1965 Leeds City Council election

The municipal elections for Leeds were held on Thursday 13 May 1965,[1] with one third of the council and an extra vacancy in Allerton to be elected.[2]

Building upon the previous year, the Conservatives fully reversed the downward trend they'd been on since 1960. With a whopping 10.2%[3] swing their way, they defeated the Labour Party in a manner not seen since 1951, with Labour's share reduced to the thirties - surpassing even their record low then.

The Conservatives six gains were largely a regaining of Labour's 1963 gains, with the notable exceptions of Beeston, which they already held, and Kirkstall - a first for the ward, which had been monolithically Labour since the boundary changes in 1951.[2]

The Conservatives also recovered Roundhay from Labour who gained it in a by-election in 1963.

Elsewhere, the Liberals continued their decline from the 1962 highs, now at near enough where they were pre-spike. In contrast, the Communists, having steadily raised their candidates in each election since the mid-1950s were now fielding a record of 12, achieving party records in both vote and share. Turnout fell again by just over two percent on last year's figure to 34.5%.[3][4]

Election result

Leeds Local Election Result 1965
Party Seats Gains Losses Net gain/loss Seats % Votes % Votes +/−
  Conservative 17 6 0 +6 58.6 56.1 65,041 +11.2%
  Labour 12 0 6 -6 41.4 37.8 43,813 -9.1%
  Liberal 0 0 0 0 0.0 4.6 5,366 -2.5%
  Communist 0 0 0 0 0.0 1.5 1,741 +0.5%

The result had the following consequences for the total number of seats on the council after the elections:[4]

Party Previous council New council
Cllr Ald Cllr Ald
Labour 56 19 50 19
Conservatives 28  9 34  9
Total 84 28 84 28
112 112
Working majority  28   10   16   10 
 38   26 

Ward result

Allerton[2][5]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Conservative Frank Marshall 5,358 78.8 +9.4
Conservative John William Harwood Long 5,174
Labour Gerald Bloom 1,442 21.2 -0.2
Labour Donald Chadwick 1,308
Majority 3,732 57.6 +9.7
Turnout 6,800
Conservative hold Swing
Conservative hold Swing +4.8
Armley[2][5]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Labour Joseph Bissell 1,907 52.6 -7.2
Conservative Kevin Anthony Beal 1,717 47.4 +19.0
Majority 190 5.2 -26.2
Turnout 3,624
Labour hold Swing -13.1
Beeston[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Conservative Alan Hartley 3,496 58.4 +9.2
Labour Eric Forbes Mill 2,400 40.1 -7.8
Communist Frederick Sidebottom 87 1.5 -1.4
Majority 1,096 18.3 +17.0
Turnout 5,983
Conservative hold Swing +8.5
Blenheim[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Labour William Merritt 1,100 59.6 -9.1
Conservative Rolland Derrick Austwick 747 40.4 +9.1
Majority 353 19.1 -18.2
Turnout 1,847
Labour hold Swing -9.1
Bramley[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Conservative Jack Hart 2,973 56.4 +16.9
Labour William Lord 2,297 43.6 -16.9
Majority 676 12.8 -8.3
Turnout 5,270
Conservative gain from Labour Swing +16.9
Burmantofts[2][5]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Labour George Murray 1,431 56.1 -16.2
Conservative Jessie Margaret (commonly known as Peggy) White 1,120 43.9 +16.2
Majority 311 12.2 -32.3
Turnout 2,551
Labour hold Swing -16.2
City[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Labour Bernard Peter Atha 724 61.6 -11.7
Conservative Michael Herbert Baker 451 38.4 +11.7
Majority 273 23.2 -23.5
Turnout 1,175
Labour hold Swing -11.7
Cross Gates[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Labour Enid Muriel Coward 3,708 57.7 -7.7
Conservative Sidney Andrew Codd 2,294 35.7 +6.6
Communist Henry Fawcett 421 6.6 +1.1
Majority 1,414 22.0 -14.4
Turnout 6,423
Labour hold Swing -7.1
East Hunslet[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Labour Ernest Kavanagh 1,017 63.1 -9.2
Conservative Keith Anthony Frederick Grainger 594 36.9 +9.2
Majority 423 26.3 -18.4
Turnout 1,611
Labour hold Swing -9.2
Far Headingley[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Conservative Alan Edwin Roberts 5,905 67.2 +14.0
Labour Nellie Doreen Jenner 1,649 18.8 -1.4
Liberal Anastasios Christodoulop 1,238 14.1 -12.6
Majority 4,256 48.4 +21.9
Turnout 8,792
Conservative hold Swing +7.7
Halton[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Conservative John Hutchings Rhodes 4,879 78.4 +8.9
Labour Doreen Hamilton 1,347 21.6 -8.9
Majority 3,532 56.7 +17.7
Turnout 6,226
Conservative hold Swing +8.9
Harehills[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Conservative Patrick Crotty 2,720 58.9 +7.5
Labour Howard Howlett 1,639 35.5 -3.5
Liberal Ronald Gibbon Sissons 258 5.6 -4.0
Majority 1,081 23.4 +11.0
Turnout 4,617
Conservative hold Swing +5.5
Holbeck[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Labour Gertrude Bray 1,304 55.0 -1.5
Conservative Michael Waddington 905 38.2 +11.7
Communist Joyce McCarthy 160 6.8 +3.6
Majority 399 16.8 -13.2
Turnout 2,369
Labour hold Swing -6.6
Hunslet Carr[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Labour Wilfred Parker 1,311 57.9 -4.9
Conservative Herbert Ernest Lister 852 37.6 +6.0
Communist Leslie Hunter 101 4.5 -1.1
Majority 459 20.3 -10.9
Turnout 2,264
Labour hold Swing -5.4
Hyde Park[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Conservative Ronald Derek Fielding 2,495 55.9 +6.8
Labour Wilfred Window 1,166 26.1 -12.8
Liberal Deryck ernest Senior 689 15.4 +3.3
Communist Stanley Peter Walker 116 2.6 +2.6
Majority 1,329 29.8 +19.6
Turnout 4,466
Conservative hold Swing +9.8
Kirkstall[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Conservative Raymond Kent 2,202 50.4 +16.3
Labour Dennis Burrill Matthews 2,020 46.2 -9.0
Communist Beryl Huffinley 150 3.4 +0.7
Majority 182 4.2 -17.0
Turnout 4,372
Conservative gain from Labour Swing +12.6
Meanwood[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Conservative Thomas William Kirkby 3,232 67.6 +9.0
Labour John McPheat 1,049 21.9 -9.2
Liberal Evelyn Mary Briggs 500 10.5 +0.2
Majority 2,183 45.7 +18.3
Turnout 4,781
Conservative hold Swing +9.1
Middleton[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Labour St. John Binns 1,833 74.7 -6.1
Conservative Frank Stubley 477 19.4 +3.9
Communist Enos Leslie Moore 143 5.8 +2.2
Majority 1,356 55.3 -10.0
Turnout 2,453
Labour hold Swing -5.0
Moortown[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Conservative Louie Ellen Henson 5,532 71.2 +8.9
Labour Bernard Ingham 1,485 19.1 -7.9
Liberal Kenneth Roy Dunn 561 7.2 -3.5
Communist Philip Boyes 190 2.4 +2.4
Majority 4,047 52.1 +16.8
Turnout 7,768
Conservative hold Swing +8.4
Osmondthorpe[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Labour William John (aka Jack) Pritchard 1,322 65.3 -13.0
Conservative Ethel Megan Lewis 704 34.7 +13.0
Majority 618 30.5 -26.0
Turnout 2,026
Labour hold Swing -13.0
Pottenewton[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Conservative Irwin Norman Bellow 2,270 56.2 +8.8
Labour Joyce Brenda Gould 1,267 31.4 -11.7
Liberal Sydney Herbert Bexan 427 10.6 +3.3
Communist Raymond Ramsden 73 1.8 -0.4
Majority 1,003 24.8 +20.5
Turnout 4,037
Conservative hold Swing +10.2
Richmond Hill[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Labour William Cain 1,463 69.6 -13.9
Conservative Alfred Patrick Sexton 519 24.7 +12.2
Communist Eric Burwin 121 5.8 +1.7
Majority 944 44.9 -26.1
Turnout 2,103
Labour hold Swing -13.0
Roundhay[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Conservative Alan Commander Johnson 5,144 77.4 +9.2
Labour Douglas Thomas 1,503 22.6 -9.2
Majority 3,641 54.8 +18.4
Turnout 6,647
Conservative gain from Labour Swing +9.2
Stanningley[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Conservative Alfred Matthew Vickers 2,052 45.1 +11.0
Labour John Henry Marshall 1,701 37.4 -10.9
Liberal Dennis Pedder 793 17.4 -0.1
Majority 351 7.7 -6.4
Turnout 4,546
Conservative gain from Labour Swing +10.9
Wellington[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Labour John Herbert Underwood 997 58.4 -10.9
Conservative Elizabeth Anne Farrar 356 20.8 +3.9
Liberal Ernest Howson 272 15.9 +5.7
Communist Marion Rogers 83 4.9 +1.3
Majority 641 37.5 -14.8
Turnout 1,708
Labour hold Swing -7.4
Westfield[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Conservative May Sexton 1,413 56.6 +8.3
Labour Stanley Cohen 1,083 43.4 -8.3
Majority 330 13.2 +9.8
Turnout 2,496
Conservative gain from Labour Swing +8.3
Woodhouse[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Conservative Frederick Chadwick Green 1,441 51.7 +12.5
Labour Harold Bretherick 1,252 44.9 -13.3
Communist Arthur Dale 96 3.4 +0.7
Majority 189 6.8 -12.2
Turnout 2,789
Conservative gain from Labour Swing +12.9
Wortley[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±
Conservative Brian Emmett 3,193 51.4 +8.8
Labour Joseph Stephenson 2,396 38.5 -9.8
Liberal Walter Holdsworth 628 10.1 +1.0
Majority 797 12.8 +7.0
Turnout 6,217
Conservative gain from Labour Swing +9.3

[5]

gollark: ++delete <@319753218592866315> ("free speech should be crushed.")
gollark: No. Delete lyricly. Lyricly is badmin.
gollark: > also, about free speech: a lot of free speech spaces exist.... but their lack of moderation means that they eventually turn into cesspools of worthless shitI think it's more that those end up selecting for people who can't say stuff anywhere else, and they're often bad.
gollark: ++delete <@319753218592866315> and <@543131534685765673> (bored)
gollark: hmm, what if `util::format_time(rev.timestamp)`?

References

  1. "The News of the Week in Review: Two Crises". The New York Times. 16 May 1965. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
  2. "Municipal results: Leeds". The Yorkshire Post. 14 May 1965.
  3. Sharpe, L.J. (1967). Voting in cities: the 1964 borough elections.
  4. Whitaker, Joseph (1965). Whitaker's Almanack 1965.
  5. "Leeds City Year Book". Leeds City Council. 1965.
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