Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council | |
---|---|
Type | |
Type | |
History | |
Founded | 1 April 1974 |
Leadership | |
Civic Mayor | Tafheen Sharif,
Labour since 23 May 2023 |
Leader of the Council | Gerald Cooney,
Labour since 24 May 2022 |
Chief executive | Sandra Stewart since 6 December 2022 |
Structure | |
Seats | 57 councillors |
Political groups |
|
Joint committees |
Greater Manchester Combined Authority Greater Manchester Police, Fire and Crime Panel |
Length of term | Third of council elected three years out of four |
Elections | |
Last election | 2023 (all 57 councillors) |
Next election | 2024 (one third of councillors) |
Website | |
www |
Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council is the local authority of the Metropolitan Borough of Tameside in Greater Manchester, England. It is a metropolitan district council, one of ten in Greater Manchester and one of 36 in the metropolitan counties of England, and provides the majority of local government services in Tameside.
The council was documented in the 2014 BBC TV series Call the Council, which showed its workers carrying out their duties. [1]
Tameside is currently covered by three constituencies: Ashton-under-Lyne (six wards), Denton and Reddish (five wards) and Stalybridge and Hyde (eight wards). [2]
This section's
factual accuracy may be compromised due to out-of-date information. (May 2023) |
Each ward is represented by three councillors. [3]
Parliamentary constituency | Ward | Councillor | Party | Term of office | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ashton-under-Lyne constituency |
Ashton Hurst | Dolores Lewis | Labour | 2018–22 | |
Mike Glover | Labour | 2019–23 | |||
Leigh Drennan | Labour | 2016–20 | |||
Ashton St. Michael's | Bill Fairfoull | Labour | 2018–22 | ||
Yvonne Cartey | Labour | 2019–23 | |||
Margaret Sidebottom | Labour | 2016–20 | |||
Ashton Waterloo | Vimal Choksi | Labour | 2018–22 | ||
Lee Huntbach | Green | 2019–23 | |||
Pauline Hollinshead | Labour | 2018–20 | |||
Droylsden East | Susan Quinn | Labour | 2018–22 | ||
Laura Boyle | Labour | 2019–23 | |||
David Mills | Labour | 2017–20 | |||
Droylsden West | Barrie Holland | Labour | 2018–22 | ||
Ann Holland | Labour | 2019–23 | |||
Gerald Cooney | Labour | 2016–20 | |||
St. Peters | Joyce Bowerman | Labour | 2018–22 | ||
David McNally | Labour | 2019–23 | |||
Warren Bray | Labour | 2016–20 | |||
Denton and Reddish constituency |
Audenshaw | Oliver Ryan | Labour | 2018–22 | |
Charlotte Martin | Labour | 2019–23 | |||
Teresa Smith | Labour | 2016–20 | |||
Denton North East | Vincent Ricci | Labour | 2018–22 | ||
Allison Gwynne | Labour | 2019–23 | |||
Denise Ward | Labour | 2016–20 | |||
Denton South | Claire Reid | Labour | 2018–22 | ||
Jack Naylor | Labour | 2019–23 | |||
George Newton | Labour | 2016–20 | |||
Denton West | Michael Smith | Labour | 2018–22 | ||
Brenda Warrington | Labour | 2019–23 | |||
George Jones | Labour | 2019–21 | |||
Dukinfield | Jackie Lane | Labour | 2018–22 | ||
John Taylor | Labour | 2019–23 | |||
Brian Wild | Labour | 2016–20 | |||
Stalybridge and Hyde constituency |
Dukinfield / Stalybridge | Eleanor Wills | Labour | 2018–22 | |
David Sweeton | Labour | 2019–23 | |||
Leanne Feeley | Labour | 2016–20 | |||
Hyde Godley | Jim Fitzpatrick | Labour | 2018–22 | ||
Betty Affleck | Labour | 2019–23 | |||
Joe Kitchen | Labour | 2016–20 | |||
Hyde Newton | Philip Fitzpatrick | Labour | 2018–22 | ||
Helen Bowden | Labour | 2019–23 | |||
Peter Robinson | Labour | 2016–20 | |||
Hyde Werneth | Phil Chadwick | Conservative | 2018–22 | ||
Shibley Alam | Labour | 2019–23 | |||
Ruth Welsh | Conservative | 2016–20 | |||
Longdendale | Janet Cooper | Labour | 2018–22 | ||
Jacqueline Owen | Labour | 2019–23 | |||
Chris Buglass | Labour | 2016–20 | |||
Mossley | Stephen Homer | Labour | 2018–22 | ||
Tafheen Sharif | Labour | 2019–23 | |||
Jack Homer | Labour | 2016–20 | |||
Stalybridge North | Sam Gosling | Labour | 2018–22 | ||
Adrian Pearce | Labour | 2019–23 | |||
Jan Jackson | Labour | 2016–20 | |||
Stalybridge South | Liam Billington | Conservative | 2018–22 | ||
Clive Patrick | Conservative | 2019–23 | |||
Doreen Dickinson | Conservative | 2016–20 |
|