The Chronicle

Councils coy over poll race

RIVALS ‘NOT BIDDING TO DECLARE FIRST’

- By KATIE DICKINSON Reporter katie.dickinson@reachplc.com @KatieJDick­inson

The race was on – or not, as Newcastle insists – to declare first in the 2017 poll

AS election night draws nearer, all eyes will be on the North East regional rivals Newcastle and Sunderland to see who declares the first results of 2019 – but each city insists it is not a race.

For the six general elections from 1992 to 2015, the slick counters of Sunderland were the first to declare the winning MPs.

They honed a smooth operation, with bank tellers brought in to handle the votes, and the sight of teenagers running ballot boxes into the count was an election night TV tradition.

So, in June 2017, there was a gasp at the Silksworth tennis centre – perhaps from the assembled broadcaste­rs hoping to relay news of the first result – when Newcastle upon Tyne Central was announced some seven minutes before they could declare the result for Houghton and Sunderland South.

Election administra­tor Bill Crawford, who worked for Sunderland City Council and helped them take the title from Torbay in 1992, had transferre­d across to Newcastle City Council to advise them on making their process more efficient.

The Newcastle operation moved from the council’s Civic Centre base to the larger hall at Northumbri­a University’s Sport Central, which accommodat­es basketball games, and sports students in trainers were brought in to deliver the ballot boxes to the counting tables.

The location also allows cars to deliver ballot boxes straight to its back door, whereas Sunderland’s tennis centre requires them to be passed along by volunteers from the nearest drop-off.

Mr Crawford is now not working for Newcastle City Council, who have

insisted there was no drive to be the first to declare, and the only intention was to run a smooth operation, with the aim of declaring the first of its three constituen­cies before midnight.

It said councils could not use lighter ballot papers and said it did not alter traffic lights to get votes through to the city centre quicker.

A spokesman said: “Our priority is to carry out the elections as efficientl­y and smoothly as possible, with the first result expected sometime between 11pm and midnight.

“In 2017, we were the first to declare thanks to our efficient processes and the fact we have many city centre polling stations close to the count venue, enabling the ballot boxes to arrive relatively quickly compared with more rural constituen­cies.

“Our process this time for counting and declaring is unchanged and we will be using the same venue, numbers of staff and levels of resources as in 2017.

“As in 2017, there will be no conscious effort made to be the first to declare.”

In Sunderland, acting returning officer Patrick Melia said they will also try to run a smooth operation.

He said: “As usual, Sunderland will be looking to run an accurate and efficient count that the electorate and candidates can all have confidence in.

“It isn’t about declaring first, it is about delivering an efficient and organised count. The early declaratio­ns have been due to meticulous planning and processes executed by a great team who are extremely well organised.

“We have a very experience­d and capable team who work tirelessly all year round, and from the moment the election is called, do everything from organising the polling stations and the staffing of them through to setting up and planning of the count.”

Newcastle City Council spokespers­on

As in 2017, there will be no conscious effort made to be the first to declare

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom