Election Name: | 2019 United Kingdom local elections |
Country: | United Kingdom |
Type: | parliamentary |
Ongoing: | no |
Previous Election: | 2018 United Kingdom local elections |
Previous Year: | 2018 |
Next Election: | 2021 United Kingdom local elections |
Next Year: | 2021 |
Seats For Election: | 33 out of 36 metropolitan boroughs, 47 out of 55 unitary authorities, 168 out of 192 district councils, all 11 Northern Irish councils and 6 directly elected mayors |
Election Date: | 2 May 2019 |
1Blank: | Projected vote-share |
2Blank: | Swing |
3Blank: | Councils |
4Blank: | Councils +/– |
5Blank: | Councillors |
6Blank: | Councillors +/– |
Party1: | Conservative Party (UK) |
Last Election1: | 5,521 seats 163 councils |
1Data1: | 28% |
3Data1: | 93 |
4Data1: | 44 |
5Data1: | 3,564 |
6Data1: | 1,330 |
Party2: | Labour Party (UK) |
Last Election2: | 2,278 seats 74 councils |
1Data2: | 28% |
2Data2: | 7pp |
3Data2: | 84 |
4Data2: | 6 |
5Data2: | 2,021 |
6Data2: | 84 |
Party3: | Liberal Democrats (UK) |
Last Election3: | 702 seats 4 councils |
1Data3: | 19% |
2Data3: | 3pp |
3Data3: | 18 |
4Data3: | 10 |
5Data3: | 1,351 |
6Data3: | 704 |
Leader4: | Jonathan Bartley and Siân Berry |
Party4: | Green Party of England and Wales |
Last Election4: | 87 seats[1] |
Seats4: | 273 |
Seat Change4: | 198 |
Leader5: | Arlene Foster |
Party5: | Democratic Unionist Party |
Seats Before5: | 130 |
Seats5: | 122 |
Seat Change5: | 8 |
Party6: | Sinn Féin |
Seats Before6: | 105 |
Seats6: | 105 |
Map2 Caption: | Map showing the party with the most votes by ward. |
The 2019 United Kingdom local elections took place on Thursday 2 May 2019, with 248 English local councils, six directly elected mayors in England, and all 11 local councils in Northern Ireland being contested.[2]
A total of 8,886 councillors were elected: terms were up for 8,861 seats, but eight elections for a total of 14 seats were postponed due to the death of a candidate;[3] [4] there were also casual vacancies to be filled: 38 in England (including on nine councils with no other elections) and one on Dundee City Council in Scotland.[5]
With the exception of areas whose electoral cycle has temporarily changed (due to a boundary review) or permanently changed, or that have been reorganised, the seats up for election in England were last contested in the 2015 local elections, on the same day as the general election of that year. The seats in Northern Ireland were last regularly contested in 2014.
The biggest winners were the Liberal Democrats, who gained 704 seats to make a total of 1,351 councillors. The biggest losers were the Conservative Party down 1,333 from their previous total to 3,561 seats. Labour also lost seats, down by 84 to 2,021 seats. The Green Party gained 194 seats for a total of 265 seats. UKIP lost 145 seats, having only 31 councillors elected.
All registered electors (British, Irish, Commonwealth and European Union citizens) who were aged 18 or over on the day of the election were entitled to vote in the local elections.[6]
A person with two homes (such as a university student having a term-time address and living at home during holidays) could register to vote at both addresses as long as the addresses are not in the same electoral area, and can vote in the local elections for the two different local councils.[7]
Ten local authorities in England required voters to provide identification as part of trial schemes.[8] [9]
A majority of the councils up for election in this year were last elected in 2015, the same day as the general election.[10] [11] The result of the 2018 local elections saw the collapse of the United Kingdom Independence Party's vote, largely to the benefit of the Conservatives.[12] The Liberal Democrats made gains in 2018; David Cutts, a professor of political science at the University of Birmingham, argued that the 2019 elections would be more a test of their relevance as the elections were in old strongholds of theirs.[13]
In the run-up to the elections, Facebook announced that they would only allow political adverts from authenticated accounts.[14] The government also funded a grant scheme for disabled candidates to participate, funding 60 candidates.[15]
Brexit dominated UK politics leading up to the local elections. In March, there was a demonstration in London, the Put it to the People March, in favour of a second referendum on EU membership, with an attendance reported to be between several hundred thousand and over one million.[16] In addition, an online petition calling for revocation of the UK's withdrawal notification under Article 50 TEU reached over 6 million signatures, becoming the fastest signed petition ever in the UK.[17] On 29 March thousands of pro-Brexit marchers demonstrated in Parliament Square in London.[18] Though the UK was set to leave the European Union on 29 March, this was initially delayed till 12 April,[19] then was further delayed to 31 October.[20] Because of this longer extension, the UK participated within elections to the European Parliament in order to avoid a no-deal scenario on 1 June.[20]
In April, protests in London around Parliament Square and Westminster organised by the environmental pressure group Extinction Rebellion took place, in which activist blocked roads, bridges and glued themselves to public buildings.[21] A total of 1,130 people were arrested during the demonstrations.[22]
Vince Cable, leader of the Liberal Democrats, announced on 14 March that he would be stepping down from that role, with a new leadership election to be held after the May local elections.[23] There has been pressure within the Conservative party on prime minister Theresa May to resign following the local elections, triggering a new leadership election.[24]
The Conservatives stood candidates in 96% of the available seats, Labour contested 77%, the Liberal Democrats 53%, the Green Party of England and Wales 30% and UKIP 16%.[25]
According to the Electoral Reform Society, there were 148 councillors who were elected unopposed, largely Conservatives.[26] New parties the Brexit Party and Change UK, although both standing in European elections later in the month, did not stand in the local elections.[27] Chuka Umunna, Change UK's spokesperson, recommended voters support anti-Brexit parties like the Liberal Democrats or Greens.[28] Leave.EU encouraged people to spoil their ballot paper in protest at delays in Brexit.[29]
Nationally, Labour organised their campaign on raising awareness of the impact of the austerity programme by the Conservative-led government on local councils, which led subsequently to higher council tax and reduced local services.[30] As an effect of cuts to council budgets, council spending per person has fallen 30% since 2010.[31] The shadow chancellor, John McDonnell, commented that the economic policies of Preston City Council, where Labour took control of the council in 2011, were a model that he wanted other Labour councils to follow. Their changes saw the public procurement budget rise significantly, unemployment decrease and quality of life improve.[32] Labour sought to avoid talking about Brexit, but internal rows over their Brexit policy continued to create headlines.[33]
Similarly, the Conservatives focused their campaign away from Brexit and instead on efficient local services, low council tax and green credentials.[34] [35] [36] This detraction from Brexit, however, was quite difficult. Internal party sources voiced a negative outlook on the success of these elections,[37] with the deputy chair of the party saying it was an opportunity for voters to protest against the party's handling of the Brexit negotiations.[38] ConservativeHome interviewed ten Conservative councillors about how the campaigning had gone across the country and found a negative attitude.[11] Defence secretary Gavin Williamson was sacked the day before the elections, which was predicted to be unhelpful for the Conservative campaign.[39]
There were isolated incidents of politically motivated violence during the election campaign. There were a few cases of councillors, from the Labour and Conservative parties, being assaulted whilst campaigning.[40] A currently unknown assailant fired shots at the home of a Labour councillor in Sheffield.[41] Homes with Labour, Liberal Democrat and Green signs were damaged in Lewes,[42] and a Liberal Democrat candidate's car was attacked and painted with swastikas in Faversham.[43]
Party | Councillors | Councils | Votes | Projected national equivalent | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Number | Change | Number | Change | Number | Share | |||
3,564 | 1,330 | 93 | 44 | 2,985,959 | 31.4% | 28% | ||
2,021 | 84 | 60 | 6 | 2,531,907 | 26.6% | 28% | ||
1,351 | 704 | 18 | 10 | 1,602,042 | 16.8% | 19% | ||
265 | 194 | 0 | 878,485 | 9.2% | 25% | |||
31 | 145 | 0 | 430,455 | 4.5% | ||||
119 | 49 | 2 | 1 | 1,080,328 | 11.4% | |||
8 | 6 | 0 | ||||||
7 | 1 | 0 | ||||||
and minor parties | 1,045 | 606 | 2 | 2 | ||||
— | 73 | 37 | — | |||||
The Conservatives lost control of 44 councils and more than 1,300 council seats. It was the worst Conservative local election performance since 1995, when the party lost more than 2,000 seats.[45] Labour, despite topping national polls, lost 6 councils and more than 80 seats.[46]
Parties supporting remaining in the EU performed well.[47] The Liberal Democrats made the most gains of any party,[48] [49] while the Greens also picked up seats with the largest percentage growth. This election was the largest rise in Green council seat gains in 20 years. There was also a significant increase in the number of independent and local party councillors, with their number of seats more than doubling. Similarly, in Northern Ireland, Alliance (the Lib Dems' sister party), some smaller parties and independents also made significant gains.[50]
The elections were marked by a number of spoiled ballots expressing anger toward the Brexit stances of the Conservative and Labour parties.[51] In the voter ID trial areas an average of 102 voters in each pilot area failed to vote due to not having the required documentation, compared with 70 per pilot area in 2018.[52]
Leading up to the election, journalists had noted the Conservatives' had performed well when these council seats had last been elected in the 2015 local elections due to those elections coinciding with the 2015 general election, where the party made gains.[11] [10] Defending those gains was predicted to be difficult, and when combined with Theresa May's struggle to deliver on Brexit, various sources predicted a loss of between 500 and 1000 seats for the Conservatives.[53] [54] Conservative peer Lord Robert Hayward projected that his party would lose at least 800 seats, with 500 to go to the Liberal Democrats and 300 to Labour.[55]
The BBC and other analysts calculated projected national vote shares from these local election results. These projections aim 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 and the Conservatives on 28% (both down 7% from the local elections the previous year), the Liberal Democrats on 18% (up 2%) and all other parties combined on 25%.[56]
Sir John Curtice, who calculated the BBC's national projected vote share, commented that the rise of smaller parties and in particular the independents showed a dissatisfaction with the party system presently. Additionally, Curtice noted how the Green party benefited from recent climate protests across the country.[57]
Some argued that the Conservatives had set their expectations so low so that the perceived significance of their losses was reduced.[58] Media reports described the results as poor for both Labour and the Conservatives, with many noting decline of Labour representation in some leave areas. It was also regarded as a disappointing result for Labour because of expectations that they would make gains.
Will Jennings, a professor at the University of Southampton analysed ward-level data and found little correlation between Labour's decline and the level of Brexit support in a ward. Labour made both gains and loses in areas that both voted to leave and remain in the 2016 referendum. Jennings instead noted the results better fit the transition in British politics at that time; where large cities, areas with high student populations, and professionals were moving towards Labour, whilst deindustrialised towns were moving towards the Conservatives.[59]
Simon Briscoe, statistician and director of The Data Analysis Bureau, was critical of the idea that the Liberal Democrats had experienced a surge on the scale that commentators described. He instead attributed their gains to a much lower turnout when compared to the 2015 local elections. An example of this is that any swings in vote share towards the Liberal Democrats masked the fact that the number of votes for them hadn't changed significantly from 2015.[60]
Martin Baxter, the creator of the political analytics website Electoral Calculus, suggested that the election data indicated that the next general election could produce a Labour-Scottish Nationalist coalition government.[61]
In England, council elections were held in 33 metropolitan boroughs, 168 of the second-tier districts, and 47 of the unitary authorities, as well as for six directly elected mayoral posts. 248 of the 343 English local councils held elections, with the exception of eight unitary authorities, the Isles of Scilly, the 26 counties, 24 non-metropolitan districts and boroughs, three metropolitan boroughs, the 32 London boroughs and the City of London. 8,399 seats were up for election (but elections are postponed for 14), with a further 38 casual vacancies to be filled, so 8,423 councillors were elected. Elections also took place for most English parish councils.
By-elections were held for seven county council seats (in Cambridgeshire, Cumbria, Gloucestershire, Kent (two seats), Surrey and West Sussex) and for two seats in the London Borough of Lewisham. Other casual vacancies to be filled (variously by by-election or multiple vacancy election) are indicated in the tables below by a superscript addition (+n).
In 33 of the 36 English metropolitan borough councils, one-third of their seats were up for election. Elections were not held in Birmingham, Doncaster or Rotherham.
Council | Seats | Previous control | Result | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
up | of | |||||
Barnsley | 21 | 63 | ||||
Bolton | 20 | 60 | (Conservative minority with Lib Dem/UKIP/Independent support) | |||
Bradford | 30 | 90 | ||||
Bury | 17 | 51 | ||||
Calderdale | 17 | 51 | (Labour minority with Lib Dem support) | |||
Coventry | 18 | 54 | ||||
Dudley | 24 | 72 | (Labour minority with Independent support) | (Conservative minority) | ||
Gateshead | 22 | 66 | ||||
Kirklees | 23 | 69 | ||||
Knowsley | 15 | 45 | ||||
Leeds | 33 | 99 | ||||
Liverpool | 30 | 90 | ||||
Manchester | 32+1 | 96 | ||||
Newcastle upon Tyne | 26+1 | 78 | ||||
North Tyneside | 20 | 60 | ||||
Oldham | 20 | 60 | ||||
Rochdale | 20 | 60 | ||||
Salford | 19 | 60 | ||||
Sandwell | 24 | 72 | ||||
Sefton | 22+1 | 66 | ||||
Sheffield | 28 | 84 | ||||
Solihull | 17 | 51 | ||||
South Tyneside | 18+1 | 54 | ||||
St Helens | 16 | 48 | ||||
Stockport | 21 | 63 | (Labour minority) | (Labour minority) | ||
Sunderland | 25+1 | 75 | ||||
Tameside | 19 | 57 | ||||
Trafford | 21 | 63 | (Labour minority with Lib Dem support) | |||
Wakefield | 21 | 63 | ||||
Walsall | 20 | 60 | (Conservative minority) | |||
Wigan | 25 | 75 | ||||
Wirral | 22 | 66 | (Labour minority) | |||
Wolverhampton | 20+2 | 60 | ||||
All 33 councils | 726+7 | 2,181 |
Elections took place in 47 of the 55 unitary authorities. No elections took place in Bristol, Cornwall, the Isle of Wight, Shropshire, Warrington or Wiltshire.
By-elections took place in Durham (2 seats) and Northumberland, in addition to those indicated below.
In 30 English unitary authorities the whole council was up for election.
Unitary authorities for Bournemouth and Poole had merged with Christchurch district council to form one new unitary for the eastern portion of Dorset. An additional unitary authority replaced the remaining portion of Dorset County Council’s area and the district councils of North, West and East Dorset, Weymouth and Portland and Purbeck. Both authorities had their inaugural elections in May, and their predecessor authorities were all Conservative controlled except for Weymouth and Portland, which is in no overall control. Nine other unitary authorities were elected on new ward boundaries.
Council | Seats | Previous control | Result | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bath and North East Somerset‡[63] | 59 | ||||
Bedford | 40 | (Labour/Lib Dem coalition) | (Labour/Lib Dem/Independent coalition) | ||
Blackpool | 42 | ||||
Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole | 76 | New council (predecessor authorities were all Conservative) | (Lib Dem/Green/Labour/Independent coalition) | ||
Bracknell Forest | 42 | ||||
Brighton and Hove | 54 | (Labour minority) | (Labour minority) | ||
Central Bedfordshire | 59 | ||||
Cheshire East | 82 | (Labour/Independent coalition) | |||
Cheshire West and Chester‡[66] | 70 | (Labour minority) | |||
Darlington | 50 | (Conservative minority with Lib Dem/Independent support) | |||
Dorset | 82 | New council (all predecessors were Conservative except Weymouth and Portland) | |||
East Riding of Yorkshire | 67 | ||||
Herefordshire[68] | 52 of 53 | (Independent/It's Our County/Green coalition) | |||
Leicester | 54 | ||||
Luton | 48 | ||||
Medway | 55 | ||||
Middlesbrough | 46 | ||||
North Lincolnshire | 43 | ||||
North Somerset | 50 | (Independent/Green/Lib Dem/Labour coalition) | |||
Nottingham‡[69] | 55 | ||||
Redcar and Cleveland‡[70] | 59 | (Labour minority) | (Independent/Lib Dem coalition) | ||
Rutland‡[71] | 27 | ||||
South Gloucestershire‡[72] | 61 | ||||
Stockton-on-Tees | 56 | (Labour minority) | |||
Stoke-on-Trent | 44 | (City Independents/Conservative coalition) | (City Independents/Conservative coalition) | ||
Telford and Wrekin | 54 | ||||
Torbay‡[73] | 36 | (Lib Dem/Independent partnership) | |||
West Berkshire‡[74] | 43 | ||||
Windsor & Maidenhead‡[75] | 41 | ||||
York | 47 | (Conservative/Lib Dem coalition) | (Lib Dem/Green Coalition) | ||
All 30 councils | 1,594 of 1,595 |
In 17 English unitary authorities one third of the council is up for election.
Council | Seats | Previous control | Result | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
up | of | |||||
Blackburn with Darwen | 17 | 51 | ||||
Derby | 17 | 51 | (Conservative minority with UKIP/Lib Dem support) | (Conservative minority with UKIP/Lib Dem support) | ||
Halton | 19 | 56 | ||||
Hartlepool | 11 | 33 | (Independent/Conservative coalition) | |||
Hull | 19 | 57 | ||||
Milton Keynes | 19 | 57 | (Labour minority with Lib Dem support) | (Labour minority with Lib Dem support) | ||
North East Lincolnshire | 15+1 | 42 | (Labour minority with Lib Dem support) | |||
Peterborough | 20 | 60 | (Conservative minority with Independent support) | |||
Plymouth | 19 | 57 | ||||
Portsmouth | 14+1 | 42 | (Lib Dem minority with Labour support) | (Lib Dem minority with Labour support) | ||
Reading | 15+1 | 46 | ||||
Slough | 14 | 42 | ||||
Southampton | 16 | 48 | ||||
Southend-on-Sea | 17 | 51 | (Labour/Lib Dem/Independent coalition) | |||
Swindon | 19 | 57 | ||||
Thurrock | 16+1 | 49 | (Conservative minority) | (Conservative minority) | ||
Wokingham | 18 | 54 | ||||
All 17 councils | 285+4 | 853 |
Elections took place in 168 non-metropolitan districts.
The new districts of Somerset West and Taunton, East Suffolk and West Suffolk held their first elections in 2019. They replace Taunton Deane, West Somerset, Waveney, Suffolk Coastal, Forest Heath, and St Edmundsbury.
Aylesbury Vale, Chiltern, Corby, Daventry, East Northamptonshire, Kettering, Northampton, South Bucks, South Northamptonshire, Wellingborough and Wycombe originally had elections scheduled for 2019, but the elections were postponed in law following a decision to merge these councils into unitary authorities covering Northamptonshire[76] and Buckinghamshire.[77]
Additionally, there were no elections in Adur, Cheltenham, Fareham, Gloucester, Gosport, Harrogate, Hastings, Huntingdonshire, Nuneaton and Bedworth, Oxford, South Cambridgeshire or Stroud.
A by-election was held in Newcastle-under-Lyme, in addition to those indicated below.
In 121 English district authorities the whole council was up for election.
46 of these councils were electing on new ward boundaries, including six councils which normally elect by thirds: Carlisle, Crawley, Norwich, Preston, Reigate and Banstead and Runnymede. In addition, Great Yarmouth and Wyre Forest switched from thirds to whole council elections.
Council | Seats | Previous control | County | Result | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Allerdale ‡[78] | 49 | (Labour minority) | Cumbria | (Independent/Conservative coalition) | ||
Arun | 54 | West Sussex | (Lib Dem minority) | |||
Ashfield | 35 | (Ashfield Independents minority) | Nottinghamshire | |||
Ashford ‡[79] | 47 | Kent | ||||
Babergh ‡[80] | 32 | Suffolk | (Conservative/Independent/Lib Dem coalition) | |||
Barrow-in-Furness | 36 | Cumbria | ||||
Bassetlaw | 48 | Nottinghamshire | ||||
Blaby | 39 | Leicestershire | ||||
Bolsover ‡[81] | 37 | Derbyshire | (Labour/Independent coalition) | |||
Boston | 30 | Lincolnshire | ||||
Braintree | 49 | Essex | ||||
Breckland | 49 | Norfolk | ||||
Broadland | 47 | Norfolk | ||||
Bromsgrove | 31 | Worcestershire | ||||
Broxtowe[82] | 42 of 44 | Nottinghamshire | (Labour/Lib Dem/Independent coalition) | |||
Canterbury | 39 | Kent | ||||
Carlisle ‡ | [83] | 39 | (Labour minority) | Cumbria | (Conservative minority with UKIP/Lib Dem/Independent support) | |
Charnwood | 52 | Leicestershire | ||||
Chelmsford | 57 | Essex | ||||
Chesterfield | 48 | Derbyshire | ||||
Chichester ‡[84] | 36 | West Sussex | (Conservative minority) | |||
Copeland ‡[85] | 33 | Cumbria | ||||
Cotswold | 34 | Gloucestershire | ||||
Crawley ‡ | [86] | 36 | West Sussex | |||
Dacorum | 51 | Hertfordshire | ||||
Dartford ‡[87] | 42 | Kent | ||||
Derbyshire Dales | 39 | Derbyshire | ||||
Dover ‡[88] | 32 | Kent | ||||
Eastbourne ‡[89] | 27 | East Sussex | ||||
East Cambridgeshire ‡[90] | 28 | Cambridgeshire | ||||
East Devon ‡[91] | 60 | Devon | ||||
East Hampshire ‡[92] | 43 | Hampshire | ||||
East Hertfordshire | 50 | Hertfordshire | ||||
East Lindsey | 55 | Lincolnshire | ||||
East Staffordshire | 39 | Staffordshire | ||||
East Suffolk *[93] [94] | 55 | New Council (both predecessor districts were Conservative) | Suffolk | |||
Eden | 38 | Cumbria | (Lib Dem/Independent coalition with Green/Labour support) | |||
Epsom and Ewell | 38 | Surrey | ||||
Erewash | 47 | Derbyshire | ||||
Fenland | 39 | Cambridgeshire | ||||
Folkestone & Hythe | 30 | Kent | (Conservative minority with UKIP/Independent support) | |||
Forest of Dean ‡[95] [96] | 35 of 38 | (Conservative minority) | Gloucestershire | (Independent/Green/Labour coalition) | ||
Fylde | 51 | Lancashire | ||||
Gedling | 41 | Nottinghamshire | ||||
Gravesham | 44 | (Gravesham Independents minority) | Kent | |||
Great Yarmouth •[97] | 39 | Norfolk | ||||
Guildford | 48 | Surrey | (Lib Dem minority) | |||
Hambleton | 28 | North Yorkshire | ||||
Harborough ‡[98] | 34 | Leicestershire | ||||
Hertsmere ‡[99] | 39 | Hertfordshire | ||||
High Peak | 43 | Derbyshire | ||||
Hinckley and Bosworth | 34 | Leicestershire | ||||
Horsham ‡[100] | 48 | West Sussex | ||||
King's Lynn and West Norfolk ‡[101] | 55 | Norfolk | ||||
Lancaster | 60 | Lancashire | (Labour/Green coalition with Lib Dem support) | |||
Lewes ‡[102] | 41 | East Sussex | (Conservative minority) | |||
Lichfield | 47 | Staffordshire | ||||
Maldon | 31 | Essex | ||||
Malvern Hills | 38 | Worcestershire | (Independent/Lib Dem/Green coalition) | |||
Mansfield | 36 | (Mansfield Independent Forum minority) | Nottinghamshire | |||
Melton | 28 | Leicestershire | ||||
Mendip | 47 | Somerset | (Lib Dem minority) | |||
Mid Devon | 42 | Devon | (Independent/Lib Dem coalition) | |||
Mid Suffolk ‡[103] | 34 | Suffolk | (Conservative minority) | |||
Mid Sussex | 54 | West Sussex | ||||
New Forest | 60 | Hampshire | ||||
Newark and Sherwood †[104] | 39 | Nottinghamshire | ||||
North Devon ‡[105] [106] | 41 of 42 | (Conservative minority) | Devon | |||
North East Derbyshire ‡[107] | 53 | Derbyshire | ||||
North Kesteven | 43 | Lincolnshire | (Conservative/Independent coalition) | |||
North Norfolk ‡[108] | 40 | Norfolk | ||||
North Warwickshire | 35 | Warwickshire | ||||
North West Leicestershire | 38 | Leicestershire | ||||
Norwich ‡ | [109] | 39 | Norfolk | |||
Oadby and Wigston | 26 | Leicestershire | ||||
Preston ‡ | [110] | 48 | Lancashire | |||
Reigate and Banstead ‡ | [111] | 45 | Surrey | |||
Ribble Valley ‡[112] | 40 | Lancashire | ||||
Richmondshire ‡[113] | 24 | North Yorkshire | (Independent/Lib Dem/Green coalition) | |||
Rother ‡[114] | 38 | East Sussex | (Independent/Lib Dem/Labour/Green coalition) | |||
Runnymede ‡ | [115] | 41 | Surrey | |||
Rushcliffe | 44 | Nottinghamshire | ||||
Ryedale | 30 | (Conservative minority) | North Yorkshire | (Conservative/Independent coalition) | ||
Scarborough ‡[116] | 46 | (Conservative minority) | North Yorkshire | (Labour minority) | ||
Sedgemoor | 48 | Somerset | ||||
Selby | 31 | North Yorkshire | ||||
Sevenoaks †[117] | 54 | Kent | ||||
Somerset West and Taunton *[118] [119] | 59 | New Council (both predecessor districts were Conservative) | Somerset | |||
South Derbyshire | 36 | Derbyshire | ||||
South Hams | 31 | Devon | ||||
South Holland | 37 | Lincolnshire | ||||
South Kesteven | 56 | Lincolnshire | ||||
South Norfolk ‡[120] | 46 | Norfolk | ||||
South Oxfordshire †[121] | 36 | Oxfordshire | (Lib Dem/Green coalition) | |||
South Ribble[122] | 48 of 50 | Lancashire | (Labour minority with Lib Dem support) | |||
South Somerset ‡[123] | 60 | Somerset | ||||
South Staffordshire[124] | 47 of 49 | Staffordshire | ||||
Spelthorne | 39 | Surrey | ||||
Stafford | 40 | Staffordshire | ||||
Staffordshire Moorlands | 56 | Staffordshire | (Conservative minority) | |||
Stratford-on-Avon | 36 | Warwickshire | ||||
Surrey Heath ‡[125] | 35 | Surrey | ||||
Swale | 47 | Kent | (Labour/Independent/Lib Dem/Green coalition) | |||
Teignbridge ‡[126] | 47 | Devon | ||||
Tendring ‡[127] [128] | 46 of 48 | Essex | (Conservative minority with UKIP/Independent support) | |||
Test Valley ‡[129] | 43 | Hampshire | ||||
Tewkesbury ‡[130] | 38 | Gloucestershire | ||||
Thanet | 56 | Kent | (Conservative minority) | |||
Tonbridge and Malling | 54 | Kent | ||||
Torridge ‡[131] | 36 | Devon | (Independent minority) | |||
Uttlesford | 39 | Essex | ||||
Vale of White Horse †[132] | 38 | Oxfordshire | ||||
Warwick ‡[133] | 44 | Warwickshire | (Conservative minority with Residents Association support) | |||
Waverley | 57 | Surrey | (Lib Dem/Residents Association coalition) | |||
Wealden ‡[134] | 45 | East Sussex | ||||
West Devon | 31 | Devon | ||||
West Lindsey | 36 | Lincolnshire | ||||
West Suffolk *[135] [136] [137] | 64 | New Council (both predecessor districts were Conservative) | Suffolk | |||
Wychavon | 45 | Worcestershire | ||||
Wyre | 50 | Lancashire | ||||
Wyre Forest •[138] | 33 | Worcestershire | (Independent/Lib Dem/Labour/Green coalition) | |||
All 121 councils | 5,123 of 5,135 |
In 47 English district authorities, one-third of the council is up for election.
Seven other district councils normally elect by thirds. As noted above, due to boundary changes, six of these have all-up elections. Daventry originally had elections scheduled for 2019, but the elections were postponed following a decision to merge the seven districts of Northamptonshire into two unitary authorities covering the county from 2020.
Council | Seats | Previous control | County | Result | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
up | of | ||||||
Amber Valley | 15 | 45 | Derbyshire | ||||
Basildon | 14 | 42 | Essex | (Conservative minority with UKIP support) | |||
Basingstoke and Deane | 20 | 60 | Hampshire | ||||
Brentwood | 12 | 37 | Essex | ||||
Broxbourne | 10+1 | 30 | Hertfordshire | ||||
Burnley | 15 | 45 | Lancashire | (Independent/Lib Dem/Conservative coalition with UKIP/Green support) | |||
Cambridge | 14+2 | 42 | Cambridgeshire | ||||
Cannock Chase | 15 | 41 | Staffordshire | (Labour minority) | |||
Castle Point | 14 | 41 | Essex | ||||
Cherwell | 16+1 | 48 | Oxfordshire | ||||
Chorley | 15 | 47 | Lancashire | ||||
Colchester | 17 | 51 | (Lib Dem/Labour/Independent Coalition) | Essex | (Lib Dem/Labour/Independent Coalition) | ||
Craven | 10+1 | 30 | North Yorkshire | ||||
Eastleigh | 13 | 39 | Hampshire | ||||
Elmbridge | 16 | 48 | (Conservative minority) | Surrey | (Lib Dem/Residents Association coalition) | ||
Epping Forest | 18 | 58 | Essex | ||||
Exeter | 13+1 | 39 | Devon | ||||
Harlow | 11 | 33 | Essex | ||||
Hart | 11+1 | 33 | Hampshire | ||||
Havant | 10+1 | 38 | Hampshire | ||||
Hyndburn | 12 | 35 | Lancashire | ||||
Ipswich | 16 | 48 | Suffolk | ||||
Lincoln | 11 | 33 | Lincolnshire | ||||
Maidstone | 18 | 55 | (Lib Dem minority with Independent support) | Kent | (Lib Dem minority with Independent/Labour support) | ||
Mole Valley | 14 | 41 | Surrey | ||||
North Hertfordshire | 16 | 49 | Hertfordshire | (Labour/Lib Dem Coalition) | |||
Pendle | 17 | 49 | Lancashire | (Labour/Lib Dem coalition) | |||
Redditch | 10 | 29 | Worcestershire | ||||
Rochford | 13 | 39 | Essex | ||||
Rossendale | 12 | 36 | Lancashire | ||||
Rugby | 14 | 42 | Warwickshire | ||||
Rushmoor | 13 | 39 | Hampshire | ||||
St Albans | 20+1 | 58 | Hertfordshire | (Liberal Democrat minority with Green/Independent support) | |||
South Lakeland | 16 | 51 | Cumbria | ||||
Stevenage | 13 | 39 | Hertfordshire | ||||
Tamworth | 10 | 30 | Staffordshire | ||||
Tandridge | 14 | 42 | Surrey | (Conservative minority) | |||
Three Rivers | 13+1 | 39 | Hertfordshire | ||||
Tunbridge Wells | 16+2 | 48 | Kent | ||||
Watford | 12+1 | 36 | Hertfordshire | ||||
Welwyn Hatfield | 16+2 | 48 | Hertfordshire | (Conservative minority) | |||
West Lancashire | 18 | 54 | Lancashire | ||||
West Oxfordshire | 16 | 49 | Oxfordshire | ||||
Winchester | 16 | 45 | Hampshire | ||||
Woking | 10 | 30 | Surrey | (Conservative minority) | |||
Worcester | 11 | 35 | Worcestershire | (Conservative/Labour coalition) | |||
Worthing | 11 | 37 | West Sussex | ||||
All 47 councils | 657+15 | 1,983 |
Six direct mayoral elections were held. Five are for local authorities (the Mayoralty of Torbay is abolished this year):
Local Authority | Incumbent Mayor | Result | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Bedford | ||||
Copeland | ||||
Leicester | ||||
Mansfield | ||||
Middlesbrough |
One election was held for a regional mayor: this newly established combined authority was set up by groups of local councils, much like similar devolution deals across the country, giving the combined authorities additional powers and funding.
See main article: 2019 Northern Ireland local elections.
In Northern Ireland, local elections were last held in 2014. No party held a working majority on any council (proportional representation makes this less likely) before the 2019 election, although the Democratic Unionist Party came close on Lisburn and Castlereagh City Council, with half of the seats.
The Electoral Office for Northern Ireland published lists and total numbers of candidates, showing that a total of 819 persons were nominated to stand. Elections are by single transferable vote in 5- to 7-member district electoral areas.
Council | Seats | Largest party before election | Largest party after election | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Belfast[139] | 60 | (19) | (18) | ||
Ards & North Down[140] | 40 | (17) | (14) | ||
Antrim & Newtownabbey[141] | 40 | (15) | (14) | ||
Lisburn & Castlereagh[142] | 40 | (20) | (15) | ||
Newry, Mourne & Down[143] | 41 | (14) | (16) | ||
(14) | |||||
Armagh, Banbridge & Craigavon[144] | 41 | (13) | (11) | ||
Mid & East Antrim[145] | 40 | (16) | (15) | ||
Causeway Coast & Glens[146] | 40 | (11) | (14) | ||
Mid Ulster[147] | 40 | (18) | (17) | ||
Derry & Strabane[148] | 40 | (16) | (11) | ||
(11) | |||||
Fermanagh & Omagh[149] | 40 | (17) | (15) | ||
All eleven councils | 462 | (130) | (122) |
The council by-election in Scotland (seat previously Labour) was won by the Scottish National Party, resulting in the party taking control of Dundee City Council.[150]