The 2012 City of Bradford Metropolitan District Council election took place on 3 May 2012.[1] The elections took place shortly after the Bradford West by-election, in which the Respect Party's George Galloway pulled off a shock victory against the incumbent Labour Party. Held alongside was a referendum on directly elected mayors. The Labour Party were one seat short of an overall majority following the election, leaving the council in no overall control.
Of the council's 90 seats, 30 were up for election.
An asterisk denotes an incumbent.
Faisal Khan resigned from the Respect Party along with four other councillors in October 2013 and served as an independent councillor[3] until March 2015 when he rejoined the party.[4]
Ruqayyah Collector resigned from the Respect Party along with four other councillors in October 2013 and served as an independent councillor[3] until March 2015 when he rejoined the party.[4]
In 2008, Adrian Naylor stood successfully in this ward as a Conservative Party candidate.[5]
Mohammad Shabbir resigned from the Respect Party along with four other councillors in October 2013.[3] He served as an independent councillor until April 2015 when he joined the Labour Party.[6]
Anne Hawkesworth left the Conservative Party in January 2013 and joined The Independents: Adrian Naylor (Craven) and Chris Greaves (Wharfedale).[7]
Ishtiaq Ahmed resigned from the Respect Party along with four other councillors in October 2013 and served as an independent councillor[3] until March 2015 when he rejoined the party.[4]
163 (3.66%) ballot papers were rejected, compared to 48 (0.96%) in the 2008 election in this ward. Arshad Hussain stood successfully here as a Conservative Party candidate in 2008, before defecting in 2010 following a race row - his vote change corresponds to the 2008 Labour Party candidate, Sobia Kauser.
Mayoral referendums were held in 11 local authorities across England to decide whether to introduce directly elected mayors, as opposed in Bradford to the previous system of Councillors electing a leader of the council. Alongside Birmingham, Coventry, Leeds, Newcastle upon Tyne, Nottingham, Sheffield and Wakefield, Bradford voted against directly elected mayors. Only Bristol and Doncaster voted in favour.
Vote changes correspond to the 2012 Council election.
This was triggered by the resignation of Cllr. Matt Palmer, who had stood successfully for the Conservative Party in this ward in the 2003, 2007 and 2011 council elections, in early October.[8][9]
Bradford local elections