Mabe, Perranarworthal and St Gluvias (electoral division)

Mabe, Perranarworthal and St Gluvias (Cornish: Lannvab, Peranarwodhel ha Pluw Luwyek)[3][4][5] was an electoral division of Cornwall in the United Kingdom which returned one member to sit on Cornwall Council between 2013 and 2021. It was abolished at the 2021 local elections, being succeeded by Mylor, Perranarworthal and Ponsanooth and Constantine, Mabe and Mawnan.

Mabe, Perranarworthal and St Gluvias
Former ward
Cornwall Council.
Boundary of Mabe, Perranarworthal and St Gluvias in from 2013-2021.
CountyCornwall
2013 (2013)2021 (2021)
Number of councillorsOne
Replaced byMylor, Perranarworthal and Ponsanooth
Constantine, Mabe and Mawnan
Created fromMabe[1][2]

Councillors

ElectionMemberParty
2013 Michael KeoghUKIP
2014 by-election Peter WilliamsConservative
2017
2021 Seat abolished

Extent

Mabe, Perranarworthal and St Gluvias represented the villages of Perranarworthal, Ponsanooth, St Gluvias and Mabe as well as the hamlets of Church Town, Trenoweth, Antron and Burnthouse. The division also covered part of Tremough, a university campus of the University of Exeter and Falmouth University. The division covered 2644 hectares in total.[6]

Election results

2017 election

2017 election: Mabe, Perranarworthal and St Gluvias[7]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Conservative Peter Williams 816 45.4 4.0
Liberal Democrats Simon Taylor 473 26.3 15.0
Independent Peter Tisdale 303 16.9 New
Labour Cathy Page 199 11.1 0.2
Majority 343 19.1 19.0
Rejected ballots 5 0.3 0.2
Turnout 1796 41.5 19.0
Conservative hold Swing

2014 by-election

2014 by-election: Mabe, Perranarworthal and St Gluvias[8]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Conservative Peter Williams 406 41.4 13.1
Liberal Democrats John Ault 405 41.3 18.5
Labour Linda Hitchcox 107 10.9 2.0
Mebyon Kernow Karen Sumser-Lupson 58 5.9 New
Majority 1 0.1 N/A
Rejected ballots 5 0.5
Turnout 981 22.5 17.4
Conservative gain from UKIP Swing

2013 election

2013 election: Mabe, Perranarworthal and St Gluvias[9]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
UKIP Michael Keogh 413 28.5
Conservative Chris Ridgers 410 28.3
Liberal Democrats John Ault 331 22.8
Independent Christopher Jackson 160 11.0
Labour Betty Ross 129 8.9
Majority 3 0.2
Rejected ballots 7 0.5
Turnout 1450 39.9
UKIP win (new seat)

References


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