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London mayoral election, 2000

 
Wikipedia: London mayoral election, 2000
None Flag of the United Kingdom 2004
London mayoral election, 2000
4 May 2000
     
Candidate Ken Livingstone Steven Norris Frank Dobson
Party Independent Conservative Labour
Popular vote 776,427 (final) 564,137 (final) Not in final round
Percentage 57.9% (final) 42.1% (final) Not in final round
First preference
Popular vote 667,877 464,434 223,884
Percentage 39.0% 27.1% 13.1%
Second preference
Popular vote 178,809 188,041 228,095
Percentage 12.6% 13.2% 16.0%

Incumbent Mayor
None
Nonpartisan

The first election to the office of Mayor of London took place on 4 May 2000.

Contents

Results

London Mayoral Election Results 2000
Name Party 1st Preference Votes  % 2nd Preference Votes¹  % Final  %²
Ken Livingstone Independent 667,877 39.0 178,809 12.6 776,427 57.9
Steven Norris Conservative 464,434 27.1 188,041 13.2 564,137 42.1
Frank Dobson Labour 223,884 13.1 228,095 16.0 N/A
Susan Kramer Lib Dem 203,452 11.9 404,815 28.5 N/A
Ram Gidoomal CPA 42,060 2.4 56,489 4.0 N/A
Darren Johnson Green 38,121 2.2 192,764 13.6 N/A
Michael Newland BNP 33,569 2.0 45,337 3.2 N/A
Damian Hockney UKIP 16,324 1.0 43,672 3.1 N/A
Geoffrey Ben-Nathan Pro-Motorist Small Shop 9,956 0.6 23,021 1.6 N/A
Ashwin Tanna Independent 9,015 0.5 41,766 2.9 N/A
Geoffrey Clements Natural Law 5,470 0.3 18,185 1.3 N/A

¹Under the Supplementary Vote system, if no candidate receives 50% of 1st choice votes, 2nd choice votes are added to the result for the top two 1st choice candidates. If a ballot gives a first and second preference to the top two candidates in either order, then their second preference is not counted, so that a second preference cannot count against a first, hence why the “total” vote for Livingstone and Norris is not the sum of first and second preferences.

²Percentage figures are not officially used on the final votes, they are produced here for illustration and are calculated by the candidates final vote divided by the total of final votes.

  • Turnout: 1,752,303 (34.43%)
  • As the ballot papers are counted electronically, totals for all second preferences are available, even though some did not contribute to the final result.

Candidates

Candidate selection

Ken Livingstone had sought the Labour Party nomination but was defeated by Frank Dobson. He described the result as "tainted" because the election system gave greater weight to the votes of London Labour MPs rather than rank-and-file party members, and decided to contest the election as an Independent candidate. On handing in nomination papers he was automatically expelled from membership of the Labour Party.

Steve Norris had lost the original selection ballot for Conservative candidate to Jeffrey Archer, but Archer stood down as a candidate when a newspaper printed a story accusing him of committing perjury during a 1987 libel trial (he was later convicted and imprisoned).

References



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