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Deansgate (ward)

Deansgate
Deansgate electoral ward within Manchester City Council
Deansgate electoral ward within Manchester City Council
Coat of arms of Deansgate
Motto: 
By wisdom and effort
Map
Interactive map of Deansgate
Coordinates: 53°28′42″N 2°14′58″W / 53.4784°N 2.2494°W / 53.4784; -2.2494
CountryUnited Kingdom
Constituent countryEngland
RegionNorth West England
CountyGreater Manchester
Metropolitan boroughManchester
CreatedDecember 2017
Named afterDeansgate
Government
 • TypeUnicameral
 • BodyManchester City Council
 • Leader of the councilBev Craig (Labour)
 • CouncillorSarah Wakefield (Green)
 • CouncillorAnthony McCaul (Labour)
 • CouncillorMarcus Johns (Labour)
UK Parliamentary ConstituencyManchester Central
Member of ParliamentLucy Powell
UK Parliamentary ConstituencyBlackley and Broughton
Member of ParliamentGraham Stringer

The Deansgate electoral ward of Manchester City Council was created by the Local Government Boundary Commission for England to replace part of the City Centre ward in 2018.[1]

Different parts of this ward are represented by different MPs; the majority of the ward is in the Manchester Central constituency but the area north of the railway line through Victoria station is in the Blackley and Broughton constituency.

Councillors

[edit]

Three councillors serve the ward:[1] William Jeavons, Labour (2019–23),[2] Marcus Johns, Labour (2021–24),[3] and Joan Davies, Labour (2018–22).[4]

Election Councillor Councillor Councillor
2018 William Jeavons (Lab) Marcus Johns (Lab) Joan Davies (Lab)
2019 William Jeavons (Lab) Marcus Johns (Lab) Joan Davies (Lab)
2021 William Jeavons (Lab) Marcus Johns (Lab) Joan Davies (Lab)
2022 William Jeavons (Lab) Marcus Johns (Lab) Joan Davies (Lab)
2023 Anthony McCaul (Labour Co-op) Marcus Johns (Lab) Joan Davies (Lab)
2024 Anthony McCaul (Labour Co-op) Marcus Johns (Lab) Joan Davies (Lab)
2026 Anthony McCaul (Labour Co-op) Marcus Johns (Lab) Sarah Wakefield (Grn)

  indicates seat up for election.

Elections in 2020s

[edit]

* denotes incumbent councillor seeking re-election.

May 2026

[edit]
2026
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Green Sarah Wakefield 1,380 47.4 Increase34.0
Labour Joan Davies* 801 27.5 Decrease32.4
Reform David Bryan 380 13.0 Increase11.3
Liberal Democrats John Bridges 226 7.8 Decrease9.1
Conservative Daniel Bell 120 4.1 Decrease4.0
SDP Connor Sanders 5 0.2 New
Majority 579 19.9 N/A
Turnout 2,912 26.7 Increase6.6
Green gain from Labour Swing

May 2024

[edit]
2024
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Co-op Marcus Charles Johns* 1,432 61.3 7.4 Increase
Green Chris Ogden 490 21.0 9.9 Increase
Conservative Jason Peter McLeod 196 8.4 1.3 Increase
Liberal Democrats Luke Allan 186 8.0 17.3 Decrease
Majority 942 40.3
Rejected ballots 31 1.3
Turnout 2,335 24.23
Registered electors 9,635
Labour hold Swing 1.2 Decrease

May 2023

[edit]
2023
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Co-op Anthony McCaul 1,050 56.8 22.0 Increase
Green Chris Perriam 370 20.0 2.4 Increase
Liberal Democrats Joe Lynch 253 13.7 17.7 Decrease
Conservative Paul Wan 163 8.8 Steady
Majority 680 36.8
Rejected ballots 14
Turnout 1,850 21.16
Registered electors 8,744
Labour Co-op hold Swing

May 2022

[edit]
2022
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Joan Davies* 1,033 59.9 5.9 Increase
Liberal Democrats John Bridges 292 16.9 8.3 Decrease
Green Anastasia Wiest 231 13.4 2.3 Increase
Conservative Jamie Hoyle 139 8.1 1.0 Increase
Reform Nick Buckley 30 1.7 0.0 Steady
Majority 741 43.0 14.3 Increase
Rejected ballots 8
Turnout 1,725 20.1 0.7 Increase
Registered electors 8,643
Labour hold Swing 7.1 Increase

May 2021

[edit]
2021
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Co-op Marcus Johns* 1,245 53.9 12.8 Increase
Liberal Democrats John Bridges 583 25.3 0.6 Increase
Green Chris Ogden 256 11.1 9.9 Decrease
Conservative James Flanagan 164 7.1 5.0 Decrease
Women's Equality Samantha Days 60 2.6 8.6 Decrease
Majority 662 32.6 Increase12.2
Rejected ballots 16 0.7
Turnout 2,324 28.9 9.5 Increase
Registered electors 8,047
Labour hold Swing 6.1 Increase

Elections in 2010s

[edit]

May 2019

[edit]
2019
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour William Jeavons* 497 34.8 Decrease4.0
Liberal Democrats John Bridges 449 31.4 Increase6.7
Green Christopher Ogden 252 17.6 Decrease3.4
Conservative Connor Watson 126 8.8 Decrease3.9
Women's Equality Sam Johnson 105 7.3 Decrease3.9
Majority 48 3.36 Decrease10.7
Rejected ballots 9 0.63
Turnout 1429 19.81 Increase0.43
Registered electors 7,258
Labour hold Swing Decrease5.35

May 2018

[edit]
2018[5]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Joan Davies* 782 53.3
Labour Marcus Johns 604 41.1
Labour William Jeavons 570 38.8
Liberal Democrats John Bridges 362 24.7
Liberal Democrats Gary McKenna 311 21.2
Green Christopher Ogden 308 21.0
Liberal Democrats George Rice 285 19.4
Conservative Russ George 196 13.4
Conservative Lee Evans 185 12.6
Independent Nick Buckley 164 11.2
Women's Equality Sam Johnson 164 11.2
Conservative Charles Latchford 151 10.3
Independent Giles Grover 99 6.7
Majority 208
Rejected ballots 2 0.026
Turnout 1,468 19.38
Registered electors 7,573
Labour win (new seat)
Labour win (new seat)
Labour win (new seat)
Party Candidates Seats Won Votes Vote %
Labour 3 3 1,956 46.78
Liberal Democrats 3 0 958 22.91
Conservative 3 0 532 12.72
Green 1 0 308 7.37
Independent 2 0 263 6.29
Women's Equality 1 0 164 3.92

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b LGBCE (April 2017). Final recommendations on the new electoral arrangements for Manchester City Council (PDF). Local Government Boundary Commission for England. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 February 2018.
  2. ^ "William Jeavons". democracy.manchester.gov.uk. Manchester City Council. Retrieved 9 July 2019.
  3. ^ "Marcus Johns". manchester.gov.uk. Manchester City Council. Retrieved 22 February 2018.
  4. ^ "Joan Davies". manchester.gov.uk. Manchester City Council. Retrieved 22 May 2018.
  5. ^ "3 May 2018 Local Government Election results". manchester.gov.uk. Manchester City Council. 5 May 2018. Archived from the original on 7 May 2018. Retrieved 8 May 2018.