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Tartuffe, The Misanthrope, The Learned Women, The School for Wives, L'Avare

2024 Leeds City Council election



Electoral wards
Leeds City Council's 33 electoral wards have been fully reviewed twice since 2000, once before the 2004 council election and again before the 2018 council election.

Beforehand, the ward boundaries had not been amended since the last review in 1979. The 1979 review increased the number of wards in Leeds from 32 to 33, thereby increasing the number of councillors from 96 to 99. The 1980 council election was the first to be contested based on the new ward boundaries across the city, and therefore it was a full council, all-out election where all of the 99 council seats were up for election.

The boundary review between February 2002 and July 2003 was completed by the Boundary Committee for England. The review recommended the retention of 99 councillors representing 33 wards across the city, but suggested substantial alterations to ward boundaries to reduce the level of variance between different wards. Prior to the boundary review, based on the 2001 electorate, the largest and smallest wards respectively were Morley South (22,167 electors) and Hunslet (10,955 electors). Following the review all wards had an electorate within 10% of the average of all 33 wards across the city.

A similar process was completed in November 2017 by the Boundary Committee's successor, the Local Government Boundary Commission for England. The process had held consultations since July 2016. The biggest ward boundary changes saw the creation of two new wards in Headingley & Hyde Park and Little London and Woodhouse from the previous Hyde Park & Woodhouse and Headingley wards. City & Hunslet also became Hunslet & Riverside. Following the example of previous reviews, all of the city's councillors were re-elected together again based on the new ward boundaries in May 2018.

New section
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Notes

New infobox
Revolver

Episode details:

1. XTC, Steel Pulse, John Dowie, Rich Kids, Kate Bush, Ricky Cool and the Icebergs, Tom Robinson Band

2. The Autographs, Hi-Tension, The Lurkers, The Stranglers, The Boyfriends, Kandidate, The Boomtown Rats

3. The Vibrators, The Roy Hill Band, Bonnie Tyler, Buzzcocks, Siouxsie and the Banshees, Sore Throat, Ian Dury and the Blockheads

4. The Rezillos, Matumbi, The Motors, Nick Lowe, Brent Ford and the Nylons, Elvis Costello

5. Fabulous Poodles, Dire Straits, The Boomtown Rats, Heatwave, Jab Jab, The Jam

6. The Motors, The Shirts, Ian Dury and the Blockheads, Steve Gibbons Band, Goldie, Patrik Fitzgerald, Suzi Quatro

7. Eddie Kidd, X-Ray Spex, The Roy Hill Band, Lindisfarne, Merger, C-Gas 5, Eddie and the Hot Rods

8. David Coverdale and Whitesnake, The Tourists, Rich Kids, The Only Ones, The Showbiz Kids, Darts

Lynsey Hanley
Lynsey Hanley (born 12 April 1976) is a writer and academic. She is the author of Estates: an Intimate History and Respectable: Crossing the Class Divide, and is also a regular contributor to The Guardian. Hanley is a visiting fellow in cultural history at Liverpool John Moores University.

Early life

Hanley was born in Birmingham and grew up on a council estate in the suburb of Chelmsley Wood. She studied English at Queen Mary, University of London.

A frequent theme of Hanley's work is social mobility, often based on her own journey from a working-class background to attending university and becoming a writer.

As of 2023 she lives in Liverpool.

Bibliography


 * Estates: an Intimate History (2007)


 * Respectable: Crossing the Class Divide (2016)

External links


 * Articles in The Guardian

Number of appearances per guest panellist
The table below does not include appearances in the unbroadcast pilot, three special episodes, thirteen two-part compilation episodes, and one episode containing outtakes from "Series E".

Original May 1979 release

 * Sides one and two were combined as tracks 1–14 on CD and download reissues.

October 1979 reissue
Notes
 * "Let's Talk About Girls" is a cover of a 1966 song by The Grodes.