For Darwen Party

Last updated

For Darwen Party
Leader Stephen Potter
FoundedMarch 2007 (2007-03)
DissolvedNovember 5, 2013 (2013-11-05), [1] announced 2014 [2]
HeadquartersDuckworth Street, Darwen
Ideology Localism
Hard Euroscepticism
Colours Cyan
Website
fordarwen.org.uk (archived)

The For Darwen Party was a local political party in Darwen, south of Blackburn, England, with a platform that Darweners were not properly represented on Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council.

Contents

Founded in 2007, the party had three Borough Councillors following the May elections and five in 2008. Councillors included former members of the Liberal Democrats, England First Party and the BNP. They formed a coalition administration with the Liberal Democrats and Conservatives from 2007 to 2010, and successfully campaigned for the creation of Darwen Town Council in 2009, on which they won seven seats.

In 2010 they suffered three defections and Labour regained control of the borough council. By 2012 For Darwen had lost all their seats and the party folded in 2014, most of the remaining membership joining UKIP.

History

The party was cofounded in March 2007 by businessman Tony Melia, and Michael Johnson who was the elected councillor for Lower Darwen and Fernhurst [3] Tony Melia had previously stood as a Liberal Democrat candidate against Jack Straw in the 2005 general election in Blackburn. He said he quit the Liberal Democrats to form For Darwen as he was tired of what the Labour-controlled council was doing, particularly with the Darwen Academy, leisure centre, and regeneration. [4] Melia was joined by Michael Johnson, who had been elected in May 2006 as a councillor for the far-right England First Party but publicly left the party at the full council meeting after disagreeing with a racist Christmas card on the party website.]] [5] After the 2007 local elections, For Darwen had three councillors and formed a ruling coalition with the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats. Melia was re-elected and Trevor Maxfield, a former BNP organiser, was also elected. [6]

Cllr Johnson left For Darwen in March 2008 over "Back stabbing and lies made by some party members stating he had been banned from pubs in Darwen and other matters which could not be substantiated and were proven to be completely untrue. This and other policy differences with certain unelected party members was his reason for leaving"; he stayed a member of the coalition, but this reduced the number of seats For Darwen held in the coalition. [7] In June 2008, Melia was criticised for going on a council-funded twin town trip to Altena, Germany, despite a campaign pledge, "There will be no more trips abroad for councillors paid for by us, the council taxpayers". [8]

The party led the successful campaign for the formation of Darwen Town Council [2] and gained seven seats - half the seats - in June 2009. [9] Liberal Democrat Paul Browne, also a Borough Councillor, became Town Mayor in July and For Darwen councillor Phil Jones became deputy leader. [10]

The party stayed in coalition with the Liberal Democrats and Conservatives after the May 2010 borough council elections, with five councillors, arguing successfully for the town council not to be charged for use of Darwen Town Hall. [11] Cllr Trevor Maxfield became executive member for leisure and culture in June. [6] However, in opposition to coalition budget cuts, Cllrs Maxfield and Anthony Meleady became independents in August, returning Labour to a majority - Labour won a motion of no confidence in September and regained control of the council. [12] Maxfield regained his seat in Earcroft in 2011 for Labour. [13] Martin McCaughran, Sudell ward town councillor, joined the Liberal Democrats in June 2010. [14] That October, deputy leader Phil Jones was criticised for living in nearby Rishton, rather than in Darwen. [15]

Melia lost his seat on the borough council in May 2011. He relinquished the leadership of the party and stood down as a Town Councillor in March 2012 and was replaced by Cllr Stephen Potter. All For Darwen Town and Borough Councillors either stood down in 2012 or, after significant gains by the Labour Party, lost their seats.

After the party lost its last councillors in 2012, the leader Stephen Potter announced the end of For Darwen in June 2014. Potter joined UKIP and aimed for the remaining For Darwen members to form a Darwen branch of UKIP, which founder Melia said was not his choice. [2]

Electoral history

2007

For Darwen stood four candidates for the Borough Council: Tony Melia seeking re-election in Sunnyhurst, Trevor Maxfield in Earcroft, Phil Jones in Marsh House, and Anthony Meleady in Sudell. [16] Melia and Maxfield were elected.

2008

Despite losing a councillor before the election, For Darwen stood seven candidates and gained a further three seats in the May 2008 Borough Council elections, [17] [18] two in the same wards (Earcroft, Sunnyhurst) as 2007. The third was in Marsh House.

2010

For Darwen stood six candidates for the Borough Council: Heather Ashurst, Joan Helliwell, Wilf Helliwell, Martin McCaughran, Nella Melia, Stephen Potter. [19]

Tony Melia also stood in Rossendale and Darwen for the anti-immigration Impact Party, [20] [21] gaining 243 votes (0.5% of votes cast). He remained leader of For Darwen.

2011

For Darwen stood six candidates for the borough council, but none were elected. Melia was defeated by returning veteran Labour Councillor Dave Smith in Sunnyhurst by 700 votes; Melia came third. [13]

2012

New leader Stephen Potter lost his seat in Earcroft in May 2012 to Labour's Stephanie Brookfield, coming joint second. David Jackson came second in Sudell. [22]

Councillors

Numbers following May elections.

Blackburn with Darwen Council

64 seats in total.

Darwen Town Council

Thirteen seats, founded in 2009.

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References

  1. "For Darwen". Open Electoral Commission. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  2. 1 2 3 Clough, Dan (4 June 2014). "The party is over as 'For Darwen' folds". York Press. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  3. Bartlett, David (3 March 2007). "New party pledges to put Darwen first". Lancashire Telegraph .
  4. "Party's first public meeting". Lancashire Telegraph . 13 March 2007. Archived from the original on 21 November 2008.
  5. Bartlett, David (5 March 2007). "England First pair quit party". Lancashire Telegraph. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  6. 1 2 Moseley, Tom (3 June 2010). "Former BNP activist made Blackburn with Darwen's culture boss". Lancashire Telegraph. Retrieved 16 April 2017.
  7. Moseley, Tom (12 March 2008). "Councillor quits For Darwen party". Lancashire Telegraph .
  8. Moseley, Tom (23 June 2008). "For Darwen council leader trips up". Lancashire Telegraph. Retrieved 16 April 2017.
  9. 1 2 Pye, Catherine (5 June 2009). "For Darwen party victorious in Darwen town council elections". Lancashire Telegraph. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  10. Pye, Catherine (23 July 2009). "Row as Paul Browne becomes Darwen mayor". Lancashire Telegraph. Retrieved 16 April 2017.
  11. Moseley, Tom (18 May 2010). "Coalition 'to continue running Blackburn with Darwen Council'". Lancashire Telegraph. Retrieved 16 April 2017.
  12. Watkinson, David (14 September 2010). "Labour back in control of Blackburn with Darwen". Lancashire Telegraph. Retrieved 16 April 2017.
  13. 1 2 Moseley, Tom (6 May 2011). "Labour consolidates control of Blackburn with Darwen". Wirral Globe. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  14. Pye, Catherine (May 2011). "'Crunch' meeting on For Darwen Party's future". Lancashire Telegraph. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  15. Moseley, Tom (19 October 2010). "Row over For Darwen Party councillor living in Rishton". Lancashire Telegraph. Retrieved 16 April 2017.
  16. "'For Darwen' poll hopefuls". Lancashire Telegraph. 3 April 2007. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  17. May 2008 official results
  18. Moseley, Tom (2 May 2008). "Blackburn with Darwen election results: Ruling coalition fares well". Lancashire Telegraph. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  19. Moseley, Tom (2010). "Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council election battle". Lancashire Telegraph. Retrieved 16 April 2017.
  20. Moseley, Tom (31 March 2010). "For Darwen Leader to stand for anti-immigration party". Lancashire Telegraph. Retrieved 15 April 2017.
  21. "About us". Impact Party. Archived from the original on 9 May 2010. Retrieved 16 April 2017.
  22. "Live election results: Blackburn with Darwen". Lancashire Telegraph. 3 May 2012. Retrieved 15 April 2017.