2022 Orkney Islands Council election
Elections to the Orkney Islands Council were held on 5 May 2022 on the same day as the 31 other Scottish local government elections. As with other Scottish council elections, it was held using single transferable vote – a form of proportional representation – in which multiple candidates are elected in each ward and voters rank candidates in order of preference.
The elections were the first held since the passage of the Islands (Scotland) Act 2018 which allowed wards in Scottish councils containing islands to be reduced to single- and dual-member wards. Changes were made to the boundaries in the Orkney Islands but the six wards created under the Local Governance (Scotland) Act 2004 remained.
As with previous elections in the area, independent councillors retained a large majority of the seats on the council and retained control of the administration. The [Scottish Scottish Green Party|Green Party|Greens] – who won their first representation on the council in 2017 – increased their number of seats to two.
Background
Previous election
At the previous election in 2017, independent councillors retained control of the council after taking all but three seats. The Orkney Manifesto Group won their first representation on the council at a full election as they took two seats while the Greens won their first seat in the region.| Party | Seats | Vote share | |
| Independents | 18 | 83.2% | |
| Orkney Manifesto Group | 2 | 12.1% | |
| Green | 1 | 4.7% |
Source:
Electoral system
The election used the six wards created under the Local Governance (Scotland) Act 2004, with 21 councillors being elected. Each ward elected either three or four members, using the single transferable vote electoral system – a form of proportional representation – in which voters rank candidates in order of preference.Composition
There were no official changes to the political composition of the council in the preceding term. However, independent councillor John Ross Scott did announce he had joined the Greens in 2021, which did not change his affiliation on the council. One by-election was held and resulted in an independent hold.| Party | 2017 result | Dissolution | |
| Independents | 18 | 18 | |
| Orkney Manifesto Group | 2 | 2 | |
| Green | 1 | 1 |
Retiring councillors
Source:Boundary changes
Following the passing of the Islands (Scotland) Act 2018, a review of the boundaries was undertaken in North Ayrshire, Argyll and Bute, Highland, Orkney Islands, Shetland Islands and the Western Isles. The Act allowed single- or two-member wards to be created to provide better representation of island communities. As a result, the boundaries of the existing wards were changed but the number of councillors remained the same. North Isles, Stromness and South Isles and West Mainland were unchanged. The boundaries in and around Kirkwall were amended to better reflect local ties. Kirkwall Airport and neighbouring communities were placed in Kirkwall wards instead of East Mainland, South Ronaldsay and Burray while the boundary between Kirkwall East and Kirkwall West and Orphir was amended by the harbour to make a more identifiable boundary.Candidates
The total number of candidates fell from 38 in 2017 to 35. The number of independent candidates outstripped any individual party but fell by four from the previous election. Only one political party – the Greens – named candidates in 2022. In total, they contested five of the six wards as they named three more candidates than in 2017. The Orkney Manifesto Group – who named two candidates in 2017 – was voluntarily deregistered with the Electoral Commission prior to the 2022 election. Despite the drop in overall candidate numbers – and unlike the 2017 election in which the Stromness and South Isles ward was uncontested – all six wards were contested.Election result
Source:Notes:
- Votes are the sum of first preference votes across all council wards. The net gain/loss and percentage changes relate to the result of the previous Scottish local elections on 4 May 2017. This is because STV has an element of proportionality which is not present unless multiple seats are being elected. This may differ from other published sources showing gain/loss relative to seats held at the dissolution of Scotland's councils.
Ward summary
!rowspan=2 align="left"|Ward! %
!Cllrs
! %
!Cllrs
!rowspan=2|Total
Cllrs
!colspan=2|Ind
!colspan=2|Green
!align="left"|Total
!85.4
!19
!14.6
!2
!21
Seats changing hands
Below is a list of seats which elected a different party or parties from 2017 in order to highlight the change in political composition of the council from the previous election. The list does not include defeated incumbents who resigned or defected from their party and subsequently failed re-election while the party held the seat.;Notes
Ward results
Kirkwall East
The Greens gained a seat while independent councillors Steven Heddle, Gwenda Shearer and David Dawson retained the seats they had won at the previous election. Cllr John Ross Scott was elected as an independent candidate in 2017 but stood for the Greens in 2022.Kirkwall West and Orphir
The Greens and independent candidate Ivan Taylor gained a seat from former independent councillor Barbara Foulkes and the Orkney Manifesto Group while independent candidates Leslie Manson and Sandy Cowie retained the seats they had won at the previous election.Stromness and South Isles
Independent councillor James Stockan retained the seat he had won at the previous election while independent candidates Graham Bevan and Lindsay Hall gained a seat from former independent councillors Rob Crichton and Magnus Thomson.West Mainland
Independent candidates Owen Tierney and Duncan Tullock retained the seats they had won at the previous election while independent candidates Rachael King and Jean Stevenson gained a seat from former independent councillor Harvey Johnston and the Orkney Manifesto Group. In 2017, Cllr King was elected as an Orkney Manifesto Group candidate.East Mainland, South Ronaldsay and Burray
Independent candidates Raymie Peace, Gillian Skuse and James Moar gained a seat from the Greens and former independent councillors Andrew Drever and Norman Rae Craigie.North Isles
Independent councillor Stephen Clackson retained the seat he had won at the previous election while independent candidates Heather Woodbridge and Mellissa Thomson gained seats from former independent councillors Graham Sinclair and Kevin Woodbridge. Cllr Heather Woodbridge was elected at a by-election in 2020 following the death of her father, Kevin Woodbridge.Aftermath
Two Green councillors were elected as the party doubled their representation on the council. Kristopher Leask, Green councillor for Kirkwall West and Orphir, was returned as the youngest person to be elected to the council while the number of women on the council increased from four to six.Stromness and South Isles councillor James Stockan was re-elected as council leader as independent councillors retained control of the council. Cllr Heather Woodbridge was elected as depute leader and Cllr Graham Bevan was elected as convener - the civic head of the council - for a period of two years.
Cllr Stockan retired in February 2024 and was replaced as council leader by Cllr Woodbridge who, in turn, was replaced as depute leader by Cllr Alexander Cowie.
In May 2024, Cllr Bevan was re-elected as convener until the end of the council term in 2027.