Hamlets Council. 3 May 2018. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  25. ^ "Lewisham Mayoral Election 2022 - Thursday, 5th May, 2022". Lewisham Borough Council.
  26. ^ "Local Elections 2022 - Mayoral Election Result". newham.gov.uk. Retrieved 7 May 2022.
  27. ^ "Election results for Tower Hamlets, 5 May 2022". Tower Hamlets Council. 6 May 2022. Retrieved 6 May 2022.
  28. ^ "Caroline Woodley is the new directly elected Mayor of Hackney". Hackney London Borough Council. 10 November 2023. Retrieved 10 November 2023.
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  31. ^ "Election results for Liverpool, 5 May 2016". Liverpool City Council. 5 May 2016. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  32. ^ Council, Doncaster. "Mayoral election results 2017 - Doncaster Council". www.doncaster.gov.uk. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  33. ^ "Election results for Liverpool, 6 May 2021". Liverpool City Council. 6 May 2021. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  34. ^ "Election of a Mayor for Bristol City Council, 15 November 2012". Bristol City Council. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  35. ^ Mayoral election results at the Wayback Machine (archived 2015-05-10)
  36. ^ "Mayoral Election 2016 stage 1 count results". Bristol City Council. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  37. ^ "Mayoral election stage 1 count results". Bristol City Council. Retrieved 9 March 2022.
  38. ^ "Leicester result - Local Elections 2023". BBC News. Retrieved 7 May 2023.
  39. ^ "Mansfield Mayoral and district election results 2023". Mansfield District Council. Retrieved 7 May 2023.
  40. ^ "TUSC candidates for May council elections 2011 – regional breakdown". Tusc.org.uk. TUSC. Archived from the original on 7 April 2011. Retrieved 1 May 2011.
  41. ^ "TUSC 2012 Local elections - Victories in Preston and Walsall; a setback in Coventry; solid votes in many councils". Archived from the original on 2012-07-09.
  42. ^ "TUSC candidates in the 2012 local elections". Archived from the original on 2012-04-13.
  43. ^ "London TUSC election launch Rally". 2012-03-21. Archived from the original on 2012-04-06.
  44. ^ "TUSC announces 'biggest left-of-Labour electoral challenge in sixty years'". Tusc.org.uk. TUSC. Archived from the original on 23 May 2014. Retrieved 2 May 2014.
  45. ^ "LOCAL ELECTIONS 2014 GREAT VICTORY AS TUSC REBEL COUNCILLOR RE ELECTED". tusc.org.uk. 23 May 2014. Archived from the original on 26 June 2014. Retrieved 2 March 2015.
  46. ^ "SECOND MALTBY COUNCILLOR FOR TUSC". tusc.org.uk. 28 February 2014. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 2 March 2015.
  47. ^ "Angry at Maltby council decision". Rotherham Advertiser. Archived from the original on 18 May 2015. Retrieved 6 May 2015.
  48. ^ "SOCIALIST COUNCILLORS CAN HELP BOOST RESISTANCE". tusc.org.uk. 12 May 2014. Archived from the original on 19 May 2015. Retrieved 6 May 2015.
  49. ^ Archivist (8 March 2010). "TUSC". Socialist Party. Archived from the original on 18 May 2015. Retrieved 6 May 2015.
  50. ^ "Councillors". warrington.gov.uk.[permanent dead link]
  51. ^ Dave Nellist on RT. 26 March 2015. Archived from the original on 2021-12-15 – via YouTube.
  52. ^ "RESULTS STILL COMING IN BUT TUSC SET TO POLL 100000 VOTES FOR BOLD NO CUTS MESSAGE". tusc.org.uk. 8 May 2015. Archived from the original on 19 May 2015. Retrieved 11 May 2015.
  53. ^ "Third anti-cuts councillor elected in Coxford! Congratulations Tammy Thomas!". Southampton TUSC. 2016-05-12. Archived from the original on 22 April 2017. Retrieved 2018-04-07.
  54. ^ "Borough council election results, May 2016". Warrington Borough Council. Archived from the original on 4 June 2016. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
  55. ^ "Local elections 2018 - The TUSC results Report" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2018-11-16.
  56. ^ "Southampton council group announce split". Daily Echo. 20 June 2018. Archived from the original on 13 September 2018. Retrieved 16 November 2018.
  57. ^ "Councillor who once rebelled against Labour resigns - but hasn't given a reason why". Daily Echo. 3 January 2019. Archived from the original on 26 April 2019. Retrieved 26 April 2019.
  58. ^ "2021 elections" (PDF). www.tusc.org.uk. Archived (PDF) from the original on 15 April 2021. Retrieved 25 April 2021.