The 1956 municipal elections for Leeds were held on Thursday 10 May 1956, with one third of the council and an extra vacancy in Hyde Park to be elected.

A 3% swing to Labour seen them once again on top in votes, although things may have been closer had the Conservatives stood candidates in Hunslet Carr and Wellington. With the swing, Labour managed to hold on to all of their 1953 gains; most fairly comfortably. The notable exceptions were in Woodhouse, one of the few wards to record a swing to the Conservatives - of 4.6% no less - reducing Labour's majority to 169 votes. The other being Wortley, where the Liberal intervention there hit the Conservatives twice as hard as Labour, helping them to retain their seat by 31 votes. The closest run result, in actuality, was found in Beeston - with Labour just one vote away from a gain there. As such the night ended without a gain, leaving the dramatic drop in turnout - from what was already one of the worst recorded since the war - by a fifth to an all-time low of 31.4% the main story.

Election result

The result had the following consequences for the total number of seats on the council after the elections:

Ward results

References


Leeds City Council election, 2016 Alchetron, the free social encyclopedia

Photo of Leeds, City Square And Queens Hotel c.1965

Armley Ward Leeds City Council election candidate 2018 statements

22 photo gems take you back to the city centre in 1956

Leeds City Council election results Labour lose two seats in Pudsey in