Mayor of Salford

The Mayor of Salford is a directly elected politician responsible for the executive functions of Salford City Council, created in 2012 for the City of Salford in Greater Manchester.[1] The position is different from the long-existing and largely ceremonial, annually appointed ceremonial mayor of Salford.

Mayor of Salford
Coat of arms of the City of Salford
Incumbent
Paul Dennett
since 6 May 2016
StyleNo courtesy title or style
AppointerElectorate of Salford
Term lengthFour years
Inaugural holderIan Stewart
Formation2012
Websitecitymayor.salford.gov.uk

Greater Manchester Combined Authority

The GMCA is made up of 11 constituent members: the elected Mayor of Greater Manchester and the 10 leaders, nominated by each of Greater Manchester's constituent authorities.The Mayor of Salford is the only directly elected council leader in Greater Manchester. [2]

Referendum

A petition of 10,500 Salford residents, started by the English Democrats, on a referendum on the creation of a directly elected mayor triggered the process of establishing a directly elected mayor for Salford.[3] The poll was held on 26 January 2012.

Mayor of Salford referendum
26 January 2012
ChoiceVotes%
Elected Mayor17,34455.92
Cabinet System13,65344.08
Valid votes30,99799.70
Invalid or blank votes940.30
Total votes31,091100.00
Registered voters/turnout171,79018.09
Source: Salford City Council[4]

Elections

2012

In the first election for a directly elected mayor in May 2012, Ian Stewart, a Labour Party politician who was the Member of Parliament (MP) for Eccles from 1997 until 2010, was elected.[5] During the campaign controversy surrounded Independent candidate Paul Massey who stated that he is not a criminal, after he was arrested in connection with allegations of money laundering.[6]

Salford Mayoral Election 3 May 2012 [7]
PartyCandidate1st round2nd round1st round votesTransfer votes, 2nd round
TotalOf roundTransfersTotalOf round
LabourIan Stewart20,66346.0%2,79623,45970.0%
ConservativeKaren Garrido8,05518.0%2,01610,07130.0%
UKIPBernard Gill3,3687.5%
IndependentPat Ward2,6655.9%
Liberal DemocratsNorman Owen2,1484.8%
BNPEdward O'Sullivan2,0264.5%
IndependentPaul Massey1,9954.5%
English DemocratMichael Felse1,6163.6%
GreenJoseph O'Neill1,2732.8%
Community ActionMichael Moulding1,0652.4%
Labour win

2016

Salford Mayoral Election 5 May 2016 [8][9]
PartyCandidate1st round2nd round1st round votesTransfer votes, 2nd round
TotalOf roundTransfersTotalOf round
LabourPaul Dennett24,20949.6%4,12328,33266.2%
ConservativeRobin Garrido11,81024.2%2,67414,48433.8%
UKIPOwen Hammond8,66817.7%
GreenWendy Olsen4,1588.5%
Labour hold

2021

The election was scheduled to take place in May 2020 but was delayed to 6 May 2021 due to COVID-19 pandemic, it took place alongside other local and regional elections in the United Kingdom.

Salford Mayoral Election 6 May 2021 [10]
PartyCandidate1st round2nd round1st round votesTransfer votes, 2nd round
TotalOf roundTransfersTotalOf round
LabourPaul Dennett30,89259.0%
ConservativeArnie Saunders12,23423.4%
GreenWendy Olsen4,5858.8%
IndependentStephen Ord1,8903.6%
Liberal DemocratsJake Overend1,7163.3%
IndependentStuart Cremins1,0362.0%
Turnout53,50928.76%
Labour hold

2024

The 2024 Salford mayoral election was held on 2 May 2024, alongside the 2024 Salford City Council elections, the 2024 Greater Manchester mayoral election and other local elections across England and Wales.

This election was the first to use first-past-the-post to elect the mayor as a result of changes made to electoral law by the Elections Act 2022. The candidates were announced on the same day that the candidates for the local elections were made known.[11]

Salford Mayoral Election 2 May 2024[12]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourPaul Dennett 30,753 61.5% +2.5%
ConservativeJillian Collinson10,93021.9%-1.5%
GreenDavid Jones5,62311.2%+2.4%
TUSCSally Griffiths2,6815.4%N/A
Rejected ballots690
Majority19,82339.6%+4.0%
Turnout49,98725.9%-2.9%
Registered electors193,084
Labour holdSwing+2.0%

List of mayors

Political partyNameEntered officeLeft office
LabourIan StewartMay 2012May 2016
LabourPaul DennettMay 2016Incumbent

References