An election to Oxfordshire County Council took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the United Kingdom local elections, 2013. 63 councillors were elected from 61 electoral divisions, which returned either one or two county councillors each by first-past-the-post voting for a four-year term of office. Following a boundary review, the electoral divisions were not the same as those used at the previous election in 2009.
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| - An election to Oxfordshire County Council took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the United Kingdom local elections, 2013. 63 councillors were elected from 61 electoral divisions, which returned either one or two county councillors each by first-past-the-post voting for a four-year term of office. Following a boundary review, the electoral divisions were not the same as those used at the previous election in 2009.
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| - Oxfordshire County Council election, 2013
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| - An election to Oxfordshire County Council took place on 2 May 2013 as part of the United Kingdom local elections, 2013. 63 councillors were elected from 61 electoral divisions, which returned either one or two county councillors each by first-past-the-post voting for a four-year term of office. Following a boundary review, the electoral divisions were not the same as those used at the previous election in 2009. The election saw the Conservative Party lose overall control of the council as the party found itself one seat short of an overall majority.All locally registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on Thursday 2 May 2013 were entitled to vote in the local elections. Those who were temporarily away from their ordinary address (for example, away working, on holiday, in student accommodation or in hospital) were also entitled to vote in the local elections, although those who had moved abroad and registered as overseas electors cannot vote in the local elections. It is possible to register to vote at more than one address (such as a university student who had a term-time address and lives at home during holidays) at the discretion of the local Electoral Register Office, but it remains an offence to vote more than once in the same local government election.
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dbp:candidate
| - Nikolai Tolstoy
- Michael Waine
- Bill Atkinson
- John Brown
- Nick Carter
- Mary Young
- Michael Taylor
- David Harvey
- Peter Davis
- Kevin Harris
- David Moore
- David Smith
- Paul Williams
- James Douglas
- John Howson
- Mark Stevenson
- Paul Collins
- Graham Jones
- Andrew Wright
- Jonathan Miller
- Patricia Jones
- John Sanders
- David James
- Paul Creighton
- Ian Hudspeth
- Peter Jones
- David Williams
- Ken Clark
- Robert Paynter
- Diane West
- Bob Johnston
- John Haywood
- Stuart Brown
- Paul Skinner
- John Walsh
- Sushila Dhall
- Mad Hatter
- Michael Montgomery
- Nicholas Turner
- John Tanner
- James Stanley
- David Weaver
- David Newman
- John Christie
- Clive Taylor
- Andrew Jones
- Ian Macdonald
- Christopher Henderson
- Laura Price
- Jane Jackson
- Peter Elliot
- John O'Regan
- Michael Enright
- John Innes
- Sam Coates
- Tom Fleming
- Alan Thompson
- Alan Harris
- Alasdair Murray
- Ann Duncan
- Craig Simmons
- Sarah Edwards
- Colin Clark
- Dickie Bird
- Ian Middleton
- Sean Woodcock
- Liz Leffman
- David Bartlett
- Richard Langridge
- Tony White
- James Norman
- Jacqueline Jones
- Lee Upcraft
- Neil Fawcett
- Stephen Webb
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