2023 Leicester City Council election

The 2023 Leicester City Council election will take place on 4 May 2023 to elect all 54 members of Leicester City Council in England. This is on the same day as other local elections, and the election for the directly elected Mayor of Leicester.

2023 Leicester City Council election
4 May 2023

All 54 seats to Leicester City Council
27 seats needed for a majority
  First party Second party Third party
  Blank
Leader Peter Soulsby Sanjay Modhwadia Nigel Porter
Party Labour Conservative Liberal Democrats
Leader's seat Mayoralty North Evington Aylestone
Last election 56.9%, 53 seats 17.5%, 0 seats 8.7%, 1 seat
Seats before 36 5 1
Seats won 31 17 3
Seat change Decrease 22 Increase17 Increase2
Popular vote 89,425 76,867 21,399
Percentage 40.4% 34.8% 9.7%
Swing Decrease16.5% Increase17.3% Increase1.0%

  Fourth party Fifth party
  Blank Blank
Leader Patrick Kitterick
Party Green Independent
Leader's seat Castle
Last election 11.6%, 0 seats 0.6%, 0 seats
Seats before 1 11
Seats won 3 0
Seat change Increase3 -
Popular vote 13,830 17,757
Percentage 6.3% 8.0%
Swing Decrease5.3% Increase7.4%

Mayor before election

Peter Soulsby
Labour

Mayor after election

Peter Soulsby
Labour

The elections saw losses by the Labour Party, who lost 22 seats and gains by the Conservative Party who picked up seventeen seats against the national trend. The Green Party and Liberal Democrats also made gains, with each being represented by three seats.[1]

Background

2019 elections

Labour retained control of Leicester City Council in the 2019 local elections, winning fifty-three councillors on an increased share of the vote.[2] The Liberal Democrats were runners-up, becoming the only opposition party on the council after the wipe-out of the Conservatives. A month later, Labour came top of the polls in the European Parliament election in the city – Leicester having the second-highest Labour vote share in the country, behind only the London Borough of Newham. The Brexit Party narrowly pipped the Liberal Democrats into second place.

In the 2019 general election, Labour consolidated its support in the city by winning all three constituencies with healthy majorities,[3] despite a disappointing general election campaign elsewhere. However, the candidate selection of Claudia Webbe in Leicester East, from a shortlist of one, caused controversy amongst local Labour Party members who were angry at being denied an option of a candidate from the South Asian community, at Webbe's views on the Kashmir conflict, and at the fact that she was a serving councillor in the London Borough of Islington.[4] Long-serving councillor John Thomas resigned from the party, citing the selection of Webbe and the leadership of Jeremy Corbyn,[5] and the Conservatives achieved a swing of 15% in the constituency.

Controversies and by-elections

City Mayor Peter Soulsby faced calls to resign by Liberal Democrat leader Nigel Porter during the COVID-19 pandemic after it emerged Soulsby had been breaking lockdown rules to visit his lover.[6] This was in the background of Leicester's COVID cases being amongst the highest in the United Kingdom, with the city being kept in stricter restrictions than the rest of the country for much of the pandemic.

Soulsby was further criticised after Assistant Mayor Mustafa Malik was suspended by the Labour Party after sharing anti-semitic posts on social media but was allowed to retain the Labour whip in the City Council.[7] Councillor Jacky Nangreave was also suspended, after claiming that Keir Starmer was an "agent of Israel", though was later reinstated.[8][9] Additionally, Labour Councillor for Western Ward, Lindsay Broadwell, resigned the Labour whip and sat as an independent citing the toxic atmosphere of the Labour group and dissatisfaction with the party nationally.[10]

Amidst the controversies, the Labour grip on the city began to wane. In the 2021 North Evington By-election, they narrowly held onto a previously safe ward after a 26.5% swing to the Conservatives.[11] A few months later, the Conservatives gained their first representative on the council since the 2019 elections after winning the Humberstone and Hamilton by-election.[12] Winning Conservative candidate Daniel Crewe was soon, in September 2022, joined by Labour defector Deepak Bajaj.[13] However, Crewe later resigned his membership of the Conservative Party following the 2022 mini-budget.[14]

Despite this, Labour continued to do poorly in local by-elections. Labour narrowly held on in a three-way fight at the Evington by-election, clinging on with a twenty-one percent reduction in the vote share after both the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats gained heavily.[15] Another three-way election, the 2022 North Evington by-election, followed, with Labour being relegated to third in a ward that in 2019 it had won with 66.8% of the vote.[16] Sanjay Modhwadia won for the Conservatives, with the Greens some distance behind in second place. There was a further setback when former Council Leader Ross Willmott was suspended by the national Labour Party for membership of an organisation that the party had proscribed.[17]

Deselections and defections

In spite of these difficulties, Sir Peter Soulsby was re-confirmed as the Labour candidate for the 2023 elections – though the Leicester Mercury noted mixed feelings amongst its readers at this announcement.[18]

However, following the electoral defeats, the Labour Party at national level set up a 'Campaigns Improvement Board' to oversee the local party.[19] The Labour Party National Executive Committee's (NEC) claims that the local Labour Party was beset with "in-fighting, division and no clear vision" was quickly seized upon by political opponents.[20] As a result of the NEC supervision, nineteen local Labour councillors were deselected.[21] The Labour Party was criticised for a disproportionate number of Asian councillors being deselected, with 58% of BAME councillors not re-selected versus just 18% of white councillors[22] while Councillor Stephen Gee quit the party following the process, stating that "Labour no longer supports people with disabilities".[23] After being deselected, many Labour councillors vowed to fight as independents. Additionally, three councillors – Rashmikant Joshi,[24] Paul Westley and Hemant Rae Bhatia –[25] defected to the Conservatives, bringing the total number of Conservative members of the council to five.

To compound Labour's problems, a vote on whether to retain the Mayoral system saw open warfare breakout within the Labour group. The vote, in which City councillors voted to retain the Mayoral system, saw fourteen Labour councillors rebel against the whip amid accusations of bullying and intimidation to force them to vote to retain the mayor.[26] Ultimately, four Labour councillors had the whip suspended[27][28][29] while Councillor Patrick Kitterick defected to the Green Party, claiming that "the Labour Party has changed for the worse" and that "“It seems the party is going down a route where you either unquestioningly agree with the city mayor or you leave. So I'm leaving."[30] His defection gave the Green Party its first seat on the City Council since losing all its seats in the 2015 elections.

Council composition

Party 2019 Election Before 2023 Election
Labour 53 36
Conservative 0 5
Liberal Democrats 1 1
Green 0 1
Independent 0 11

Campaign

Labour launched its campaign, aiming to make Leicester a 'fairer, happier and safer city' by providing extra support for families struggling with the cost-of-living crisis and to invest in more CCTV and street lights. The party also says it seeks to do more to tackle climate change.[31]

The Conservative campaign is focused on preventing new housing developments, pledging a nature reserve to prevent housing on the city's fringes. The party also pledges to provide free bus travel for schoolchildren and to not raise council tax above inflation.[32]

The Liberal Democrats are campaigning on building 3,000 new affordable homes and offering a referendum on the mayoral system – a position they also put forward at the 2019 elections.[33]

The Green Party announced it was targeting three wards in the election: Castle, where it held seats between 2011 and 2015; Saffron; and North Evington.[34] The party is campaigning to scrap the Mayoral system, pledging a referendum within a year of taking office.[35][36]

Candidates

Councillors not standing for re-election

Councillor Ward Party Notes
Deborah Sangster Castle Labour Deselected
Shahid Khan Evington Labour Deselected
Daniel Crewe Humberstone and Hamilton Independent Elected as a Conservative councillor
Luis Fonseca North Evington Labour Deselected
Bill Shelton Saffron Labour
Stephan Gee Thurncourt Independent Elected as a Labour councillor
Lindsay Broadwell Western Independent Elected as a Labour councillor

Councillors standing under a different political affiliation

Councillor 2019 party 2019 ward 2023 party 2023 ward
Paul Westley Labour Beaumont Leys Conservative Beaumont Leys
Hemant Rae Bhatia Labour Beaumont Leys Conservative Beaumont Leys
Deepak Bajaj Labour Evington Conservative Evington
Ruma Ali Labour Humberstone and Hamilton TUSC Evington
Rashmikant Joshi Labour North Evington Conservative Evington
Rita Patel Labour Rushey Mead Independent Rushey Mead
Ross Willmott Labour Rushey Mead Independent Rushey Mead
Kirk Masters Labour Stoneygate Independent Stoneygate
Sharmen Rahman Labour Stoneygate Independent Stoneygate
Aminur Thalukdar Labour Stoneygate Independent Stoneygate
Jacky Nangreave Labour Westcotes Independent Westcotes
Gary O’Donnell Labour Western Independent Western
Padmini Chamund Labour Belgrave Independent Belgrave
Nita Solanki Labour Belgrave Independent Belgrave
Mahendra Valand Labour Belgrave Independent Belgrave
Patrick Kitterick Labour Castle Green Castle

Councillors standing in a different ward

Councillor 2019 party 2019 ward 2023 party 2023 ward
Manjit Kaur Saini Labour Abbey Labour Humberstone and Hamilton
Adam Clarke Labour Aylestone Labour Westcotes
Vi Dempster Labour Beaumont Leys Labour Western
Ted Cassidy Labour Fosse Labour Saffron
Ashiedu Joel Labour Troon Labour Humberstone and Hamilton
Ruma Ali Labour Humberstone and Hamilton TUSC Evington
Rashmikant Joshi Labour North Evington Conservative Evington

Results

Summary

2023 Leicester City Council election
Party Candidates Seats Gains Losses Net gain/loss Seats % Votes % Votes +/−
  Labour 54 31 0 22 -22 57.4 40.4 89,425
  Conservative 52 17 17 0 +17 31.5 34.8 76,867
  Liberal Democrats 42 3 2 0 +2 5.6 9.7 21,399
  Green 26 3 3 0 +3 5.6 6.3 13,830
  TUSC 9 0 0 0 - 0 0.7 1,540
  Democracy and Freedom 1 0 0 0 - 0 0.1 138
  Reform UK 1 0 0 0 - 0 0.0 80
  Communist 1 0 0 0 - 0 0.0 42
  British Democratic 1 0 0 0 - 0 0.0 34
  Independent 27 0 0 0 - 0 8.0 17,757

Abbey

Abbey[37]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Conservative Charleigh Barnes 1,829 36.1 +20.9
Conservative Nags Agath 1,793
Labour Annette Byrne 1,776 35.1 -18.7
Conservative Kuljit Singh 1748
Labour Vijay Singh Riyait 1652
Labour Emma Elaine Saunders-Sinclair 1536
Green Jim McCallum 583 11.5 -1.1
Independent Hannel Chohan 482 9.5
Liberal Democrats Richard Salisbury 391 7.7 +0.6
Conservative gain from Labour
Conservative gain from Labour
Labour hold

Aylestone

Aylestone[38]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Democrats Nigel Porter 1,096 38.9 +6.1
Liberal Democrats Scott Kennedy-Lount 927
Labour Rose Norah Ann Griffiths 839 29.8 -1.4
Labour Rebecca Louise Pawley 605
Conservative Deloris Esther Philip 360 12.8 -3.9
Conservative Inder Pal Singh 301
Green Bob Ball 300 10.6 +1.1
TUSC Steve Score 157 5.6 +3.0
Independent George Scott Brown 68 2.4
Liberal Democrats hold
Liberal Democrats gain from Labour

Belgrave

Belgrave[39]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Conservative Yogesh Chauhan 4,424 41.1 +26.4
Conservative Shital Adatia 4,409
Conservative Jaiantilal Gopal 4,335
Labour Gurinder Kaur Athwal 1,818 16.9 -58.4
Labour Kirit Mistry 1,759
Labour Hersh Thaker 1,636
Independent Nita Solanki 1,356 12.6
Independent Padmini Chamund 1,296 12.0
Independent Mahendra Valand 1,103 10.3
Green Darren Howes 341 3.2 -2.9
Liberal Democrats Pravin Raja 239 2.2 -1.4
TUSC David Howard Rollins 183 1.7
Conservative gain from Labour
Conservative gain from Labour
Conservative gain from Labour

Evington

Evington[40]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Democrats Zuffar Haq 1,841 29.7 +21.5
Conservative Deepak Bajaj 1,794 28.9 +7.4
Conservative Jenny Joannou 1,657
Labour Naj Hassan 1,603 25.9 -28.3
Conservative Rashmikant Joshi 1,590
Liberal Democrats Farida Patel 1,490
Labour Sue Hunter 1,367
Labour Jatinder Singh Matharu 1,292
Liberal Democrats Nitesh Dave 1,200
Independent Baljit Singh 377 6.1
Green Jill Fisher 349 5.6 -6.5
TUSC Ruma Ali 234 3.8 -0.2
Liberal Democrats gain from Labour
Conservative gain from Labour
Conservative gain from Labour

Humberstone & Hamilton

Humberstone & Hamilton[41]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Stephen Robert Bonham 1,673 32.6 -21.6
Labour Manjit Kaur Saini 1,642
Labour Joel Ashiedu 1,531
Conservative Ranjit Sonigra 1,342 26.1 +4.6
Conservative Sameer Thanki 1,286
Conservative Romail Gulzar 1,275
Green Pam Bellinger 492 9.6 -2.5
Independent Solly Lunat 478 9.3
Liberal Democrats Bicram Athwal 416 8.1 -0.1
Independent Vinodrai Ghadiali 345 6.7
Liberal Democrats Neville Hunnings 337
Liberal Democrats Karan Vyas 299
TUSC Barbara Potter 196 3.8 -0.2
Independent Ravi Kanta Powar 196 3.8
Labour hold
Labour hold
Labour hold

North Evington

North Evington[42]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Conservative Dilip Joshi 3,943 45.6 +28.7
Conservative Sanjay Modhwadia 3,910
Conservative Ravi Mahesh 3,863
Labour Mohammed Abu Taher 3,154 36.5 -35.9
Labour Zoya Shaikh 3,136
Labour Ajay Kumar Aggarwal 2,776
Liberal Democrats Nilesh Bica 732 8.5 +3.6
Liberal Democrats Hitesh Bhutiya 728
Liberal Democrats Hakan Akgoz 636
Green Hannah Rose Wakley 385 4.5 -1.3
Green Martin Charles Gage 302
Green Brendan Robert Keegan 296
Reform UK Raj Solanki 80 0.9
Conservative gain from Labour
Conservative gain from Labour
Conservative gain from Labour

Rushey Mead

Rushey Mead[43]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Conservative Bhupen Dave 3,036 34.0 +15.5
Conservative Geeta Karavadra 2,990
Conservative Devi Singh Patel 2,844
Labour Piara Singh Clair 2008 22.5 -43.0
Labour Gurinder Singh Sandhu 1761
Labour Priya Evarista Lavina Mendes 1751
Independent Rita Patel 1328 14.9
Independent Dharmesh Bhagwanji Lakhani 941 10.5
Independent Rajul Tejura 761 8.5
Liberal Democrats Hash Chandarana 475 5.3 -3.5
Independent Ross Willmott 384 4.3
Liberal Democrats Pradeep Gocal 301
Liberal Democrats Asit Sodha 213
Conservative gain from Labour
Conservative gain from Labour
Conservative gain from Labour

Thurncourt

Thurncourt[44]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Teresa Aldred 1,202 41.8 -5.4
Conservative Abdul Razak Osman 1,122 39.0 +10.5
Conservative Mike Joannou 1024
Labour Brahmpreet Kaur Gulati 998
Green Karen Wildin 293 10.2 +3.4
Liberal Democrats Kate Sullivan 257 8.9 +4.5
Labour hold
Conservative gain from Labour

Troon

Troon[45]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Di Cank 1,489 33.7 -23.7
Labour Mohinder Singh Sangha 1,432
Conservative Ashton Fernandes 1329 30.1 +7.8
Conservative Heten Tejura 1244
Independent Sital Singh Gill 567 12.9
Independent Kamlesh Kumari 439 10.0
Independent Karan Modha 307 7.0
Liberal Democrats Paul Smith 281 6.4 -2.3
Labour hold
Labour hold

Beaumont Leys

Beaumont Leys[46]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Conservative Hazel Orton 1,470 39.3 +19.0
Conservative Hemant Rae Bhatia 1,456
Conservative Paul Westley 1,420
Labour Denis Yomi Tanfa 1278 34.2 -14.1
Labour Mo Peberdy 1235
Labour David Stephen Towers 1234
Green Andrew James Reeves 370 9.9 -0.5
Independent Adrian Charles Barnes 321 8.6
Liberal Democrats Daniel Irungu 299 8.0 +0.3
Liberal Democrats Alieu Ceesay 233
Conservative gain from Labour
Conservative gain from Labour
Conservative gain from Labour

Braunstone Park & Rowley Fields

Braunstone Park & Rowley Fields[47]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Su Barton 1,489 39.6 -3.7
Labour Elaine Halford 1,419
Labour Kalwinder Singh Johal 1,395
Conservative Jay Barnet Popat 805 21.4 +9.4
Conservative Alexandros Ali 760
Conservative Ian Alix Daliston Stanton-Wright 705
Green Neil James McDermott 489 13.0 -3.1
Liberal Democrats Ian Bradwell 370 9.8 -0.1
Independent Jaspreet Kaur Gill 369 9.8
Liberal Democrats Kamal Panchmatia 259
Liberal Democrats Arshdeep Singh 245
TUSC Wayne Jan Naylor 237 6.3 +1.6
Labour hold
Labour hold
Labour hold

Fosse

Fosse[48]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Sue Waddington 999 36.9 -5.1
Labour Syed Monsur Zaman 792
Liberal Democrats Benjamin Feist 580 21.4 +11.9
Conservative Foligar Kum Lang 535 19.7 +4.8
Conservative Pamsi Rally 531
Green Geoff Forse 377 13.9 -3.5
Liberal Democrats Martin Pold 355
TUSC Brian Rodney Scott 129 4.8
Independent Chikaire Wilfred Williams Ezeru 90 3.3
Labour hold
Labour hold

Westcotes

Westcotes[49]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Sarah Russell 986 39.9 -9.5
Labour Adam Clarke 818
Liberal Democrats Parmjit Singh Gill 483 19.5 +9.6
Liberal Democrats Juliet Kechouane Gill 357
Green Jessica Southworth 353 14.3 -6.1
Conservative Dhirubhai Dholakia 283 11.4 -3.1
Conservative Sofia Ali 243
Independent Jacky Nangreave 231 9.3
Independent Michael Shenton 137 5.5
Labour hold
Labour hold

Western

Western[50]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Vi Dempster 1,536 33.2 -9.6
Labour Molly Ann O'Neill 1,465
Labour George Cole 1,441
Conservative Kanchan Choudhary 993 21.5 +4.4
Conservative Jay Thobhani 967
Conservative Richard Philip Tutt 998
Independent Gary O'Donnell 840 18.2
Green Tine Juhlert 707 15.3 -0.4
Liberal Democrats Chris Sidwell-Smith 548 11.9 +0.7
Labour hold
Labour hold
Labour hold

Castle

Castle[51]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Green Patrick Kitterick 1,564 46.3 +13.7
Green Mick Gregg 1,453
Green Liz Sahu 1,419
Labour Danny Myers 1219 36.1 -6.5
Labour Lee David Holmes 1128
Labour Chizor Anthonia Onwuegbute 1101
Conservative Jayaram Shastri 309 9.1 -0.9
Liberal Democrats Nathan Gubbins 288 8.5 -6.3
Liberal Democrats Philip Smith 209
Liberal Democrats Hania Orszulik 196
Green gain from Labour
Green gain from Labour
Green gain from Labour

Eyres Monsell

Eyres Monsell[52]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Elaine Pantling 791 52.7 +5.2
Labour Karen Pickering 644
Conservative Mohammad Ahsan Ahmadi 389 25.9 -12.5
Conservative Vineed Vijayan 373
Green Anna Broszkiewicz 174 11.6 +2.4
Liberal Democrats Jo Webb 147 9.8 +1.0
Liberal Democrats Zelda Rubinstein 141
Labour hold
Labour hold

Knighton

Knighton[53]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Melissa March 2,203 39.0 +2.3
Labour Lynn Moore 2,071
Labour Geoff Whittle 2,067
Liberal Democrats Chris Willmott 1198 21.2 +6.9
Green Sue King 1053 18.7 +1.2
Liberal Democrats Jorawar Singh Bhoot 1000
Conservative Ravinder Kaur Lall 981 17.4 -10.5
Conservative Lu Mistry 886
Conservative Amar Tanna 866
Liberal Democrats Roopal Jaimini Shah 843
Green Bill Walker 692
TUSC Alex Gillham 208 3.7 +0.9
Labour hold
Labour hold
Labour hold

Saffron

Saffron[54]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Ted Cassidy 783 44.5 -5.2
Labour Elly Cutkelvin 774
Green Ursula Bilson 438 24.9 +4.0
Green Mags Lewis 428
Conservative Gillian Jillett 286 16.3 +5.9
Conservative Julie Simons 284
Liberal Democrats Denise Buchan 95 5.4 -6.3
TUSC Peter Anthony Bisson 80 4.6 -2.7
Liberal Democrats Michael Smith 78
Communist Ann Green 42 2.4
British Democratic David John Haslett 34 1.9
Labour hold
Labour hold

Spinney Hills

Spinney Hills[55]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Misbah Batool 2,513 46.1 -22.0
Labour Mustafa Malik 2,455
Conservative Mohammed Fozdar 1121 20.6 -1.3
Conservative Sheraz Ali Durrani 713
Independent Shahid Ullah Khan 671 12.3
Independent Iqbal Alibhai Desai 510 9.4
Liberal Democrats Christopher Everitt Garner 277 5.1 +1.9
Green Jan Grothusen 219 4.0 -1.0
ADF Abdul Vali 138 2.5
Labour hold
Labour hold

Stoneygate

Stoneygate[56]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Raffiq Mohammed 2,898 29.5 -38.9
Labour Yasmin Ahmed Surti 2,777
Labour Manjula Sood 2,107
Conservative Abdul Giash 1688 17.2 +3.0
Independent Aminur Thalukdar 1504 15.3
Independent Kirk Master 1503 15.3
Independent Sharmen Rahman 1153 11.7
Conservative Saeed Khilji 1017
Conservative Shirin Shafia Shahid 954
Liberal Democrats Aqdus Ghafar 535 5.5 -0.6
Green Chris Hughes 534 5.4 -4.4
Liberal Democrats Alan Fox 529
Labour hold
Labour hold
Labour hold

Wycliffe

Wycliffe[57]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Hanif Aqbany 3,690 66.9 -19.4
Labour Mohammed Dawood 3,681
Conservative Zakaria Ahmed 1218 22.1 +15.0
Conservative Subane Mohamed Abdi 1168
Liberal Democrats Hoque Akramul 275 5.0 +2.0
Green Sarah Joanne Read 219 4.0 +0.4
TUSC Tessa Warrington 116 2.1
Labour hold
Labour hold

See also

References

Footnotes
      Citations
      1. Steelyard, Linda; Kershaw, Tom; Richardson, Hannah; Moorhouse, Sam (6 May 2023). "Local Elections 2023 in Leicestershire as it happened". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 10 May 2023.
      2. Martin, Dan (30 April 2019). "Every result from Leicester City Council elections". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      3. Dimmer, Sam; Martin, Dan (13 December 2019). "What happened in the election here and in the rest of the UK". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      4. Martin, Dan (13 November 2019). "Labour picks General Election candidate to replace Keith Vaz". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      5. "Leicester East Labour chairman quits 'laughing stock' party". BBC News. 18 November 2019. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      6. "Calls for Leicester mayor Sir Peter Soulsby to resign over alleged lockdown visits to partner's home". Leicester Mercury. 14 June 2020. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      7. Martin, Dan (22 November 2019). "Top Labour councillor suspended over anti-Semitic KKK video". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      8. Richardson, Hannah (23 November 2021). "Councillor suspended ahead of antisemitism investigation". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      9. Richardson, Hannah (3 March 2023). "Labour suspends councillor over attempt to scrap mayor's job". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      10. Richardson, Hannah (22 July 2022). "Labour councillor quits Party to sit as independent". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      11. "Leicester City Council". www.leicester.gov.uk. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      12. Richardson, Hannah (23 July 2021). "Tories win first seat on Leicester City Council in 2 years". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      13. Richardson, Hannah (7 September 2022). "Labour councillor joins Tories over 'failure of democracy'". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      14. "Leicester Tory councillor quits over 'ridiculous' mini budget". BBC News. 29 September 2022. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      15. Richardson, Hannah (4 February 2022). "Labour hold Evington in by election". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      16. Murray, Jessica (14 October 2022). "Leicester council byelection sees huge swing to Tories in area hit by unrest". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      17. Richardson, Hannah (8 November 2022). "Party suspension for councillor accused of banned group link". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      18. Richardson, Hannah (5 May 2022). "Readers react as Soulsby is confirmed as mayoral candidate". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      19. Richardson, Hannah (3 February 2023). "Labour in Leicester angry as national party takes control". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      20. Richardson, Hannah (19 February 2023). "Labour's brutal assessment of its performance in Leicester". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      21. Richardson, Hannah (20 March 2023). "Fury as 19 sitting councillors dropped by own party". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      22. Shobowale, Sali; Moorhouse, Sam (27 March 2023). "Majority of deselected Labour city councillors are from a BAME background". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      23. Richardson, Hannah (20 March 2023). "Another city councillor quits Labour". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      24. Moorhouse, Sam (28 March 2023). "Former Leicester lord mayor defects from Labour to Tories". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      25. Moorhouse, Sam (24 March 2023). "Two Leicester councillors defect to the Tories after being deselected by Labour". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      26. Richardson, Hannah (11 March 2023). "Soulsby responds to claims councillors were bullied into backing him". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      27. Richardson, Hannah (3 March 2023). "Labour suspends councillor over attempt to scrap mayor's job". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      28. Richardson, Hannah (22 March 2023). "Councillor wants Leicester mayoral job so she can scrap it". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      29. Richardson, Hannah (17 March 2023). "City mayor vote suspensions 'aim to silence debate and democracy'". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      30. Richardson, Hannah (18 March 2023). "City councillor says Labour crushes debate as he defects to Greens". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      31. Richardson, Hannah (5 April 2023). "Labour pledges to make Leicester 'fairer, happier and safer'". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      32. Richardson, Hannah (9 March 2023). "Protected parks, tax lock and free bus travel, Tories pledge". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 17 April 2023.
      33. Richardson, Hannah (5 April 2023). "Former MP to challenge Sir Peter Soulsby for Mayor role". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      34. Richardson, Hannah (21 March 2023). "Greens to target three key Leicester battlegrounds". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      35. Richardson, Hannah (5 April 2023). "Greens declare mayoral candidate but will not take salary". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      36. Richardson, Hannah (6 February 2023). "Second party takes aim at city mayor role ahead of elections". LeicestershireLive. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      37. "Leicester City Council". www.leicester.gov.uk. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
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      45. "Leicester City Council". www.leicester.gov.uk. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      46. "Leicester City Council". www.leicester.gov.uk. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      47. "Leicester City Council". www.leicester.gov.uk. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      48. "Leicester City Council". www.leicester.gov.uk. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      49. "Leicester City Council". www.leicester.gov.uk. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      50. "Leicester City Council". www.leicester.gov.uk. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      51. "Leicester City Council". www.leicester.gov.uk. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      52. "Leicester City Council". www.leicester.gov.uk. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      53. "Leicester City Council". www.leicester.gov.uk. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      54. "Leicester City Council". www.leicester.gov.uk. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      55. "Leicester City Council". www.leicester.gov.uk. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      56. "Leicester City Council". www.leicester.gov.uk. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
      57. "Leicester City Council". www.leicester.gov.uk. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
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