2023 United Kingdom local elections

Elections to local councils and mayoralties From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2023 United Kingdom local elections

The 2023 United Kingdom local elections were held on Thursday, 4 May 2023 in England and on Thursday 18 May 2023 in Northern Ireland.[6] These included district councils, unitary authorities, and directly elected mayors in England, and included all local councils in Northern Ireland.[7][8] Notably, these elections were the first to be held under the Elections Act 2022, a new voter identification law that required voters to show photo ID when attending a polling station,[9] and was a cause for controversy.[10]

Quick Facts 230 unitary, metropolitan and district councils in England 4 directly elected mayors in England All 11 councils in Northern Ireland, Turnout ...
2023 United Kingdom local elections

 2022 4 May 2023 (England)
18 May 2023 (Northern Ireland)
2024 

230 unitary, metropolitan and district councils in England
4 directly elected mayors in England
All 11 councils in Northern Ireland
Turnout32.0% (England)[1]
54.7% (Northern Ireland)[2]
  First party Second party
  Thumb Thumb
Leader Keir Starmer Rishi Sunak
Party Labour Conservative
Leader since 4 April 2020 24 October 2022
Seats before 5,982 seats[3]
86 councils
6,823 seats
118 councils
Projected vote share[a] 35%
26%
4%
Seats won (2023) 2,675
71 councils
2,296
33 councils
Councillors (after) 6,507
108 councils[4]
5,702
70 councils
Net change (notional) 537
22 councils
1,063
48 councils

  Third party Fourth party
  Thumb Thumb
Leader Ed Davey Carla Denyer and Adrian Ramsay
Party Liberal Democrats Green
Leader since 27 August 2020[n 1] 1 October 2021
Seats before 2,605 seats
25 councils
556 seats
0 councils
Projected vote share[a] 20%
1%
n/a
Seats won (2023) 1,628
29 councils
481
1 council
Councillors (after) 2,992
37 councils
789
1 council
Net change (notional) 407
12 councils
241
1 council

Thumb
Map showing party control of councils following the elections.
  •   No election
  • otherwise see analysis table
Close
Thumb
Local authorities with elections:
  •   Metropolitan borough
  •   Unitary authority
  •   District councils in England
  •   District councils in Northern Ireland
  •   No election
Thumb
The largest party in each council

The elections in England saw significant losses for the governing Conservative Party, which lost over 1,000 council seats. The Labour Party, the Liberal Democrats and the Green Party of England and Wales all made gains, with Labour becoming the party with most members elected to local government for the first time since 2002. The Greens won majority control of Mid Suffolk District Council, the party's first ever council majority.[11]

In Northern Ireland, Sinn Féin emerged as the largest party in local government for the first time. These elections were also the first since the creation of Northern Ireland in which nationalist candidates received more votes than unionists.

England

Summarize
Perspective

Background

Policy

These elections were to be the first under the new voter identification laws. This meant voters would be required to show photo identification when attending a polling station. These new laws were controversial[10] and led to accusations of voter suppression.[12][13] There were concerns that turnout would be extremely low at the elections due to a combination of lack of ID held by some voters, and many members of the public remaining unaware of the new requirements.[14][15] The police had been alerted to the possibility of anger and confrontation over these new rules, and polling station staff had been trained to de-escalate situations.[16]

Since late 2021, the cost of living crisis had been growing, leading to government support for help with bills. Changes to waste collection and recycling had been delayed by the Government until after the elections.[17]

Narrative

A majority of the seats up for election were last elected in 2019. At those elections, the Conservative Party lost over a thousand seats and control of several councils while the Liberal Democrats managed to make the most gains at their expense. The Labour Party also lost seats and control of some councils at the 2019 local elections.[18] In terms of seat numbers, this day of local elections was the biggest since 2019.[19] Many wards had new boundaries.[20]

The year up to the 2023 elections included the political crisis leading to Boris Johnson's resignation, the market turbulence caused by the "mini-budget", and the subsequent credibility crisis leading to Liz Truss' resignation and Rishi Sunak's appointment.

The cost of living crisis and a surge in inflation were significant contributing factors to several strikes in the public sector, with high-profile strikes in the transport sector and the health service. There were also extensive strikes in the postal services, education sector and amongst the civil service. In mid-February 2023, Conservative member of the House of Lords, Lord Hayward, said that the strikes had popular support and were therefore damaging the government and party's chances in the local elections. He argued the strikes needed to stop in order to improve their chances.[21]

The Liberal Democrats had been utilising comments from senior Conservative MPs as part of their advertising in the so-called "blue wall" to draw attention to their undesirable and "toxic" opinions, such as support for the death penalty.[22]

The Labour Party had stated to the press that they want to use these local elections to prepare for the 2024 general election.[18][needs update]

The Green Party stood 3,331 candidates, 41% of all seats that were up for election, the most they had ever contested.[23] Over half of the party's 536 total local council seats were to be defended at these elections.[24] The Greens launched their national local elections campaign in Stowmarket, Mid Suffolk, where they were aiming to win majority control, which would be the first time the Greens had won a majority on any council.[25] The Greens were said to have been aiming to win at least 100 new seats, with their appeal spreading to both left and right-wing voters due to dissatisfaction with the main two parties.[26]

Predictions

The Conservatives had been performing poorly in national polls leading up to these elections. They had been more than 20 points behind the Labour party in national opinion polling, though the gap had been narrowing.[27] Conservative party chair Greg Hands MP publicly recognised that this election would be difficult for the party and referred to analysis that suggested they would lose more than 1,000 seats.[28][29] This estimate was based on comments by British academics Colin Rallings and Michael Thrasher, who said current polling would put conservative seat losses at around 1,000, while Labour would gain around 700 seats.[30][31] President of the British Polling Council Sir John Curtice had described the electorate as "increasingly sophisticated" in using tactical voting to defeat the Conservative party candidates.[31] For this reason Sir John Curtice said the Conservative party could actually end up losing well over 1,000 seats if the tactical voting is a big factor, which director of polling company Savanta, Chris Hopkins, agreed with.[31] A website was created to inform voters how to vote to have the best chance to unseat the Conservatives in their local area, and it received publicity thanks to endorsements from several public figures.[32]

Labour NEC member Luke Akehurst stated that he expected the party to make its best gains in seat numbers since 2012, when it gained 847 seats (next best being a net gain of 288 seats), but expected varied results in terms of council control.[33]

Sky News reported that YouGov predictions were pointing towards Labour gains in the North and the Midlands.[34][35] That same report showed that Conservative-controlled Swindon council looked set to switch control to Labour, and some other councils would move into Labour control from no overall control, or move to no overall control from Conservative.[34] East Cambridgeshire was predicted to switch from Conservative control to Liberal Democrat.[34] Sky News also reported that if the Conservatives only lost 500 seats they may feel "relatively unscathed"; if they lost 750 they could argue that Labour was not performing as well as the polls suggest, but over 1,000 seat losses would be "difficult to spin".[36][37]

Campaigning

Conservatives

7,512 / 8,063(93%)

Labour Party

6,232 / 8,063(77%)

Liberal Democrats

4,816 / 8,063(60%)

Green Party

3,322 / 8,063(41%)

Reform UK

471 / 8,063(6%)
Seats contested by party, Election Maps UK[38]

The Conservative Party launched its campaign on 24 March 2023 in the Midlands when Rishi Sunak visited some local sites along with West Midlands Mayor Andy Street and local MPs.[39][40] There was some confusion as to whether this had been the campaign launch, but Conservative headquarters later confirmed the launch had happened.[30]

The Liberal Democrats launched its campaign on 29 March 2023 in Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, when the party leader, Ed Davey, drove a tractor into a ‘Blue Wall’ of hay bales.[41][42]

Labour launched its campaign on 30 March 2023 in Swindon with speeches from Keir Starmer, Angela Rayner and Rachel Reeves.[43][44]

The Green Party launched its campaign in early April 2023 in Stowmarket, Suffolk, with speeches from co-leaders Adrian Ramsay and Carla Denyer.[45][46]

On 31 March 2023, Rishi Sunak was photographed looking at a pothole in Darlington to raise awareness of new powers to prevent potholes from forming and to help fix them.[47][48]

There were rumours that the Conservative Party would turn to Boris Johnson to help boost the parties chances by having him join the campaign trail.[49] There had been earlier reports stating that the Conservative Party election leaflets and campaign material did not show pictures of Rishi Sunak, but instead showed images of Boris Johnson, Michael Gove, and Suella Braverman.[50]

Amid the campaign, Sunak was accused of a conflict of interest over his wife's shares in a childcare agency that benefits from the latest budget policy.[51] This led to Sunak declaring his wife's shares as a financial interest on 19 April 2023.[52]

Whilst there is no fixed date for the pre-election period to begin, the UK government's guidance was that special care should be taken from 13 April 2023, three weeks before the election date in England.[53] The Liberal Democrats called for an investigation into Rishi Sunak's alleged flouting of these rules by making a speech on his proposed "maths to 18" policy after this date, although a spokesperson for the government said the announcement was within the rules.[54]

A further distraction to the election campaign came in the form of the Dominic Raab bullying scandal. In February 2023 Raab said he would quit if the government's independent ethics adviser, Adam Tolley KC, upheld the bullying claim against him.[55] Sunak received the report on 20 April[56][57] and Raab resigned the next day.[58][59]

The list of candidates put forward in strongly Tory-held Bracknell Forest Council led to local Labour and Liberal Democrat parties being accused of going against their national party leaderships by forming a de facto 'progressive alliance' to defeat the Conservative candidates.[60] The local parties denied this was planned and suggested a struggle for candidates and cash had led to the choices of which seats to challenge for. The Greens were also said to be involved in this arrangement; however, they only stood three candidates in the 2019 locals in Bracknell yet were standing seven in these elections, including in seats also contested by Labour or the Liberal Democrats.

Election day

Impact of voter ID requirement

ITV News reported that tellers had told them between 10 and 25% of voters in Oxfordshire were unable to cast their ballots due to the new measures.[61] The chair of the Electoral Commission was quoted as saying that "It appears that the government has designed a system which denies the prospect of sensible and co-ordinated information collection and makes it almost impossible to judge the true impact of the introduction of voter ID".[61] The Guardian reported that some transgender electors were not being allowed to vote because their identity documents did not match their new name as recorded on the electoral roll.[62] Disabled and clinically vulnerable voters were also turned away due to a requirement to remove face masks.[62]

Results

The table below shows the results of these elections, along with the overall number of councillors in Great Britain for each party following the elections.

More information Party, Councillors ...
Party Councillors Councils
Won After[4] +/-[b] Won After +/-
Labour 2,675 6,507 Increase537 71 108 Increase22
Conservative 2,296 5,702 Decrease1,063 33 70 Decrease48
Liberal Democrats 1,628 2,992 Increase407 29 37 Increase12
Green 481 789 Increase241 1 1 Increase1
SNP [c] 452 Steady 0 1 Steady
Plaid Cymru [d] 203 Steady 0 4 Steady
Aspire [e] 24 Steady 0 1 Steady
Reform UK 6 10 Increase2 0 0 Steady
Independent 971 1,920 Decrease120 4 7 Increase1
No overall control 92 140 Increase12
Close

Results analysis

More information Party, Councillors ...
Analysis by party
Party[63] Councillors Councils
Number Change Number Change
No overall control 92 Increase 12
Labour 2,675 Increase 537 71 Increase 22
Conservative 2,296 Decrease 1,063 33 Decrease 48
Liberal Democrats 1,628 Increase 407 29 Increase 12
Independent 864 Decrease 89 2 Increase 1
Green 481 Increase 241 1 Increase 1
Residents 99 Decrease 13 2 Steady
Liberal 4 Increase 2 0 Steady
Yorkshire 3 Increase 1 0 Steady
SDP 2 Increase 1 0 Steady
UKIP 0 Decrease 25 0 Steady
Post-election vacancy 24
Close
More information Party, BBC ...
Projected proportion of aggregate votes
Party BBC[64] Sky News[65]
% Change from %
2022[66] 2019[67]
Labour 35% Steady Increase 7 36%
Conservative 26% Decrease 4 Decrease 2 29%
Liberal Democrats 20% Increase 1 Increase 1 18%
Others 19% Increase 2 Decrease 6 17%
Close

The Labour Party achieved its largest lead in local elections over the Conservative Party since 1997. Its support recovered after a series of mediocre local election results over the previous few years; however, its projected national share of the vote remained at 35%, the same as in 2022. The Conservative Party fell to 26% in the BBC Projected National Share, its worst result ever in local elections, apart from 1995 and 2013. The Liberal Democrats and Greens made significant gains in the south of England, with some councils with safe Conservative seats at the parliamentary level voting for the opposition parties. The Liberal Democrats achieved their best result in local elections since the Cameron–Clegg coalition in 2010 with a projected national vote share of 20%. The Greens achieved their best ever result in English local elections, winning majority control of a council for the first time.[63][68]

Results by party

Conservative

These elections were the first local elections of the Premiership of Rishi Sunak, and saw the Conservatives lose over 1,000 councillor seats, with major gains achieved by Labour, the Liberal Democrats, and the Greens.[69] Labour also overtook the Conservatives as holding the highest number of members elected to local government for the first time since 2002.[70] The Conservatives did take two councils; Torbay Council in Devon,[71] and Wyre Forest District Council in Worcestershire.[72]

Labour

Labour saw a net gain of 537 councillors and 22 councils.[73] Labour became the party with most members elected to local government for the first time since 2002.[74] The only council that Labour lost was Slough Borough Council, where 16 Tory gains took the council into no overall control, the first time in 15 years.[75][76] Labour also retained Leicester City Council but lost 22 seats to the Conservatives, Liberal Democrats and Greens.[77]

Liberal Democrats

The Liberal Democrats saw considerable gains, gaining 407 councillors and winning control of 12 more councils.[78] Gains were concentrated in the Blue wall.[79]

Independents

Independents and residents associations were reported to have benefitted from voter disillusion.[80][81] The Canvey Island Independent Party gained increased seats on Castle Point Borough Council, despite the Council remaining under no overall control.[82] The Boston District Independents won a majority on Boston Borough Council.[83] The Ashfield Independents increased their majority by two seats on the Ashfield District Council, taking a seat each off of the Conservatives and Labour, for a total seat count of 32.[84]

Green Party

The Green Party gained over 240 councillors across England, and won majority control of Mid Suffolk District Council, the party's first ever council majority.[85][86] Despite losing minority-control of Brighton and Hove City Council to Labour, the Greens became the largest party on seven other councils: East Hertfordshire District Council, Lewes District Council, Warwick, Babergh, East Suffolk, Forest of Dean and Folkestone & Hythe.[87][88] 2023 saw the party's best ever results in a local election.[89]

Other parties

Reform UK jointly nominated some of the winning Reform Derby candidates who won 6 seats on Derby City Council.[90] but failed to make a breakthrough with its own candidates on any other councils, averaging 6% of the vote in the wards where it stood.[91]

The UK Independence Party lost all six seats it was defending.[92] The Daily Telegraph reported that UKIP voters had flocked to Labour and independents.[93]

The Liberal Party won four seats bringing their total to five.[94] The Yorkshire Party won three seats in the East Riding of Yorkshire.[95] The Social Democratic Party won a second seat on Leeds City Council.[96]

Metropolitan boroughs

There are thirty-six metropolitan boroughs, which are single-tier local authorities. Thirty-three of them elect a third of their councillors every year for three years, with no election in each fourth year. These councils hold their elections on the same timetable, which includes elections in 2023. Due to boundary changes, seven councils which generally elect their councillors in thirds, will elect all of their councillors in 2023. They will then return to the thirds schedule.

In 2021, the government appointed commissioners to oversee Liverpool City Council following an investigation into the mayor of Liverpool Joe Anderson. In 2022, the government announced it would take greater control of the council.[97] Liverpool was required to move to all-out elections from 2023 under new boundaries following a report by the government commissioner Max Caller.[98]

Wirral Council has also decided to move to all-out elections from 2023, on the existing ward boundaries.[99]

Whole council

More information Council, Seats ...
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Third of council

By-elections or uncontested wards can cause the seats up for election to be above or below one third of the council.

Unitary councils

Whole council

More information Council, Seats ...
Council Seats Party control Details
Previous Result
Bath and North East Somerset 59 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
Bedford 46[f][108] No overall control (Lib Dem mayor; Lib Dem/Lab/Ind coalition) No overall control (Con mayor) Details
Blackpool 42[f][109] Labour Labour Details
Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole 76 No overall control (Conservative minority) No overall control (Lib Dem/CI/PP/Ind coalition) Details
Bracknell Forest 41[f][110] Conservative Labour Details
Brighton and Hove 54[f][111] No overall control (Green minority) Labour Details
Central Bedfordshire 63 Conservative No overall control (Ind minority) Details
Cheshire East 82 No overall control (Labour/Ind coalition) No overall control Details
Cheshire West and Chester 70 No overall control (Labour minority) Labour Details
Darlington 50 No overall control (Conservative minority) No overall control Details
Derby 51[f][g][112] No overall control (Conservative minority) No overall control Details
East Riding of Yorkshire 67 Conservative No overall control Details
Herefordshire 53 No overall control (Ind/Green coalition) No overall control Details
Leicester 54 Labour Labour Details
Luton 48[f][113] Labour Labour Details
Medway 59[f][114] Conservative Labour Details
Middlesbrough 46 No overall control (Ind mayor) Labour Details
North Lincolnshire 43[f][115] Conservative Conservative Details
North Somerset 50 No overall control (Ind/Lib Dem/Lab/Ind Group/Green coalition) No overall control Details
Nottingham 55 Labour Labour Details
Redcar and Cleveland 59 No overall control (Ind Group/Lib Dem coalition) No overall control Details
Rutland 27 No overall control No overall control Details
Slough 42[f][116] Labour No overall control Details
Southampton 51[f][117] Labour Labour Details
South Gloucestershire 61 Conservative No overall control Details
Stockton-on-Tees 56[f][118] No overall control (Labour minority) No overall control Details
Stoke-on-Trent 44[f][119] No overall control (Conservative minority) Labour Details
Telford and Wrekin 54[f][120] Labour Labour Details
Torbay 36 No overall control Conservative Details
West Berkshire 43 Conservative Liberal Democrats Details
Windsor & Maidenhead 41 Conservative Liberal Democrats Details
York 47 No overall control (Lib Dem/Green coalition) Labour Details
All councils
Close

Third of council

District councils

District councils are the lower tier of a two-tier system of local government, with several district councils covering the same area as a county council with different responsibilities.

Whole council

More information Council, Seats ...
Council Seats Party control Details
Previous Result
Amber Valley 42[f] Conservative Labour Details
Arun 54 No overall control (Conservative minority) No overall control (Lib Dem/Lab/Green coalition) Details
Ashfield 35 Ashfield Ind. Ashfield Ind. Details
Ashford 47 Conservative No overall control Details
Babergh 32 No overall control No overall control (Green/Ind/Lib Dem coalition) Details
Bassetlaw 48 Labour Labour Details
Blaby 36[f] Conservative Conservative Details
Bolsover 37 Labour Labour Details
Boston 30 No overall control Boston District Independents Details
Braintree 49 Conservative Conservative Details
Breckland 49 Conservative Conservative Details
Broadland 47 Conservative No overall control (Lib Dem/Green/Lab coalition) Details
Bromsgrove 31 Conservative No overall control Details
Broxtowe 44 No overall control Labour Details
Canterbury 39 Conservative No overall control Details
Charnwood 52[f] Conservative No overall control (Labour minority) Details
Chelmsford 57 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
Chesterfield 40[f] Labour Labour Details
Chichester 36 No overall control (Conservative minority) Liberal Democrats Details
Cotswold 34 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
Dacorum 51 Conservative Liberal Democrats Details
Dartford 42 Conservative Conservative Details
Derbyshire Dales 34[f][121] Conservative No overall control (Lib Dem/Labour/Green coalition) Details
Dover 32 Conservative Labour Details
Eastbourne 27 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
East Cambridgeshire 28 Conservative Conservative Details
East Devon 60 No overall control No overall control Details
East Hampshire 43 Conservative No overall control Details
East Hertfordshire 50 Conservative No overall control (Green/Lib Dem coalition) Details
East Lindsey 55 Conservative No overall control Details
East Staffordshire 37[f] Conservative Labour Details
East Suffolk 55 Conservative No overall control (GreenLib Dem/Ind coalition) Details
Epsom and Ewell 35 Residents Association Residents Association Details
Erewash 47 Conservative Labour Details
Fenland 43[f][122] Conservative Conservative Details
Folkestone & Hythe 30 No overall control No overall control Details
Forest of Dean 38 No overall control No overall control (Green minority) Details
Fylde 37[f][123] Conservative Conservative Details
Gedling 41 Labour Labour Details
Gravesham 39[f] No overall control Labour Details
Great Yarmouth 39 Conservative No overall control Details
Guildford 48[f] No overall control Liberal Democrats Details
Harborough 34 Conservative No overall control Details
Hertsmere 39 Conservative No overall control Details
High Peak 43 No overall control Labour Details
Hinckley and Bosworth 34 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
Horsham 48 Conservative Liberal Democrats Details
King's Lynn and West Norfolk 55 Conservative No overall control Details
Lancaster 61[f] No overall control No overall control Details
Lewes 41 No overall control (Lib Dem/Green/Ind/Lab coalition) No overall control (Green/Lab coalition) Details
Lichfield 47 Conservative No overall control Details
Maldon 31 No overall control No overall control Details
Malvern Hills 31[f][124] No overall control No overall control Details
Mansfield 36[f] No overall control (Labour mayor) Labour Details
Melton 28 Conservative No overall control Details
Mid Devon 42 No overall control Liberal Democrats Details
Mid Suffolk 34 No overall control Green Details
Mid Sussex 48[f] Conservative No overall control Details
Mole Valley 39[f][125] Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
New Forest 48[f] Conservative Conservative Details
Newark and Sherwood 39 Conservative No overall control Details
North Devon 42 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
North East Derbyshire 53 No overall control Labour Details
North Kesteven 43 No overall control Conservative Details
North Norfolk 40 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
North Warwickshire 35 Conservative No overall control Details
North West Leicestershire 38 Conservative No overall control Details
Oadby and Wigston 26 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
Ribble Valley 40 Conservative No overall control Details
Rother 38 No overall control No overall control Details
Rushcliffe 44[f][126] Conservative Conservative Details
Sevenoaks 54 Conservative Conservative Details
South Derbyshire 36 No overall control Labour Details
South Hams 31 Conservative Liberal Democrats Details
South Holland 37 Conservative Conservative Details
South Kesteven 56 Conservative No overall control Details
South Norfolk 46 Conservative Conservative Details
South Oxfordshire 36 No overall control Liberal Democrats Details
South Ribble 50 No overall control Labour Details
South Staffordshire 42[f][127] Conservative Conservative Details
Spelthorne 39 No overall control No overall control Details
Stafford 40 No overall control (Conservative minority) No overall control Details
Staffordshire Moorlands 56 Conservative No overall control Details
Stratford-on-Avon 41[f][128] Conservative Liberal Democrats Details
Surrey Heath 35 No overall control (Conservative minority) Liberal Democrats Details
Swale 47 No overall control No overall control Details
Teignbridge 47 No overall control (Liberal Democrats minority) Liberal Democrats Details
Tendring 48 No overall control No overall control Details
Test Valley 43 Conservative Conservative Details
Tewkesbury 38 Conservative No overall control Details
Thanet 56 No overall control (Conservative minority) Labour Details
Tonbridge and Malling 44[f][129] Conservative No overall control Details
Torridge 36 No overall control No overall control Details
Uttlesford 39 R4U R4U Details
Vale of White Horse 38 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
Warwick 44 No overall control No overall control (Green/Labour coalition) Details
Waverley 50[f] No overall control No overall control Details
Wealden 45 Conservative No overall control Details
West Devon 31 Conservative No overall control Details
West Lancashire 45[f] No overall control (Labour minority) Labour Details
West Lindsey 36 No overall control (Conservative minority) No overall control Details
West Suffolk 64 Conservative No overall control Details
Wychavon 43[f][130] Conservative Conservative Details
Wyre 50 Conservative Conservative Details
Wyre Forest 33 No overall control Conservative Details
All councils
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Third of council

More information Council, Seats ...
Council Seats Party control Details
up of Previous Result
Basildon 14 42 Conservative Conservative Details
Basingstoke and Deane 18 54 No overall control (Conservative minority) No overall control Details
Brentwood 12 37 Conservative No overall control Details
Broxbourne 10 30 Conservative Conservative Details
Burnley 15 45 No overall control (Lab/Lib Dem coalition) No overall control (Lab/Lib Dem coalition) Details
Cambridge 14 42 Labour Labour Details
Cannock Chase 15 41 Conservative No overall control Details
Castle Point 14 41 No overall control (Ind coalition) No overall control Details
Cherwell 16 48 Conservative No overall control Details
Chorley 14 42 Labour Labour Details
Colchester 17 51 No overall control (Lib Dem/Lab/Green coalition) No overall control Details
Crawley 12 36 Labour Labour Details
Eastleigh 13 39 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
Elmbridge 16 48 No overall control (Lib Dem/Residents coalition) No overall control Details
Epping Forest 18 58 Conservative Conservative Details
Exeter 13 39 Labour Labour Details
Harlow 11 33 Conservative Conservative Details
Hart 11 33 No overall control (Community Campaign (Hart)/Lib Dem coalition) No overall control Details
Havant 10 38 Conservative Conservative Details
Hyndburn 12 35 No overall control (Labour minority) No overall control Details
Ipswich 16 48 Labour Labour Details
Lincoln 11 33 Labour Labour Details
Maidstone 18 55 Conservative No overall control Details
North Hertfordshire 16 49 No overall control (Lab/Lib Dem coalition) No overall control Details
Norwich 13 39 Labour Labour Details
Pendle 11 33 Conservative No overall control Details
Preston 16 48 Labour Labour Details
Redditch 10 29 Conservative Conservative Details
Reigate and Banstead 15 45 Conservative Conservative Details
Rochford 13 39 Conservative No overall control Details
Rossendale 12 36 Labour Labour Details
Rugby 14 42 Conservative No overall control Details
Runnymede 14 41 Conservative No overall control Details
Rushmoor 13 39 Conservative Conservative Details
St Albans 18 56 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
Stevenage 13 39 Labour Labour Details
Tamworth 10 30 Conservative No overall control Details
Tandridge 14 42 No overall control No overall control Details
Three Rivers 13 39 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
Tunbridge Wells 16 48 No overall control (Lib Dem/Ind/Lab coalition) No overall control Details
Watford 12 36 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
Welwyn Hatfield 16 48 Conservative No overall control Details
West Oxfordshire 16 49 No overall control (Lib Dem/Labour/Green coalition) No overall control Details
Winchester 16 45 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
Woking 10 30 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
Worcester 11 35 No overall control No overall control Details
Worthing 11 37 Labour Labour Details
All councils
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Mayoral elections

More information Council, Mayor before ...
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The voting system for mayoral elections was first-past-the-post - replacing the supplementary vote used for all previous mayoral elections.[131]

Post-election vacancies

A number of seats remained vacant following the elections resulting in at least 24 post election vacancies:[132]

Opinion polling

Multiple polls were undertaken and published to ascertain voting intention ahead of the local elections.

More information Dates conducted, Pollster ...
Dates
conducted
Pollster Client Sample
size
Con Lab Lib Dem Green Reform Other Lead
27–28 Apr 2023 Omnisis N/A 759 26% 37% 17% 9% 4% 6% 11
24–28 Apr 2023 Survation Good Morning Britain 2,014 23% 33% 18% 11% 14% 10
10–13 Feb 2023 Focaldata ? 1,039 29% 49% 8% 3% 6% ?% 20
2 May 2019 2019 local elections[h] 9,509,176 31.4% 26.6% 16.8% 9.2% [i] 15.9% 4.8
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Northern Ireland

References

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