Politics of Three Rivers District

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The politics of Three Rivers, a district in England, are played out at local, Hertfordshire-wide, and parliamentary levels. Three Rivers is a non-metropolitan district governed locally by a district council composed of 48 councillors that is responsible for such services as housing, waste disposal, and local planning. The district is represented by six members on the 77-councillor Hertfordshire County Council, which is responsible for such services as education, transport, and social services.

The three major parties are all competitive in different parts of Three Rivers and at different levels of representation. Three Rivers district council is under Liberal Democrat control, with the Lib Dems holding 65% of district councillors. The Conservatives are second-largest, have most votes in the last election, and hold three of the district's six county councillors. Labour, whilst a distant third at both district and county level in Three Rivers, hold sway in South Oxhey. However, Labour lost two of their district council seats there in 2008, including one to the British National Party.

Three Rivers is represented in Parliament by three Members of Parliament. Most of the district is within the South West Hertfordshire constituency, represented by Conservative David Gauke. Smaller parts of the district are represented by Daisy Cooper (St Albans, Liberal Democrat) and Dean Russell (Watford, Conservative).

District council[edit]

Three Rivers is a non-metropolitan district that elects one-third of its councillors at any one time: three times every four years, with the fourth for elections to Hertfordshire County Council). In the 2008 election, the council remained under Liberal Democrat control, having been first won by the Lib Dems from no overall control in 1999. The Conservatives are second strongest, whilst Labour have been reduced to a small contingent over the past ten years. The British National Party won its first seat in Three Rivers in 2008.

As of the 2018 elections, the composition of the council is:

Party Councillors Change (on 2007)
Liberal Democrats 20 0
Conservative 16 +1
Labour 3 -2
Total 48 -
Source: BBC News

County council[edit]

For elections to Hertfordshire County Council, the district is divided into six divisions, three of which are held by the Conservatives, two by the Liberal Democrats, and one by the BNP:

Seat Councillor Party Wards
Abbots Langley Paul Goggins Liberal Democrats Abbots Langley, Bedmond and Primrose Hill, Langleybury (part), Leavesden
Chorleywood Chris Hayward Conservative Chorleywood East, Chorleywood West, Langleybury (part), Sarratt
Croxley David Drury Liberal Democrats Croxley Green, Croxley Green North, Croxley Green South
Oxhey Park Frances Button Conservative Carpenders Park, Moor Park and Eastbury, Oxhey Hall
Rickmansworth Barbara Lamb Conservative Maple Cross and Mill End, Penn, Rickmansworth, Rickmansworth West
South Oxhey Deirdre Gates BNP Ashridge, Hayling, Northwick
Source: Hertfordshire County Council

Parliament[edit]

For parliamentary elections, the district is divided across three constituencies. Most of the district is within the South West Hertfordshire constituency, which is considered a safe Conservative seat and held by a Conservative MP (currently Gagan Mohindra) since its creation in 1950. The eastern parts of the constituency, to the north and south of Watford, are part of that borough's constituency, which is a three-way marginal currently held by Conservative’s Dean Russell, having fluctuated between Labour and the Conservatives. Most of the north-eastern ward of Bedmond and Primrose Hill is in the St Albans constituency, which is currently held by the Lib Dem Daisy Cooper.

Seat MP Party Wards
St Albans Daisy Cooper Liberal Democrats Bedmond and Primrose Hill (part)
South West Hertfordshire Gagan Mohindra Conservative Ashridge, Chorleywood East, Chorleywood West, Croxley Green, Croxley Green North, Croxley Green South, Hayling, Maple Cross and Mill End, Moor Park and Eastbury, Northwick, Penn, Rickmansworth, Rickmansworth West, Sarratt
Watford Dean Russell Conservative Abbots Langley, Bedmond and Primrose Hill (part), Carpenders Park, Langleybury, Leavesden, Oxhey Hall
Source: Boundary Commission for England

References[edit]