2018 United Kingdom local elections

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2018 United Kingdom local elections

The 2018 United Kingdom local elections were held on Thursday 3 May 2018,[2] with local council elections taking place in all 32 London boroughs, 34 metropolitan boroughs, 67 district and borough councils and 17 unitary authorities.[3] There were also direct elections for the mayoralties of Hackney, Lewisham, Newham, Tower Hamlets and Watford.

Quick Facts All 32 London boroughs, 34 out of 36 metropolitan boroughs,17 out of 55 unitary authorities, 67 out of 201 district councils, and 6 directly elected mayors, Leader ...
2018 United Kingdom local elections

 2017 3 May 2018 2019 

All 32 London boroughs, 34 out of 36 metropolitan boroughs,
17 out of 55 unitary authorities, 67 out of 201 district councils,
and 6 directly elected mayors
  Thumb Thumb Thumb
Leader Jeremy Corbyn Theresa May Vince Cable
Party Labour Conservative Liberal Democrats
Leader since 12 September 2015 11 July 2016 20 July 2017
Projected vote-share[n 1] 35% 35% 16%
Swing[n 2] 8% 3% 2%
Councils 74 46 9
Councils +/–[n 3] 3 4
Councillors 2,353 1,332 542
Councillors +/– 79 35 76

Thumb
Map showing council control following the election.
Conservative:      
Labour:      
Liberal Democrats:      
No overall control:      
No election:      
Close

With the exception of those areas that have had boundary changes, the seats up for election were last contested in the 2014 local elections.

A parliamentary by-election in West Tyrone took place the same day.[4] Various other local by-elections also took place.

Seats held prior to the election

According to a BBC News estimate, taking into account boundary changes, the major political parties are effectively defending the following 'notional' numbers of council seats on election day:

These numbers are how many seats each party won at the previous comparable election, generally in 2014, rather than which party held the seat on the eve of the election.[5] Some other news agencies, such as the Press Association, compare against the party holding a seat on the eve of the election, leading to a different analysis of gains and losses.[6][7]

There are also 48 Residents Associations' councillors, and 100 'other' / independent councillors.[8]

Eligibility to vote

All registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) aged 18 or over[9] on polling day were entitled to vote in the local elections.[10] A person with two homes (such as a university student having a term-time address and living at home during holidays) was able to register to vote at both addresses as long as the addresses were not in the same electoral area, and was able to vote in the local elections for the two different local councils.[11]

In certain councils, there was a trial system in place where photo ID was required to vote. These councils were: Swindon, Gosport, Woking, Bromley, and Watford.[12] An estimated 4,000 electors were turned away from polling stations across these trial areas as a result of not having the appropriate form of ID.[13]

Results

Summarize
Perspective

The number of councils controlled by each party following the election are shown in the table below. Both Labour and the Liberal Democrats made modest gains in terms of their respective number of councillors, whereas the Conservatives made a net loss of 35 seats. UKIP lost nearly all of the 126 seats they were defending, with only 3 councillors elected.[14]

Overall results

More information Party, Councillors ...
Party Councillors Councils Votes Projected national
equivalent[n 1]
Number Change Number Change Number[15] Share
Labour 2,353 Increase79 74 Steady 3,154,753 41.2% 35%
Conservative 1,332 Decrease35 46 Decrease3 2,444,204 31.9% 35%
Liberal Democrats 542 Increase76 9 Increase4 1,067,660 13.9% 16%
Green 39 Increase8 0 Steady 500,580 6.5% 14%
UKIP 3 Decrease123 0 Steady 101,866 1.3%
Independent 96 Increase17 0 Steady 392,139 5.2%
Residents 44 Decrease3 0 Steady
Liberal 1 Decrease1 0 Steady
PATH 1 Increase1 0 Steady
Harold Hill Ind. 1 Increase1 0 Steady
No overall control 21 Decrease1
Close

Results in London

The following table shows the aggregate results for the 32 councils that were up for election in London.

More information Party, Councillors ...
Party Councillors Councils
Number Change Number Change
Labour 1,128 Increase67 21 Increase1
Conservative 508 Decrease92 7 Decrease2
Liberal Democrats 152 Increase34 3 Increase2
Residents 25 Decrease2 0 Steady
Green 11 Increase7 0 Steady
Independent 7 Increase5 0 Steady
UKIP 0 Decrease9 0 Steady
PATH 1 Increase1 0 Steady
Harold Hill Ind. 1 Increase1 0 Steady
No overall control 1 Decrease1
Close

Due to boundary changes, the figures for seat losses/gains are notional changes calculated by the BBC, and do not match up precisely to the London-wide results in 2014.

Results outside of London

The following table shows the aggregate results for the 118 councils that were up for election outside of London.

More information Party, Councillors ...
Party Councillors Councils
Number Change Number Change
Labour 1,225 Increase12 53 Decrease1
Conservative 824 Increase57 39 Decrease1
Liberal Democrats 390 Increase42 6 Increase2
Independent 89 Increase12 0 Steady
Green 28 Increase1 0 Steady
Residents 21 Steady 0 Steady
UKIP 3 Decrease114 0 Steady
Liberal 1 Decrease1 0 Steady
No overall control 20 Steady
Close

Only four councils switched from a majority for one party to another. The Conservatives gained Redditch from Labour, and lost control of three councils to the Liberal Democrats: Kingston upon Thames, Richmond upon Thames and South Cambridgeshire. The Liberal Democrats also gained Three Rivers District Council from no overall control. Labour gained a majority on three councils that had been under no overall control (Kirklees, Plymouth and Tower Hamlets) while losing their majority on two (Derby and Nuneaton and Bedworth). The Conservatives gained a majority on one council that had been under no overall control (Basildon) while losing their majority on two (Mole Valley and Trafford).[16]

Labour won the inaugural mayoral election for the Sheffield City Region. Five other mayoral elections saw no change in the winning party: Labour held four and the Liberal Democrats held one.

Analysis

This was the first set of local elections since the 2017 general election. Most of the seats up for election had last been contested in the 2014 local elections.

Because the group of local councils varies with each cycle of local elections, the BBC and other analysts calculated a projected national vote share, which aims to assess what the council results indicate the UK-wide vote would be if the results were repeated at a general election. The BBC's estimate put Labour on 35% of the vote (up 8% since 2017), the Conservatives on 35% (down 3%), the Liberal Democrats on 16% (down 2%).[17] In the May 2017 local elections, the projected national voteshare was 38% for the Conservatives, 27% for Labour, 18% for the Liberal Democrats and 5% for UKIP. When votes were still being counted, media reports widely described the result as "mixed" for both Labour and the Conservatives.[18] The results suggested that support for the parties had not moved much since the general election 11 months earlier.[19] Some reports considered the results a relief for Theresa May and the Conservatives.[20][21]

Ben Margulies, a research fellow at the University of Warwick, noted how the United Kingdom Independence Party's collapse in vote share directly benefited the Conservatives as they committed to exiting the European Union. Margulies stated that the Conservatives' position with the electorate will "remain perched on a precipice".[22] Matthew Mokhefi-Ashton, a politics lecturer at Nottingham Trent University, argued that Labour had set their expectations too high and thus made the actual result look disappointing by comparison.[23] David Cutts, a professor of political science at the University of Birmingham, described the Liberal Democrats' performance in the election as "underwhelming" in contrast to the media response, arguing that the party only made moderate gains in their strongholds from before the Liberal-Conservative coalition and council areas that were seen as "Strong Remain" and "Strong Leave". Cutts argued that the next local elections in England are a greater test of their stability as they feature substantially more strongholds.[24]

London boroughs

Summarize
Perspective

All seats in the 32 London borough councils were up for election.

Metropolitan boroughs

Summarize
Perspective

Whole council

4 metropolitan boroughs had all of their seats up for election following boundary changes.

More information Council, Previous control ...
Close

One third of the seats in 30 metropolitan boroughs were up for election:

Unitary authorities

Summarize
Perspective

Whole council

One unitary authority had all of its seats up for election following boundary changes.

More information Council, Previous control ...
Council Previous control Result
Kingston upon Hull Labour Labour[86]
Close

Third of council

One third of the council seats were up for election in 16 unitary authorities.

Non-metropolitan districts

Summarize
Perspective

Whole council

Seven non-metropolitan districts have all of their seats up for election.

Half of council

Six non-metropolitan districts have half of their seats up for election.

Third of council

54 district councils had one third of their seats up for election. Weymouth and Portland originally had elections scheduled for 2018, but the elections were postponed indefinitely following a decision to merge the council into a unitary Dorset Council from 2019 onwards.[121][122]

These were the last elections to Daventry District Council, following the decision to abolish it along with Northamptonshire County Council and its 7 district councils into two unitary authorities in 2020.

More information Council, Previous control ...
Council Previous control Result
Amber Valley Conservative Conservative[123]
Basildon No overall control Conservative[124]
Basingstoke and Deane Conservative Conservative[125]
Brentwood Conservative Conservative[126]
Broxbourne Conservative Conservative[127]
Burnley Labour Labour[128]
Cambridge Labour Labour[129]
Cannock Chase Labour Labour[130]
Carlisle No overall control No overall control[131]
Castle Point Conservative Conservative[132]
Cherwell Conservative Conservative[133]
Chorley Labour Labour[134]
Colchester No overall control No overall control[135]
Craven Conservative Conservative[136]
Crawley Labour Labour[137]
Daventry Conservative Conservative[138]
Elmbridge Conservative No overall control[139]
Epping Forest Conservative Conservative[140]
Exeter Labour Labour[141]
Great Yarmouth Conservative Conservative[142]
Harlow Labour Labour[143]
Hart No overall control No overall control[144]
Havant Conservative Conservative[145]
Hyndburn Labour Labour[146]
Ipswich Labour Labour[147]
Lincoln Labour Labour[148]
Maidstone No overall control No overall control[149]
Mole Valley Conservative No overall control[150]
North Hertfordshire Conservative Conservative[151]
Norwich Labour Labour[152]
Pendle No overall control No overall control[153]
Preston Labour Labour[154]
Redditch Labour Conservative[155]
Reigate and Banstead Conservative Conservative[156]
Rochford Conservative Conservative[157]
Rossendale Labour Labour[158]
Rugby Conservative Conservative[159]
Runnymede Conservative Conservative[160]
Rushmoor Conservative Conservative[161]
St Albans Conservative Conservative[162]
Stevenage Labour Labour[163]
Tamworth Conservative Conservative[164]
Tandridge Conservative Conservative[165]
Three Rivers No overall control Liberal Democrats[166]
Tunbridge Wells Conservative Conservative[167]
Watford Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats[168]
Welwyn Hatfield Conservative Conservative[169]
West Lancashire Labour Labour[170]
West Oxfordshire Conservative Conservative[171]
Winchester Conservative Conservative[172]
Woking Conservative Conservative[173]
Worcester No overall control No overall control[174]
Worthing Conservative Conservative[175]
Wyre Forest Conservative Conservative[176]
Close

Mayoral elections

There were five local authority mayoral elections and one metropolitan mayoral election.

Combined authorities

More information Combined Authority, New mayor ...
Close

Local authorities

Notes

  1. All vote shares in the infobox are projected national equivalent vote shares calculated by the BBC.[1]
  2. Swing figures are the percentile changes between the BBC projected national equivalent vote share from 2017 local elections and the same for these local elections that were held in different areas.
  3. Compared to the last time these elections were held, four years previously.

References

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.