St Ives East
Former ward
Cornwall Council.
Outline map
Boundary of St Ives East in from 2013-2021.
CountyCornwall
2013 (2013)2021 (2021)
Number of councillorsOne
Replaced bySt Ives West and Towednack
St Ives East, Lelant and Carbis Bay
Created fromSt Ives North
St Ives South

St Ives East (Cornish: Porthia Est)[1] was an electoral division of Cornwall in the United Kingdom which returned one member to sit on Cornwall Council from 2013 to 2021. It was abolished at the 2021 local elections, being succeeded by St Ives West and Towednack and St Ives East, Lelant and Carbis Bay.

Councillors

ElectionMemberParty
2013 Tim AndrewesGreen
2017 Richard RobinsonConservative
2021 Seat abolished

Extent

St Ives East represented the east of St Ives (much of the coastal part of the town) as well as part of the village of Carbis Bay, which is shared with the Lelant and Carbis Bay division. The division covers 292 hectares in total.[2]

Election results

2017 election

2017 election: St Ives East[3]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Conservative Richard Robinson 565 41.2
Green Tim Andrewes 478 34.9
Labour Pedyr Prior 157 11.5
Liberal Democrats Caroline White 91 6.6
UKIP William Guppy 67 4.9
Majority 87 6.3
Rejected ballots 13 0.9
Turnout 1371 49.7
Conservative gain from Green Swing

2013 election

2013 election: St Ives East[4]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Green Tim Andrewes 471 37.0
Conservative Joan Symons 339 26.7
Independent Morag Robertson 182 14.3
UKIP Roy Britton 170 13.4
Labour Terry Murray 70 5.5
Liberal Democrats Madie Parkinson-Evans 31 2.4
Majority 132 10.4
Rejected ballots 9 0.7
Turnout 1272 41.5
Green win (new seat)

References

  1. "Henwyn Tyller A-Z". Akademi Kernewek. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
  2. "E05 Electoral Ward/Division St Ives East". Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 12 January 2021.
  3. "Election results for St Ives East Cornwall Council elections - Thursday, 4th May, 2017". Cornwall Council. Retrieved 12 January 2021.
  4. "Election results for St Ives East Cornwall Council elections - Thursday, 2nd May, 2013". Cornwall Council. Retrieved 12 January 2021.


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