2022 Jersey general election
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All 49 seats in the States Assembly 25 seats needed for a majority | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Registered | 60,678[1] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Turnout | 41.6% ( 1.9 pp)[1][2][a] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The 2022 Jersey general election was held on 22 June 2022 to elect Connétables and deputies to the States Assembly. As in previous elections, the majority of seats were won by independents. The governing Jersey Alliance party suffered a heavy defeat, losing all but one of its seats. Following the election, a coalition government led by Better Way Deputy Kristina Moore was formed.
Independent politicians won 32 of the 49 seats in the Assembly. Reform Jersey won 10 seats, primarily in the new St Helier constituencies, the largest win in the party's history. Whilst Jersey Alliance won a sizable share of the popular vote, it only won a single seat; almost all of its members in the Assembly were voted out, most notably the incumbent Chief Minister John Le Fondré. The newly founded Jersey Liberal Conservatives and Progress Party, forming the JLC–Progress Coalition, received 2 and 1 seats respectively.
Despite widespread electoral reforms made in 2021 intended to improve civic engagement, turnout decreased from the previous election to 41.6%. Following the election, Jersey Alliance's single member in the Assembly resigned from the party after only a month, leaving it with no representation in the States Assembly. The Progress Party disbanded a year later in July 2023.
Timeline
In March 2021, it was announced the election could be held in June, rather than as regular in May, to minimise the impact of the four bank holidays which would fall during the election campaign period otherwise.[3]
The election purdah period began on 10 May 2022, limiting the activities of the Council of Ministers to business as usual activities.[4]
Electoral system
The 2022 elections are the first to have been held under a new electoral system. Under the system, the role of Senators is abolished and replaced with 37 Deputies elected across 9 districts via plurality block voting. The election of one Connétable from each of the twelve parishes is maintained.[5][6]
This election has seen the debut of many new political parties to a political landscape that has been traditional dominated by independent candidates. Before the election the newly formed centre-right Jersey Alliance, which included the previous Chief Minister John Le Fondré, had led the previous Government of Jersey. The centre-right Liberal Conservatives and the centrist Progress Party entered into a political pact with one other for the election.[7] The existing social-democratic Reform Jersey party will also contest the election, and a group of independent candidates will stand with a shared platform and agreed principles under the name of ‘Better Way’, including Chief Scrutineer and Senator Kristina Moore.[8]
For the 2022 elections, the Constable of St. Martin brought forward an amendment to include "the choice of ‘None of the Above’ to be automatically included as a ballot option in any States Assembly election where the number of candidates in a District or Parish does not exceed the number of seats available, with an appropriate formal consequence being provided should this ballot option achieve a plurality of the votes cast."[9] The change was subsequently approved by the States Assembly.[10]
Political parties and groups
The table below lists the parties or groups that nominated at least one candidate for the election:
Name | Ideology | Leader | 2018 result | Pre-election seats | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Seats | |||||||
RJ | Reform Jersey | Social democracy | Sam Mézec | 5 / 49
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5 / 49 [d]
| ||
JA | Jersey Alliance | Conservative liberalism | Mark Boleat | — | 9 / 49
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PP | Progress Party[e] | Centrism | Steve Pallett | — | 2 / 49
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JLC | Jersey Liberal Conservatives[f] | Liberal conservatism | Philip Bailhache | — | 0 / 49
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BW | Better Way[c] | Consensus government | Kristina Moore | — | 1 / 49
| ||
Ind | Independents | — | — | 44 / 49
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33 / 49
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Notes
As the electorate can vote for more than one candidate, including voting for multiple candidates of differing political parties, the vote total is not indicative of the popular vote share of each party but rather the total number of votes each candidate received.
The 'Better Way' group ran as independents and are not a registered political party nor stood as a political party. Their candidates received 8,016 votes and 4 out of 5 of their candidates were elected.
Results
By constituency
By party
Party | Leader | Seats | Votes | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Of total | Of total | |||||||
Independents | – | 32 | 65.3% | 32 / 49
|
61,051 | 58.9% | ||
Reform Jersey | Sam Mézec | 10 | 20.4% | 10 / 49
|
12,751 | 12.3% | ||
Better Way[c] | Kristina Moore | 4 | 8.2% | 4 / 49
|
8,016 | 7.7% | ||
Jersey Liberal Conservatives | Philip Bailhache | 2 | 4.1% | 2 / 49
|
4,259 | 4.1% | ||
Jersey Alliance | John Le Fondré | 1 | 2.0% | 1 / 49
|
9,479 | 9.1% | ||
Progress Party | Steve Pallett | 1 | 2.0% | 1 / 49
|
4,376 | 4.2% |
List of elected members
Connétables
Parish | Name | Party | Majority | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Grouville | Mark Labey | Independent | 72 | |
St Brelade | Mike Jackson | Independent | 1,451 | |
St Clement | Marcus Troy | Independent | 1,748 | |
St Helier | Simon Crowcroft | Independent | 944 | |
St John | Andy Jehan | Independent | 1,036 | |
St Lawrence | Deidre Mezbourian | Independent | 301 | |
St Martin | Karen Shenton-Stone | Independent | 1,057 | |
St Mary | David Johnson | Independent | 83 | |
St Ouen | Richard Honeycombe | Independent | 512 | |
St Peter | Richard Vibert | Independent | 872 | |
St Saviour | Kevin Lewis | Independent | 396 | |
Trinity | Philip Le Suer | Jersey Alliance | 441 | |
Source:[11] |
Deputies
Constituency | Name | Party | Majority | |
---|---|---|---|---|
St Helier South | Sam Mézec | Reform Jersey | 364 | |
Tom Coles | Reform Jersey | 122 | ||
Beatriz Porée | Reform Jersey | 88 | ||
David Warr | Better Way[c] | 25 | ||
St Helier Central | Carina Alves | Reform Jersey | 437 | |
Robert Ward | Reform Jersey | 413 | ||
Lyndsay Feltham | Reform Jersey | 343 | ||
Catherine Curtis | Reform Jersey | 323 | ||
Geoff Southern | Reform Jersey | 210 | ||
St Helier North | Inna Gardiner | Independent | 928 | |
Mary Le Hegarat | Independent | 531 | ||
Max Andrews | Independent | 399 | ||
Steve Ahier | Independent | 262 | ||
St Saviour | Tom Binet | Independent | 595 | |
Malcom Ferey | Jersey Liberal Conservatives | 374 | ||
Louise Doublet | Independent | 326 | ||
Raluca Kovacs | Reform Jersey | 86 | ||
Philip Ozouf | Independent | 54 | ||
St Clement | Alex Curtis | Better Way[c] | 556 | |
Barbara Ward | Independent | 486 | ||
Philip Bailhache | Jersey Liberal Conservatives | 322 | ||
Karen Wilson | Independent | 50 | ||
St Brelade | Helen Miles | Independent | 1,042 | |
Moz Scott | Independent | 455 | ||
Johnathan Renouf | Independent | 454 | ||
Montfort Tadier | Reform Jersey | 175 | ||
St Mary, St Ouen, and St Peter | Kristina Moore | Better Way[c] | 1,677 | |
Lucy Stephenson | Better Way[c] | 1,186 | ||
Ian Gorst | Independent | 1,155 | ||
Lyndon Farnham | Independent | 48 | ||
St John, St Lawrence, and St John | Kirsten Morel | Independent | 1,522 | |
Hilary Jeune | Independent | 1,435 | ||
Elaine Millar | Independent | 1,075 | ||
Andy Howell | Independent | 556 | ||
Grouville and St Martin | Carolyn Labey | Independent | 674 | |
Steve Luce | Progress Party | 309 | ||
Rose Binet | Independent | 174 | ||
Source:[11] |
Notes
- ^ Based on results for deputies.
- ^ Not including Better Way.
- ^ a b c d e f g Better Way is a group of independent politicians who pledge to work together, and is not registered as a political party.
- ^ Trevor Pointon announced that he would stand for election as a Reform Jersey candidate, though continued to stand in the States Assembly as an independent until the election.
- ^ In an electoral pact with the Liberal Conservatives
- ^ In an electoral pact with the Progress Party
References
- ^ a b "Election '22 breakdown of results". vote.je. States Greffe. 2 August 2022. Archived from the original on 21 November 2023. Retrieved 2 December 2023.
- ^ "2018 Election Statistics". vote.je. States Greffe. Retrieved 2 December 2023.
- ^ "Election to be postponed until June next year?". Jersey Evening Post. 2021-03-10. Retrieved 2022-05-10.
- ^ Jersey, States of. "Government of Jersey". gov.je. Retrieved 2022-05-10.
- ^ Morris, Michael. "Electoral reforms approved after decades of debate". jerseyeveningpost.com. Retrieved 2021-04-22.
- ^ "Senator role disappears in major reform of States Assembly electoral system". ITV Channel Television. 2020-12-04. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
- ^ Express, Bailiwick. ""And I agree with Steve..." Progress Party and JLC form coalition". Bailiwick Express. Retrieved 2022-06-28.
- ^ "New 'Better Way' political coalition is formed". Jersey Evening Post. 2022-03-21. Retrieved 2022-05-10.
- ^ "COMPOSITION AND ELECTION OF THE STATES: PROPOSED CHANGES(P.139/2020) – THIRD AMENDMENT" (PDF). States Assembly. 2020-11-12.
- ^ "Islanders to be able to vote for 'none of the above'". www.bailiwickexpress.com/. 2021-07-21. Retrieved 2021-07-21.
- ^ a b "'22 Election Results". vote.je. States Greffe. 10 August 2022. Archived from the original on 2 June 2023. Retrieved 20 November 2023.