2022 Kingston upon Thames London Borough Council election

The 2022 Kingston upon Thames London Borough Council election took place on 5 May 2022 to elect all 48 members of Kingston upon Thames London Borough Council. The elections took place alongside local elections in the other London boroughs and elections to local authorities across the United Kingdom.

2022 Kingston upon Thames Council election
← 2018 5 May 2022 2026 →

All 48 council seats
 
Leader Andreas Kirsch Rowena Bass James Giles
Party Liberal Democrats Conservative KIRG
Leader since October 2021 May 2022 May 2022
Leader's seat Chessington South and Malden Rushett Coombe Hill Green Lane and St James
Last election 39 seats, 51.7% 9 seats, 30.6% 0 seats
Current seats 44 3 1

Incumbent council control


Liberal Democrats



The Liberal Democrats retained overall majority control of the council, the fifth time in the last six elections that the party has won overall control.

Background edit

History edit

 
Result of the 2018 borough election

The thirty-two London boroughs were established in 1965 by the London Government Act 1963. They are the principal authorities in Greater London and have responsibilities including education, housing, planning, highways, social services, libraries, recreation, waste, environmental health and revenue collection. Some of the powers are shared with the Greater London Authority, which also manages passenger transport, police and fire.[1]

Since its formation, Kingston upon Thames has been under Liberal Democrat control, Conservative control and no overall control. The Liberal Democrats have controlled the council since 2002, apart from the period between 2014 and 2018 when the Conservatives had an overall majority. The Liberal Democrats regained control in the most recent election in 2018, where they won 39 seats with 51.7% of the vote and the Conservatives won the remaining nine seats with 30.6% of the vote. The Labour Party lost both seats they were defending and received 11.9% of the vote across the borough.[2]

Council term edit

A Liberal Democrat councillor, Sharon Falchikov-Sumner, left her party in 2018 after the council voted to close their last residential care home. She joined the Green Party in February 2019.[3] In March 2020, the council leader Liz Green was successfully challenged by Caroline Kerr, a Liberal Democrat councillor who was first elected in 2018.[4] A Liberal Democrat councillor for Chessington South, Tricia Bamford, resigned in December 2020 due to a change in her family circumstances.[5] A by-election to replace her was not held until 6 May 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The by-election, which was contested by thirteen Official Monster Raving Loony Party candidates, was won by the Liberal Democrat candidate Andrew MacKinlay.[6] Mackinlay had previously served as the Labour MP for Thurrock.[7] In September 2021, the Liberal Democrat councillor Jon Tolley left his party due to policy disagreements with the council executive.[8] He announced that he wouldn't contest the next election, saying "I think we were lying to the public" about the demolition of a leisure centre in his ward.[9] Kerr announced her resignation as council leader in October 2021.[10]

As with most London boroughs, Kingston upon Thames was electing its councillors under new boundaries decided by the Local Government Boundary Commission for England, which it produced after a period of consultation. The number of councillors remained at 48, but the commission produced new boundaries following a period of consultation, with ten three-member wards and nine two-member wards.[11]

Electoral process edit

Kingston upon Thames, like other London borough councils, elects all of its councillors at once every four years. The previous election took place in 2018. The election took place by multi-member first-past-the-post voting, with each ward being represented by two or three councillors. Electors will have as many votes as there are councillors to be elected in their ward, with the top two or three being elected.

All registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) living in London aged 18 or over were entitled to vote in the election. People who lived at two addresses in different councils, such as university students with different term-time and holiday addresses, were entitled to be registered for and vote in elections in both local authorities.[12] Voting in-person at polling stations took place from 7:00 to 22:00 on election day, and voters were able to apply for postal votes or proxy votes in advance of the election.[12]

Previous council composition edit

After 2018 election Before 2022 election
Party Seats Party Seats
Liberal Democrats 39 Liberal Democrats 37
Conservative 9 Conservative 8
Green 1
Independent 2

Results summary edit

2022 Kingston upon Thames London Borough Council election
Party Seats Gains Losses Net gain/loss Seats % Votes % Votes +/−
  Liberal Democrats 44 5 0   5 91.1 47.9 60,732 -3.8
  Conservative 3 0 6   6 6.7 25.4 32,179 -5.2
  KIRG 1 1 0   1 2.2 5.7 7,221 +3.4
  Labour 0 0 0   0 0.0 12.7 16,123 +0.8
  Green 0 0 0   0 0.0 7.6 9,622 +4.3
  Monster Raving Loony 0 0 0   0 0.0 0.4 474 +0.3
  Independent 0 0 0   0 0.0 0.2 213 +0.1
  Women's Equality 0 0 0   0 0.0 0.2 212 New
  Liberal 0 0 0   0 0.0 0.1 97 New

Ward Results edit

Since elections were fought on new boundaries, vote share can't be directly compared with the 2018 results. Candidates marked * were sitting councillors at the time of election.

Alexandra edit

Alexandra (2)
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Democrats Peter Maurice Herlinger 991 44.2
Liberal Democrats Ian Manders 976 43.5
Conservative Andy Rowe 754 33.6
Conservative Simon Richard George Illsley 735 32.8
Labour Lizzie Hensman 255 11.4
Green Kate Worley 231 10.3
Green Des Kay 213 9.5
Labour Alexander James Lock 195 8.7
Total votes 4,350
Turnout 2,244 50.9
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)

Berrylands edit

Berrylands (2)
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Democrats Jackie Davies 1,340 51.4
Liberal Democrats Anita Margaret Schaper * 1,232 47.3
Conservative Claire Harding 752 28.9
Conservative Jagie Rai 679 26.1
Labour Johnnie Byrne 279 10.7
Green Philip Smith 271 10.4
Labour Lawrence Roy Green 245 9.4
Green Peter Anthony Whitworth 188 7.2
Liberal Carole Ann 97 3.7
Total votes 5,083
Turnout 2,606 54.5
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)

Canbury Gardens edit

Canbury Gardens (2)
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Democrats James Noel Manthel 1,191 46.8
Liberal Democrats Noel Walter Hadjimichael 1,173 46.1
Conservative Maria Jane Netley* 767 30.1
Conservative Martin Pike 692 27.2
Green Fiona Campbell 395 15.5
Green Linda Sawyer 262 10.3
Labour Chris Priest 243 9.6
Labour Bilal Ashraf Chohan 236 9.3
Total votes 4,959
Turnout 2,544 46.4
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)

Chessington South & Malden Rushett edit

Chessington South and Malden Rushett (3)
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Democrats Andreas Kirsch * 1,453 49.6
Liberal Democrats Sharukh Mirza 1,353 46.1
Liberal Democrats Griseldis Kirsch 1,335 45.5
Conservative Sue Towner 1,087 37.1
Conservative Harry James Woods 997 34.0
Conservative Bushra Tariq Aziz 869 29.6
Labour Clare Siobhan Keogh 349 11.9
Labour Mawell Oliver Freedman 339 11.6
Labour Alexander Stuart Nelson 292 10.0
Monster Raving Loony Director of Undertaking Brunskill 90 3.1
Monster Raving Loony Joe Lucky Guv 65 2.2
Monster Raving Loony A.Gent Chinners 61 2.1
Monster Raving Loony Captain Coiley 47 1.6
Total votes 8,337
Turnout 2,932 40.4
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)

Coombe Hill edit

Coombe Hill (2)
Party Candidate Votes %
Conservative Rowena Bass * 960 48.4
Conservative Ian George * 875 44.1
Liberal Democrats Kim Natasha Bailey * 678 34.2
Liberal Democrats Jason James Pethers 587 29.6
Labour Dave Cooper 240 12.1
Labour Anthony Michael Murray 199 10.0
KIRG Kerry Giles 154 7.8
KIRG Adrian King 139 7.0
Total votes 3,832
Turnout 1,984 38.5
Conservative win (new seat)
Conservative win (new seat)

Coombe Vale edit

Coombe Vale (3)
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Democrats Andrew James Crawford Bolton 1,624 44.1
Liberal Democrats Kamala Kugan 1,612 43.7
Liberal Democrats Andrew Sillett 1,475 40.0
Conservative Cathy Adams 1,213 32.9
Conservative Roy Sanjeev Arora * 1,163 31.6
Conservative Itret Latif 955 25.9
Green John Grant 675 18.3
Labour Liz Meerabeau 532 14.4
KIRG David James Giles 504 13.7
Labour Ian Alexander Parker 431 11.7
Labour Gareth Brian Thomas 379 10.3
Total votes 10,563
Turnout 3,686 50.5
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)

Green Lane & St James edit

Green Lane and St James (2)
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Democrats Tim Cobbett * 888 39.8
KIRG James Giles 853 38.2
Liberal Democrats Simon John May Edwards * 845 37.8
KIRG Yvonne Tracey 757 33.9
Conservative David Ian Condry 288 12.9
Labour Gerry Jones 253 11.3
Conservative Suniya Qureshi 240 10.7
Labour Gary Alan See 216 9.7
Total votes 4,340
Turnout 2,233 48.1
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
KIRG win (new seat)

Hook & Chessington North edit

Hook and Chessington North (3)
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Democrats Steph Archer * 1,750 54.2
Liberal Democrats Sue Ansari 1,627 50.4
Liberal Democrats Afy Afilaka 1,566 48.5
Conservative Adam Paul Stannard 909 28.1
Conservative Gia Borg-Darcy 908 28.1
Conservative Romana Chohan 874 27.1
Labour Christine Wynne Thompson 472 14.6
Labour Paul Robert John Mitchell 447 13.8
Labour Clive Simmons 423 13.2
Monster Raving Loony Lady Dave 121 3.7
Monster Raving Loony Colonel Cramps 90 2.8
Total votes 9,187
Turnout 3,230 41.2
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)

King George's & Sunray edit

King George's and Sunray (2)
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Democrats Mark Beynon * 813 48.3
Liberal Democrats Helen Rachel Grocott 784 46.6
Conservative Mihaela McKendrick 566 33.7
Conservative Stephen John Cherry 536 31.9
Labour Nicholas Gregory Draper 272 16.2
Labour Claire Johns-Perring 269 16.0
Total votes 3,240
Turnout 1,682 40.1
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)

Kingston Gate edit

Kingston Gate (3)
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Democrats Anne Owen 1,614 45.6
Liberal Democrats Sabah Hamed 1,504 42.5
Liberal Democrats Farshid Sadr-Hashemi 1,315 37.1
Conservative Andy Bickerstaff 771 21.8
Conservative George William Callaghan 723 20.4
Conservative Jamila Bibi 650 18.4
Green Jennifer Child 606 17.1
KIRG Helen Hinton 596 16.8
KIRG Deepa Veneik 442 12.5
Labour Sally Richardson 412 11.6
Labour James Dominic Leather 381 10.8
Green Alison Gomez-Russell 373 10.5
Green Paul Wright 309 8.7
Labour Ashley Zhang-Borges 290 8.2
Independent Caroline Shah 213 6.0
Total votes 10,199
Turnout 3,542 47.9
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)

Kingston Town edit

Kingston Town (3)
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Democrats Roger Mark Hayes 1,243 43.6
Liberal Democrats Nicola Nardelli 1,243 43.6
Liberal Democrats John Nicholas Sweeney * 1,104 38.7
Labour Kezia Elizabeth Coleman 625 21.9
Labour Charles St John Bamford 556 19.5
Conservative Steve Kent 501 17.6
Conservative Richard John Paton 485 17.0
Labour Martin Christopher Ellis 480 16.8
Conservative Colin Anthony Terence Suckling 436 15.3
Green Fiona Johnson 370 13.0
KIRG Georgina Lydia Anne Hinton 294 10.3
Green Jamie Brilley 293 10.3
KIRG Bob Tyler 284 10.0
KIRG Phil Doyle 281 9.8
Green John Johnson 185 6.5
Total votes 8,380
Turnout 2,854 41.9
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)

Motspur Park & Old Malden East edit

Motspur Park and Old Malden East (2)
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Democrats Lynn Isabell Henderson 1,132 46.0
Liberal Democrats Richard John Thorpe 1,009 41.0
Conservative Terry Paton 906 36.8
Conservative Rob Smith 822 33.4
Labour Alice Catherine Campbell 352 14.3
Labour Amina Rasool 259 10.5
Green Stuart James Newton 222 9.0
Total votes 4,702
Turnout 2,461 46.9
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)

New Malden Village edit

Election was postponed due to the death of Mary Jean Clark[13]

New Malden Village (3)
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Democrats Mark Durrant * 1,217 42.5
Liberal Democrats Dongsung Kim 1,184 41.3
Liberal Democrats Lesley Anne Heap * 1,182 41.2
Green Lucy Howard 867 30.3
KIRG Richard Hebborn 724 25.3
KIRG Marc Tracey 703 24.5
Conservative Paul Ashworth Bedforth 467 16.3
Labour Pat Dobson 436 15.2
Labour Sean Paul Casey 429 15.0
Labour Stephen Dunkling 374 13.0
Conservative Philip Cockle 372 13.0
Conservative Saad Hindosh 327 11.4
Total votes
Turnout 2,866 42.7
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)

Norbiton edit

Norbiton (3)
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Democrats Emily Davey * 1,541 51.7
Liberal Democrats Olly Wehring * 1,495 50.1
Liberal Democrats Susan Skipwith 1,258 42.2
Labour Marcela Veronica Benedetti 904 30.3
Labour Alex Benn-Amir 719 24.1
Labour Laurie South 712 23.9
Conservative Charlotte Karis Gray 375 12.6
Conservative Alexander Williams 366 12.3
Conservative Sandira Bye Beekoo 348 11.7
Green Martin Hall 239 8.0
Green Charlie Redman 225 7.5
KIRG Valerie Jenner 197 6.6
Green Tony Mark Robinson 163 5.5
Total votes 8.542
Turnout 2,983 43.1
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)

Old Malden edit

Old Malden (2)
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Democrats Elizabeth Park 1,162 48.6
Liberal Democrats Mike Massimi 1,093 45.7
Conservative Kevin John Davis * 880 36.8
Conservative Jason Robert Hughes * 802 33.6
Labour Grace Victoria Bollins 263 11.0
Labour Emma Keeley Francis 244 10.2
Green Pauline Howard 175 7.3
Total votes 4,619
Turnout 2,390 48.4
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)

St Mark's & Seething Wells edit

St. Mark's and Seething Wells (3)
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Democrats Elizabeth Shard Green * 1,830 46.2
Liberal Democrats Diane White * 1,726 43.6
Liberal Democrats Yogan Yoganathan * 1,669 42.1
Green Sharron Sumner * 1,351 34.1
Green Tariq Shabbeer 992 25.0
Green Hubert Kwisthout 925 23.3
Conservative Cameron John William Davis 526 13.3
Conservative Calum John Paton 472 11.9
Conservative Ian Alistair Wilson 467 11.8
Labour Naomi Louise Bamford-Hurrell 463 11.7
Labour Charlie Deacon 360 9.1
Labour Conor Alexander Bollins 349 8.8
Women's Equality Deborah Anne Young Olszewski 212 5.3
KIRG Leslie Ian Jones 210 5.3
Total votes 11,552
Turnout 3,963 46.4
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)

Sharron Sumner was elected in 2018 in Alexandra ward as a Liberal Democrat, but resigned from the council in early 2022.

Surbiton Hill edit

Surbiton Hill (3)
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Democrats Alison Holt * 1,810 53.4
Liberal Democrats Tom Reeve 1,629 48.1
Liberal Democrats Amir Ali Khan 1,596 47.1
Conservative Caroline Bowis 679 20.0
Conservative Andrew Innes 642 19.0
Conservative Richard John Hudson 535 15.8
Labour Simon Bevis Ayre 382 11.3
Green Anna Katherine Burlingsby 370 10.9
Labour Greta Lynne Farian 338 10.0
Labour Rebecca Claire Way 333 9.8
Green Claire Louise Burlingsby 310 9.4
Green Patrick Lewis Goodacre 291 8.9
KIRG Glen Colegate 285 8.7
KIRG Hayley Smithers 225 6.8
KIRG Mo Rajput 181 5.5
Total votes 9,606
Turnout 3,287 42.2
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)

Tolworth edit

Tolworth (3)
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Democrats Mariana Goncalves 2,047 59.5
Liberal Democrats Andrew John Wooldridge 2,002 58.2
Liberal Democrats Thay Thayalan * 1,998 58.1
Conservative Jemima Lucy Katherine 608 17.7
Labour Anthony John Banks 592 17.2
Conservative Julian Stewart Harvey Bedale 571 16.6
Labour Praveen Kumar Kolluguri 484 14.1
Labour Benjamin Joseph Gillmore Kerkham 479 13.9
Conservative Amia Akter Tania 475 13.8
KIRG Kelv Foote 392 11.4
Total votes 9,648
Turnout 3,440 44.3
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)

Tudor edit

Tudor (2)
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal Democrats Patrick Hall 1,321 45.5
Conservative Jamal Chohan 1,167 40.2
Conservative Ben Mallett 1,153 39.7
Liberal Democrats Jack Smith 1,098 37.8
Green David Horgan 387 13.3
Labour Mark Stephen Garland 234 8.1
Labour Frank William Wingate 206 7.1
Total votes 5,566
Turnout 2,904 56.0
Liberal Democrats win (new seat)
Conservative win (new seat)

2022–2026 by-elections edit

Green Lane & St James edit

Green Lane & St James, 10th November 2022
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
KIRG Yvonne Tracey 855 46.3 +9.2
Liberal Democrats Mahmood Rafiq 647 35.1 -4.9
Labour Nick Draper 265 14.4 +3.6
Conservative Suniya Qureshi 78 4.2 -7.9
Turnout 1,845 40.0
KIRG gain from Liberal Democrats Swing 7.0%

References edit

  1. ^ "The essential guide to London local government | London Councils". www.londoncouncils.gov.uk. Retrieved 10 October 2021.
  2. ^ Holder, Josh. "Local council elections 2018 – results in full". the Guardian. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  3. ^ Rutter, Calum (25 February 2019). "'We're facing a climate catastrophe' says Kingston councillor". MyLondon. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  4. ^ Bayley, Sian (24 March 2020). "Kingston Council's leader ousted at a key moment in the coronavirus crisis". MyLondon. Retrieved 22 October 2021.
  5. ^ Bayley, Sian (1 December 2020). "Chessington councillor resigns from Kingston Council". MyLondon. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  6. ^ Wratten, Marcus (7 April 2021). "Chessington South by-election candidates share top priorities in the "forgotten end of the borough"". Kingston Courier. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  7. ^ Bayley, Sian (3 March 2021). "First candidates for Kingston's Chessington South by-election announced". MyLondon. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  8. ^ "'We're making a stupid mistake' - Jon Tolley QUITS Kingston Lib Dems". Surrey Comet. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  9. ^ "Kingston councillor who quit Lib Dems won't stand in May election". South West Londoner. 14 March 2022. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
  10. ^ "Kingston Council leader Caroline Kerr resigns". Surrey Comet. Retrieved 22 October 2021.
  11. ^ "LGBCE | New political map for Kingston upon Thames Council | LGBCE Site". www.lgbce.org.uk. Retrieved 19 October 2021.
  12. ^ a b "How the elections work | London Councils". www.londoncouncils.gov.uk. Retrieved 14 September 2021.
  13. ^ Firby, Jamie. "Local election update: New Malden Village Ward". www.kingston.gov.uk. Retrieved 9 May 2022.