Sunderland Echo

Six in a row streak ended by Newcastle

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Newcastle has beaten its archrival Sunderland to be the first constituen­cy to declare a General Election result.

For 25 years over the last six general elections, Sunderland has beaten all-comers by running a slick operation, having runners sprint with the ballot boxes into the hall and using bank tellers to count votes.

In 2015, the well-oiled machine was able to declare the city’s three MPs within an hour and a half of the polls closing, before anyone else had been named a winner.

But last night Newcastle City Council declared the first winner, with Labour candidate Chi Onwurah winning the seat of Newcastle Central at 11pm.

This was six minutes ahead of Houghton and Sunderland South, which declared first in 2015.

Both Newcastle and Sunderland earlier stressed it was not a race and that accuracy was more important than speed.

Bill Crawford, executive director of the Associatio­n of Electoral Administra­tors, used to work with Sunderland City Council but since 2015 has been advising Newcastle on increasing its efficiency at counts.

Officials in Newcastle have worked on improving every aspect of their operation, getting the ballot boxes swiftly to the count and then getting the papers quickly on to the counting tables.

Where Sunderland uses schoolchil­dren to run with the boxes, Newcastle was using sports students to lug the ballot boxes into the Sports Central hall at Northumbri­a University.

Sunderland declared its first result minutes later, with Labour candidate Bridget Phillipson re-elected to the seat of Houghton and Sunderland South.

Ms Phillipson put the slightly slower declaratio­n at this election down to the increased turnout.

“I think it’s great for democracy, it means the count here was a little bit slower, but that’s a price worth paying for seeing more people voting.”

 ??  ?? The Houghton & Sunderland South count.
The Houghton & Sunderland South count.

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