• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

MayorWatch

London News and Comment

  • NEWS
  • Twitter

Londoners buck national polls to give Boris a second term

May 5, 2012 - Martin Hoscik@MayorWatch

The result was announced at City Hall last night
Boris Johnson has defied political gravity to win a second term as Mayor of London.

After a tense day of counting Mr Johnson beat rival Ken Livingstone by 3%, closer than many opinion polls predicted.

After second preference votes were counted Johnson won 1,054,811 votes to Livingstone’s 992,273.

Nationally Johnson’s Conservative party is trailing Labour by as much as 10%.

The result of the election was announced at City Hall by Greater London Returning Officer John Bennett.

Livingstone, who also lost to Johnson in 2008, said the contest would be his “last election”.

Paying tribute to Livingstone, Johnson said was “amongst the most creative and most original” politicians he’s met.

Mr Johnson said he would “I will dedicate myself to making sure that Londoners and above all, young Londoners, are ready to take the jobs that this amazing city creates.”

He also promised to deliver “good deal for Londoners from the government that will help us deliver prosperity for everybody in this city”.

listen to ‘The result of the 2012 Mayor of London election is announced’ on Audioboo

In re-electing Mr Johnson Londoners shrugged off national issues including the UK’s return to recession and the ongoing row over the Government’s links to News International.

Outside the capital it was a different story with the Conservatives losing hundreds of councillors as voters in England, Scotland and Wales turned against them.

Johnson’s victory was widely predicted by opinion polls which in the days before the election suggested he was leading by as much as 12%.

Livingstone led the polls only for a brief period at the start of 2012 when his promised fares cut gained what turned out to be only temporary traction. A series of negative headlines about his challenger’s tax affairs soon saw Johnson regaining the lead.

A YouGov poll for Thursday’s Evening Standard put Johnson 6% points ahead. The final result was far closer with counting lasting until well into the night.

The night also saw Green Party candidate Jenny Jones score a major victory for her party by beating Liberal Democrat rival Brian Paddick into fourth place.

  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)
  • Click to print (Opens in new window)
  • Click to email this to a friend (Opens in new window)

Tagged With: 2012 London Election

RECENT UPDATES

Tube and rail users to benefit from Oyster weekly fares cap

Mayor and TfL call on ministers to help plug funding gap

Tube to get full mobile phone coverage from 2024

TfL says Direct Vision Standard is already making HGVs safer for London road users




POPULAR

City Hall to move to Docklands as Mayor seeks to raise £55m for frontline services

‘Concern’ over TfL’s ability to deliver major projects in wake of Crossrail cost overruns

City Hall halts London Overground ticket office closures but many will still see opening hours reduced

Transport for London confirms bus cuts will go ahead despite passenger opposition

GOT A STORY?

As the original London news and scrutiny site we've been casting an eye over the capital's public services and politicians since 1999.

 

Many of our top stories started with a tip-off from a reader - if you've got something you'd like us to cover get in touch and we'll do the rest.

Stay In Touch

  • E-mail
  • RSS
  • Twitter

Copyright © 2022 · Terms of Use · Privacy Policy

loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.