Sheffield Council election, 2010
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Sheffield City Council elections
Elections in the United Kingdom
There are five types of elections in the United Kingdom: United Kingdom general elections, elections to devolved parliaments and assemblies, elections to the European Parliament, local elections and mayoral elections. Elections are held on Election Day, which is conventionally a Thursday...

 took place on Thursday 6 May 2010. There were 28 seats up for election in 2010, one of the three councillors from each ward. Since the previous election, Liberal Democrat councillor Frank Taylor had defected to an Independent leaving the Liberal Democrats with 44 councillors. Turnout was up dramatically with it being held alongside the general election, to 62.6%. The higher turnout helped mainly Labour against their electoral rivals, who managed to return the council to no overall control
No overall control
Within the context of local councils of the United Kingdom, the term No Overall Control refers to a situation in which no single party achieves a majority of seats and is analogous to a hung parliament...

with three gains.

Election result

This result has the following consequences for the total number of seats on the Council after the elections:
Party Previous council New council
Liberal Democrats 44 42
Labour 36 39
Greens 3 2
Independent Liberal Democrat 1 1
Conservatives 0 0
BNP 0 0
UKIP 0 0
Trade Unionist & Socialist 0 0
English Democrats 0 0
Socialist Alternative 0 0
Total 84 84
Working majority

Ward results





Since the election, the winning candidate Ben Curran has defected to the Labour Party.
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