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Politics of Lincolnshire

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

Lincolnshire is a ceremonial county in England, United Kingdom. It has a non-metropolitan county called Lincolnshire and two unitary authority areas in the north.

The non-metropolitan county is led by the Lincolnshire County Council. This council is mainly controlled by the Reform and Conservative parties. It is split into seven district councils.

Two districts, North East Lincolnshire and North Lincolnshire, are unitary authorities. They used to be part of Humberside county, which was dissolved in 1996. Some services in these districts are still shared with the East Riding of Yorkshire ceremonial county.

Lincolnshire has 11 Members of Parliament (MPs). After the 2019 general election, all 11 areas were represented by the Conservative Party. This shows that many people in the area support this political group.

UK Parliament

Lincolnshire has 11 Members of Parliament, called MPs. They help make decisions for the area. After the elections in 2019, all these MPs belong to the Conservative Party. This party represents all parts of Lincolnshire in the UK Parliament.

2019 general election: Lincolnshire
ConservativeLabourLiberal DemocratGreenOthersTurnout
348,325 (66.0%)
Increase34,217
120,808 (22.9%)
Decrease54,307
35,049 (6.6%)
Increase16,645
10,564 (2.0%)
Increase4,532
13,271 (2.5%)
Decrease7,870
528,006Decrease9,266
Overall numbers of seats as of 2019
ConservativeLabourLiberal
Democrat
GreenOthers
110000
Parliamentary constituencies
ConstituencyDistrictMPParty
Boston and SkegnessBoston, East LindseyMatt WarmanConservative
Brigg and GooleNorth Lincolnshire (plus part in East Riding of Yorkshire)Andrew PercyConservative
CleethorpesNorth East Lincolnshire, North LincolnshireMartin VickersConservative
GainsboroughWest Lindsey, East LindseyEdward LeighConservative
Grantham and StamfordSouth KestevenGareth DaviesConservative
Great GrimsbyNorth East LincolnshireLia NiciConservative
LincolnLincoln, North KestevenKarl McCartneyConservative
Louth and HorncastleEast LindseyVictoria AtkinsConservative
ScunthorpeNorth LincolnshireHolly Mumby-CroftConservative
Sleaford and North HykehamNorth Kesteven, South KestevenCaroline JohnsonConservative
South Holland and The DeepingsSouth Holland, South KestevenJohn Henry HayesConservative

Local government

The Lincolnshire County Council is controlled by Reform UK. They have 44 of the 70 seats. North Lincolnshire and North East Lincolnshire are separate areas and are not part of the non-metropolitan county.

The Conservatives were in charge after the 2009 local election, but lost their majority in 2013. They won again in 2017 and 2021. In the 2025 election, Reform UK took control, with Andrea Jenkyns becoming the Mayor of Greater Lincolnshire.

National referendums

1975 EC membership referendum

See also: Results of the 1975 United Kingdom European Communities membership referendum

The 1975 EC membership referendum was a vote held in the county on June 5, 1975. Voters were asked if the United Kingdom should stay in the European Communities, which later became the European Union. Most people in Lincolnshire voted to stay in.

2011 AV referendum

Main article: Results of the 2011 United Kingdom Alternative Vote referendum

In 2011, a vote asked if people wanted to change how Members of Parliament were elected. Most people in Lincolnshire voted against changing the voting system.

2016 EU membership referendum

Main article: Results of the 2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum

On June 23, 2016, Lincolnshire held a vote about staying in the European Union. Voters chose whether to remain a member or leave. The seven districts and two unitary authorities in Lincolnshire were used as voting areas.

1975 United Kingdom European Communities(Common Market) membership referendum
Non-metropolitan Lincolnshire
ChoiceVotes%
Yes180,60374.75%
No61,01125.25%
Valid votes241,61499.82%
Invalid or blank votes4450.18%
Total votes242,059100.00%
Registered voters and turnout370,51863.70%
Referendum results (without spoiled ballots):
Yes:
180,603 (74.7%)
No:
61,011 (25.3%)
United Kingdom Alternative Vote referendum, 2011
Lincolnshire
ChoiceVotes%
No232,03475.19%
Yes76,57024.81%
Valid votes308,60499.49%
Invalid or blank votes1,5930.51%
Total votes310,197100.00%
Registered voters and turnout722,21040.17%
Referendum results (without spoiled ballots):
Yes:
76,570 (24.8%)
No:
232,034 (75.2%)
Counting areasTurnout %No votesYes votesNo %Yes %
Boston39.5813,3373,95877.1122.89
East Lindsey42.6034,04510,57176.3123.69
Lincoln36.6816,0996,95169.8430.16
North East Lincolnshire34.2329,4849,54975.5424.46
North Lincolnshire39.5736,03112,54274.1825.82
North Kesteven42.9527,3977,92677.5622.44
South Holland39.8320,5425,60378.5721.43
South Kesteven42.6332,21711,24774.1225.88
West Lindsey43.7022,8828,22373.5626.44

United Kingdom European Union membership referendum, 2016
Lincolnshire
ChoiceVotes%
Leave the European Union380,55665.98%
Remain a member of the European Union196,18434.02%
Valid votes576,74099.95%
Invalid or blank votes3080.05%
Total votes595,954100.00%
Registered voters and turnout780,76173.91%
Referendum results (without spoiled ballots):
Leave:380,556 (66%)Remain:
196,184 (34%)
Voting areasTurnout %Remain votesLeave votesRemain %Leave %
Boston77.2%7,43022,97424.4%75.6%
East Lindsey74.9%23,51556,61329.3%70.7%
Lincoln69.3%18,90224,99243.1%57.0%
North East Lincolnshire67.9%23,79755,18530.1%69.9%
North Lincolnshire71.9%29,94758,91533.7%66.3%
North Kesteven78.4%25,57042,18337.7%62.3%
South Holland75.3%13,07436,42326.4%73.6%
South Kesteven78.2%33,04749,42440.1%60.0%
West Lindsey74.5%20,90633,84738.2%61.8%

Police and Crime Commissioners

Main articles: Lincolnshire Police and Crime Commissioner and Humberside Police and Crime Commissioner

Elections for leaders called Police and Crime Commissioners for Lincolnshire and Humberside took place on May 2, 2024. These leaders help make sure that police services work well and serve the community. The leaders for both areas were chosen by people who voted in the elections.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Politics of Lincolnshire, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.