East Devon Alliance
East Devon Alliance, also known as the Independent East Devon Alliance was registered as a political party in East Devon at the Electoral Commission in 2015. It provides a protective umbrella for non-national party Independent candidates in local elections. It has no whip.
East Devon Alliance | |
---|---|
Leader | Paul Arnott |
Chairperson | Cathy Gardner |
Founded | 2015 |
Political position | Localism |
Slogan | Independents working for you |
East Devon District Council seats | 11 / 60 (as of May 2019)[1]
|
Website | |
http://www.eastdevonalliance.com | |
It had its origins in 2013 as a community activist and pressure group opposed to large-scale unsustainable development providing poor quality homes with very few affordables.[2] Under electoral law it was obliged to register as a political party in 2015 when it won 10 of the 59 seats in the 2015 East Devon District Council election.[3] In May 2015, the voters of East Devon elected 10 EDA district councillors and 5 independents. In 2017, EDA elected its first Devon County Councillor, former Labour Party member Martin Shaw, representing Seaton and Colyton.[4] It campaigns strongly to save community beds in hospitals, for reform in local governance, for affordable homes and a developing green agenda[5]
In May 2019, the party increased its number of district councillors to 11.[1]
References
- Clark, Daniel (3 May 2019). "Full results as Conservatives lose control of East Devon District Council". Devon Live.
- "East Devon Alliance - Homepage". East Devon Alliance. Retrieved 4 May 2019.
The EDA was born from the coming together of several groups campaigning to prevent inappropriate and unsustainable large-scale development in East Devon
- "Declaration of result of poll" (PDF). Mark R. Williams, Returning Officer. 9 May 2015. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 2, 2016. Retrieved February 21, 2016.
- Wilkins, Daniel (5 May 2017). "East Devon Alliance win Seaton and Colyton seat in county vote". Midweek Herald.
- "Independents Working for you". East Devon Alliance. Retrieved 16 June 2019.