Cardiff City Council

Cardiff City Council was the local government district authority that administered the city of Cardiff, capital of Wales, from 1974 till 1996. The district council replaced the pre-1974 county borough council.

Cardiff City Council

Cyngor Dinas Caerdydd
History
Founded1 April 1974
Disbanded1 April 1996
Preceded byCardiff County Borough Council
Succeeded byCardiff Council
Elections
First election
10 May 1973
Last election
2 May 1991
Next election
N/A
Meeting place
Cardiff City Hall, Cardiff

Creation

Local government in England and Wales was reorganised following the Local Government Act 1972. The old administrative county of Glamorgan was subdivided, with Cardiff and the Vale between Cardiff and Bridgend forming South Glamorgan. South Glamorgan County Council came into existence on 1 April 1974.[1] The administration of the area was further subdivided between the two district councils, Cardiff City Council (later Cardiff Council) and the Vale of Glamorgan Borough Council (later the Vale of Glamorgan Council).[2]

Description

At the first Cardiff City Council elections in 1973, 75 city councillors were elected from 21 electoral wards. From 1983, the number of wards increased to 26. From 1987, the number of councillors reduced to 65.[3]

The council was headquartered at City Hall in Cathays Park.

Cardiff had traditionally been a Conservative Party stronghold, but the city council's first administration in 1974 had a Labour Party majority, reflecting the changing social composition of the city. However, control of the council changed regularly during its existence, between Labour, Conservative and a period from 1987 to 1991, when no party had a majority.[4]

Leadership

Party in control[4]Years
Labour1973 - 1976
Conservative1976 - 1979
Labour1979 - 1983
Conservative1983 - 1987
No overall control1987 - 1991
Labour1991 - 1996

Labour's Philip Dunleavy was the first leader of the council from 1974 to 1976, then again from 1979 to 1982 (when Labour regained its majority). He became Lord Mayor of Cardiff in 1982-3.[5] Dunleavy was a driving force behind the creation of St David's Hall, the Cardiff Ice Rink and other initiatives to make Cardiff a modern successful city.[5]

Councillor Ron Watkiss was Conservative leader of the council during their majority administration, which ended in May 1987.[6]

Llanrumney councillor John Reynolds became leader of the minority Labour administration in 1987 (he had been leader of the Labour group since 1983). He died in 1990.[7]

Councillor John Phillips subsequently became leader of the Labour group. Described as a Labour 'traditionalist', in 1994 he was ousted by Sue Essex of the 'new urban left', who had been promoting a green agenda in Cardiff through the 1990s.[4]

Election results

[3] Lab Con Lib Rate
19734233--
19762944-2
19794134--
[3] Lab Con Lib Lib/SDP
1983284421
[3] Lab Con Alliance Ind
1987292511-
[3] Lab Con Lib Dem Ind
1991391691

Dissolution

Cardiff City Council ceased to exist following the 1996 local government reorganisation, replaced by the unitary authority of the County Council of the City and County of Cardiff. Labour leader of Cardiff City Council, Sue Essex, narrowly lost to Russell Goodway the election to be leader of the Labour group and hence the new council.[8]

Sources

  • Alan Hooper; John Punter (Eds.) Capital Cardiff 1975–2020: Regeneration, Competitiveness and the Urban Environment. University of Wales Press (2006), ISBN 0-7083-2063-5.

Footnotes

  1. South Glamorgan/De Morgannwg: Directory of Services. South Glamorgan County Council. March 1975.
  2. Stewart Williams (Ed.), The Cardiff Book: Volume I., Stewart Williams Publishers (1973), p. 8. ISBN 0-900807-05-9.
  3. "Cardiff Welsh District County Council Election Results 1973-1991" (PDF). The Elections Centre (Plymouth University). Retrieved 11 May 2019.
  4. Capital Cardiff 1975-2020: Regeneration, Competitiveness and the Urban Environment, page 35.
  5. Tony Heath (18 January 1996). "OBITUARY: Philip Dunleavy". The Independent. Retrieved 12 May 2019.
  6. Michael Thomas (6 May 1987). "City Tory chief challenges Labour claims". South Wales Echo. p. 1.
  7. "D1440 - John Reynolds of Cardiff, Papers - 1940s-2002". Glamorgan Archives. Retrieved 30 May 2019.
  8. Capital Cardiff 1975–2020: Regeneration, Competitiveness and the Urban Environment, pp. 35-36
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