Local By-elections


saltire shield'Scottish Borders Councillor Ian Waddell (Independent) stood down after Thursday's full Council meeting in protest at the approved £5.5 million budget cuts.'
Ally McGilvary in the Border Telegraph, 19 th February 2002.
Lion Rampant

IndInd

Eyemouth & District South (Scottish Borders) 2 nd May 2002

Eyemouth & District South - ward 1

A by-election was held in the Eyemouth & District South ward of Scottish Borders Council on the 2 nd May 2006 following the resignation of Independent Cllr Ian Waddell over budget cuts on the 14 th February 2002.

Eyemouth & District South is in the new Berwickshire, Roxburgh & Selkirk Westminster parliamentary seat (held by Liberal Democrat Michael Moore MP) and in the Roxburgh & Berwickshire Scottish parliamentary seat (held by Liberal Democrat Euan Robson MSP).

Cllr Michael Cook
Borders Action Group Cllr Michael J. Cook


2 nd May 2002 By-election
Turnout 44.7 % (- 11.8 %)
Candidate Logo Party Votes % % change
Michael J. Cook Ind logo Borders Action Group 576 52.9 % (+ 52.9 %)
William Herd SNP logo Scottish National Party 229 21.4 % (+ 21.4 %) / - 9.5 %
Elspeth Baird Lib logo Liberal Democrat 225 21.0 % - 10.9 %
Michael Norcott Tory logo Conservative 50 4.7 % - 4.7 %
Borders Action Group gain from Independent Ind logo Borders Action group majority 347 31.5 %


6 th May 1999
Turnout 56.5 % (+ 14.2 %)
Candidate Logo Party Votes % % change
Cllr Ian S. Waddell Ind logo Independent 549 40.3 % - 6.4 %
Cllr William Herd Lib logo Liberal Democrat 421 30.9 % - 9.5 %
William Grant Ind logo Independent 264 19.4 % - 3.9 %
Shiela G. Stoddart Tory logo Conservative 128 9.4 % (+ 9.4 %)
Independent hold Ind logo Independent majority 128 24.0 % - 9.4 %

Borders Council, Eyemouth Landward ward 2

By-election 26 th March 1998
Turnout 42.3 % (+ 5.1 %)
Candidate Logo Party Votes % % change
Provost Ian Waddell Ind logo Independent 282 46.7 % (+ 46.7 %)
William Grant Ind logo Independent 141 23.3 % (+ 23.3 %)
Brian Park Lib logo Liberal Democrat 129 21.4 % - 47.9 %
Maureen Finlay SNP logo Scottish National Party 52 8.6 % (+ 8.6 %)
Independent gain from Liberal Democrat Ind logo Independent majority 141 23.3 %


6 th April 1995
Turnout 37.2 %
Candidate Logo Party Votes % % change
David Aitchison Lib logo Liberal Democrat 377 69.3 %
Lawrence Pettitt Labour logo Labour 167 30.7 %
Liberal Democrat win Lib logo Liberal Democrat majority 38.6 % Liberal Democrat win

Councillor resigns

By Ally McGilvray in the Border Telegraph, 19 th February 2002

SCOTTISH Borders Councillor Ian Waddell (Independent) stood down after Thursday's full Council meeting in protest at the approved £5.5 million budget cuts.

He said that the proposals were contrary to the policies and strategies implemented by this Council over the years.'

He added: 'The cuts in life Long Learning, Life Long Care and Transport and Environmental Standards have threatened to undermine all of our achievements.'

The Eyemouth South representative was the only councillor to abstain from voting during what he described a 'pretty messy' meeting.

He later admitted that he was 'encouraged' by the changes in the budget, including the additional £345,000 from Fire Board pensions and the eleventh-hour reprieve for swimming pools.

But he said: 'I was committed to voting against the budget.'

Councillor Waddell was the originally elected to stand for the Eyemouth Landward ward on SBC after the death of David Aitchison in 1998.

A by-election has been set for March 6.

By-elections in Scotland

From the Herald, 2 nd May 2002

There are three local government by-elections in Scotland today, in the Borders Council area.

They are in the wards of Old Selkirk, Eyemouth & District, and Kelso Central.

Two of the contests are due to the death of councillors but the third, in Eyemouth, was precipitated by the resignation last February of Ian Waddell, the independent councillor, over budget cutbacks.

The votes will not be counted until tomorrow morning.

By-elections

From the Herald, 4 th May 2002

A former Tory MEP has won a Scottish Borders council seat held by theLiberal Democrats.

Alasdair Hutton won the Kelso Central ward by a majority of 97 from the LibDems in one of three council by-elections in the Borders which took place at the same times as the English polls.

The Eyemouth & District South ward was won by Michael Cook, who had no party label but was a members of th Borders Action Group which campaigned against the £5m budget cuts enacted by the council earlier this year.

Gordon Edgar, and Independent, won the Old Selkirk seat.

Voters cast off Borders turmoil

By Alastair Jamieson in the Scotsman, 4 th May 2002

The Tories won a council seat from the Liberal Democrats in the Borders yesterday in the wake of the recent financial crisis which prompted severe cutbacks to services.

The former South of Scotland MEP, Alasdair Hutton won the by-election in Kelso after the Liberal Democrat vote collapsed.

The Lib Dems, who had controlled Scottish Borders Council in a coalition with independents until recently, have been implicated in a budget overspend of £4 million in the education department which has led to job losses and the closure of facilities.

The Scottish Tory party chairman, David Mitchell, said: "I warmly congratulate Alasdair on an excellent victory.

"He has the ability and experience to represent the people of Kelso."

Another by-election, in Eyemouth & District South, was won by an independent, Michael Cook. The poll was precipitated by the resignation last February of Ian Waddell, another independent councillor, over cutbacks. In a third by-election, independent candidate Gordon Edgar won the Old Selkirk council seat, beating the Lib Dems by 458 votes to 78.

The political turmoil in the Borders reached a peak in March when the controversial council leader, Drew Tulley, resigned, causing the ruling group to collapse.

Mr Tulley, 64, stepped down after a loss of public confidence in the council over budget overspend. He quit a day before Lib Dem councillors were due to table a motion of no confidence in him.

SBC ultimatum: The fight starts here

By Ally McGilvray in the Border Telegraph, 7 th May 2002

THREE new councillors have been elected to serve on Scottish Borders Council.

Gordon Edgar (Independent), Alasdair Hutton (Scottish Conservative and Unionist Party), and Michael Cook (No Ticket, Borders Action Group), last week won the by-elections in the Old Selkirk, Kelso Central and Eyemouth and District South wards respectively.

They will be sworn in when the full Council meets tomorrow (Wednesday).

All three winning candidates were anti-cuts campaigners, opposed to the financial management at the Council and the budget cuts which followed.

Mr Edgar said: 'The fight starts here to get the services that the Borders deserve.'

With vital social amenities still threatened, voters turned out in their hundreds to register their disapproval.

The result from Thursday's polls has further reduced the slight majority held by the recently formed Liberal-Democrat-led Administration at the Council.

Mr Hutton is the only winning candidate to confirm his allegiance to the ruling group.

But he warned: 'I hope that the Council will hear the message that this result will send. The people have said that they are unhappy with the way the Council has behaved.

'I am quite sure that this result should be interpreted as the people wanting councillors to be closer to the wishes and the voices of the people of the Borders.

'And I hope that this message will be heard by all the councillors of Scottish Borders Council.'

Perhaps of greater distinction, only one year from the full quota of local government elections, the Borders Action Group candidate in Eyemouth received more votes than all three Liberal-Democrat candidates put together.

Mr Cook said: 'The voters have given us a massive endorsement. That endorsement sends a huge message to Scottish Borders Council and I hope the Council is listening.

'It is a message which says: 'We are dissatisfied, and we are deeply unhappy with what has been happening'.

'It is now time for the Council to start listening to our message and take on board our message because it has been delivered in unequivocal fashion. I hope they will take note,' he added.

Ironically, the first task faced by those newly elected councillors will be to vote on the Council's proposed Recovery Plan.

Reacting to the results of last week's by-elections in Selkirk, Eyemouth and Kelso, former Council Leader Drew Tulley said that he was not surprised at the results.

Councillor Tulley said that it mirrored the 'wrong' decision by the new Administration to promise an immediate recovery plan.

He said: 'They are just creating more problems for next year.'

THE result of the polls at the three by-elections to Scottish Borders Council on Thursday were as follows:

Old Selkirk

Gordon Edgar (Independent), 458.

John Thomson (Independent), 444.

John Cooper (SNP), 173.

Graeme McIver (No Ticket, Borders Action Group), 115.

Morris Manson (Liberal Democrat), 74.

Turn-out: 45.5 per cent.

Kelso Central

Alasdair Hutton (Conservative), 328.

Peter Logan (Liberal-Democrat), 231.

John Dawson (Independent), 186.

Natasha York (SNP), 104.

Turn-out: 33.6 per cent.

Eyemouth

Michael Cook (No Ticket, Borders Action Group), 567.

William Herd (SNP), 229.

Elspeth Baird (Liberal-Democrat), 225.

Michael Norcott (Conservative), 50.

Turn-out: 44.5 per cent.

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