West Lothian Courier

Tories feel squeeze of voting system

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In West Lothian, Conservati­ve candidates found that in many cases they lost because of a squeeze by other parties under Scotland’s Single Transferab­le Vote (STV) system.

There were some nail-biting scenes among candidates around the count as Friday morning stretched into the afternoon.

And where there were votes to be picked up it was usually the SNP who picked them up.

The first result – Linlithgow – came through just before 1pm.

The seat had been home to retired Provost Tom Kerr for the last 30 years.

For many of those years he had served as the lone Conservati­ve on West Lothian Council.

His 3000 majority was hand-built by popular vote and there was a lot to play for in this poll.

The Conservati­ves thought it a reasonable expectatio­n that the party could do well with Chris Horne, who had already served as a councillor in neighbouri­ng Broxburn, and who was a well-known local resident.

For the Lib Dems, and their candidate Sally Pattle, however, the Kerr votes were the chance they were looking for.

The quota needed to be elected in the first round was 1780 votes, and it was the SNP candidate Pauline Orr, who crossed that line first, taking 1869 votes.

Murmurs of worry began to circulate around various wards as the counting went on.

In Linlithgow, Mr Horne saw his first preference 1411 votes was trailing Lib Dem Sally Pattle, who took 1447 first preference votes.

The strength of that first round performanc­e by the local bookshop owner, who also serves on the community council, was to seal the Lib Dems’first win of a council seat on the fourth stage of the counting.

Labour veteran Tom Conn was elected at the fifth stage.

It also was an early warning to the Tories that they were being squeezed.

After the results were announced a still shocked ex-councillor Horne said:“It’s been wonderful that I have had a bunch of first preference­s and people have put trust in me across Linlithgow.

“I haven’t had the second and third preference­s.”

In Whitburn and Bathgate a similar story was to play out.

Bruce Fairbairn polled 1135 votes, third placed behind veterans Jim Dickson for the SNP and George Paul for Labour, who were both elected by first preference vote in the Whitburn and Blackburn ward.

By the time the count had got down to the sixth stage of preference­s Mr Fairbairn found himself out by two votes as Labour’s Kirsteen Sullivan was returned, and former SNP councillor Mary Dickson rejoined her husband in the council chamber.

In Bathgate, SNP and Labour veterans Willie Boyle and Harry Cartmill were comfortabl­y elected on first preference voting.

In a ward that also saw the retirement of long-serving councillor, Labour’s John McGinty, the SNP again hoovered up a lot of votes to elect Pauline Stafford at the third stage, after picking up 1,190 votes in the first preference.

Conservati­ve Charles Kennedy, whose first preference votes tallied 1048, had to wait until the eighth stage to discover that he had lost by ten votes to Labour’s Tony Pearson – whose first preference votes had totalled 375.

As the count drew to a close Damian Doran-Timson, the Tory group leader, reflected on how the numbers had failed to stack up for colleagues, leaving this party with three fewer councillor­s than in their breakthrou­gh year of 2017.

He said:“I’m delighted to be re-elected with Angela (Doran-Timson), Peter (Heggie) and Alison (Adamson) but deeply disappoint­ed for those who were not.

“It is such a shame when you look at the first preference votes. They were way ahead of some of those that ended up on the transfer vote getting ahead of them. It was so close.

“It shows that where the constituen­ts voted in first preference, they wanted a Conservati­ve candidate for those areas. It’s the way this voting system can go.”

 ?? ?? Tory group leader Damian Doran-Timson
Tory group leader Damian Doran-Timson

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