London mayoral election, 2004

London mayoral election, 2004
United Kingdom
10 June 2004

 
Candidate Ken Livingstone Steven Norris
Party Labour Conservative
Popular vote 828,390 (final) 667,180 (final)
Percentage 55.4% (final) 44.6% (final)
Popular vote 685,548 542,423
Percentage 36.8% 29.1%
Popular vote 250,517 222,559
Percentage 15.7% 14.0%

First preference votes by London borough. Blue boroughs are those with most first preference votes for Steven Norris and red those for Ken Livingstone.

Mayor before election

Ken Livingstone
Independent

Elected Mayor

Ken Livingstone
Labour

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The 2004 election to the post of Mayor of London took place on 10 June 2004. It was being held on the same day as other local elections and the UK part of the 2004 European Parliament elections, so Londoners had a total of five votes on three ballot papers. Polling opened at 07:00 local time, and closed at 22:00. See: UK elections, 2004. The Supplementary Vote system was used.

Ken Livingstone gained the Labour party's nomination on 2 January 2004, three weeks after being re-admitted the Labour Party, after deputy Mayor Nicky Gavron, the previous candidate-elect, stepped down in favour of Livingstone.

Results

Mayor of London election 10 June 2004 [1]
Party Candidate 1st Round % 2nd Round Total  First Round Votes  Transfer Votes 
Labour Ken Livingstone 685,548 36.8% 142,842 828,390
Conservative Steven Norris 542,423 29.1% 124,757 667,180
Liberal Democrat Simon Hughes 284,647 15.3%
UKIP Frank Maloney 115,666 6.2%
Respect Lindsey German 61,731 3.3%
BNP Julian Leppert 58,407 3.1%
Green Darren Johnson 57,332 3.1%
Christian Peoples Ram Gidoomal 31,698 2.2%
Independent Working Class Lorna Reid 9,452 0.5%
Independent Tammy Nagalingam 6,692 0.4%
Labour gain from Independent

Summary of policies

From the Manifesto booklet

Ken Livingstone - Standing up for London

Steve Norris - For a Safer London

Simon Hughes - A New Mayor for a Greater London

Frank Maloney - Stop the career politicians

Lindsey German - Londoners deserve Respect

Julian Leppert

Darren Johnson - Quality Life, Quality London

Ram Gidoomal

Lorna Reid - We live here too!

Tammy Nagalingam

Potential candidates

London-born comedian Lee Hurst seriously considered standing as a candidate in the election. His comedy club had been under threat of redevelopment, and this had re-ignited a spark of political ambition. His manifesto would probably have included policies such as scrapping bus lanes and the congestion charge, improving public transport (including the re-introduction of bus conductors and Routemaster buses), and tackling crime and abandoned cars.[2]

References

  1. "2004 election results for the Mayor of London and the London Assembly". London Elects. 10 June 2004. Retrieved 17 February 2013.
  2. "Comedian's mayoral ambition". BBC News. 3 October 2003. Retrieved 2007-09-06.

External links