IWCA got some of the best results ever in UK politics of independent radical candidates, and several elected in Oxford. In the
2002 Oxford City Council elections the IWCA achieved the election of a local
councillor, Stuart Craft, with more than 40% of the vote in Northfield Brook ward. Three more candidates received over 20% of the vote in the local elections in London, in Heaton and
Gooshays wards in
Havering,
Clerkenwell ward in Islington and
Haggerston ward in Hackney. They won 22% in Bunhill ward in London in a by-election in 2003. The IWCA was able to raise the £20,000 required for participation in the
2004 London mayoral election and nominated Lorna Reid, a resident and advice worker on the
Highbury council estate. Her campaign focused on opposing
anti-social behaviour by funding youth facilities and cleaning up estates, establish community restorative justice schemes, local drugs detox centres and progressive local taxation. Reid came ninth with 9,542 (0.5%) of the first preference votes and 39,678 (2.1%) of the second preferences. In the
local elections that took place on the same day, the IWCA picked up two more seats on Oxford City Council. Maurice Leen contested the seat of
Oxford East for the IWCA in the
2005 UK general election, receiving 892 votes (2.1%). At the
2006 local elections, they stood six candidates and gained a further seat from Labour, taking their total to four. However, they lost two of their Oxford council seats to Labour in
May 2008. One of their councillors, Jane Lacey, stood down in 2010 to continue as a community campaigner, saying that she was disillusioned by the politics of the council. In 2008, the
Thurrock branch of the IWCA contested the seat of
Stanford East and Corringham Town ward and came last with 98 votes, down from last with 144 votes in 2007 and behind the
BNP's 344 votes. In March 2012 Stuart Craft, the last remaining IWCA local councillor in Oxford, announced to the
Oxford Mail that he would not stand again in the May elections, after ten years as an IWCA councillor. He said, "I couldn't stand on people's doorsteps any more, telling them we were going to change things when that wasn't going to happen." The party was deregistered with the
Electoral Commission in November 2020. ==History==