Before the election the Liberal Democrats had 29 seats, compared to 19 for the Conservatives, 8 for Labour and there were 2 Independents.[3] 18 of the 20 wards were contested in 2008, with only Colney Heath and Sandridge wards not having an election.[3] Each of the Liberal Democrat, Conservative, Labour and Green parties contested every seat, apart from in Redbourn where the Liberal Democrats did not put up a candidate against the sitting independent councillor Tony Swendell.[3]
3 Liberal Democrat councillors, Brian Peyton, Brian Sinfield and Jenny Stroud, and 2 Conservative councillors, Clare Ellis and Liz Stevenson, stood down at the election.[3] Independent, former Conservative, councillor John Newman also did not defend his seat in Harpenden West after moving to Dorset.[3]
Election result
The Liberal Democrats regained an overall majority of 2 on the council with 30 councillors, after making a net gain of one seat.[4][5] They gained seats in Batchwood, Sopwell and Verulam wards, but lost Harpenden East and Wheathampstead to the Conservatives, who increased to 22 seats on the council.[5] The Labour party lost all of the seats they had been defending, including London Colney to the Conservatives, to fall to 5 seats on the council, while independent Tony Swendell held his seat in Redbourn.[5] Labour blamed their defeats on voters protesting against the national Labour government.[5] Overall turnout was 42.5%, a drop from 43.6% at the 2007 election.[5]
Following the election the national Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg came to St Albans to celebrate the results.[6]
A by-election was held in Harpenden South on 4 June 2009 after Conservative councillor Paul Foster resigned from the council.[8] The seat was held for the Conservatives by Brian Ellis with a majority of 899 votes over the Labour Party.[9]