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2022 United Kingdom local elections

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2022 United Kingdom local elections

← 2021 5 May 2022 2023 →

  • 146 unitary, metropolitan, district and London councils in England
  • All 32 councils in Scotland
  • All 22 councils in Wales
  • 7 directly elected mayors in England
Turnout33.6% (England)[1]
44.8% (Scotland)[2]
38.0% (Wales)[3]
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Keir Starmer Boris Johnson Ed Davey
Party Labour Conservative Liberal Democrats
Leader since 4 April 2020 23 July 2019 27 August 2020[n 4]
Projected vote-share[n 1] 35% 30% 19%
Swing[n 2] Increase6% Decrease6% Increase2%
Councillors 3,073 1,403 868
Councillors ± Increase108 Decrease485 Increase224
Councils 74[n 3] 35 16
Councils ± Increase5 Decrease11 Increase3

  Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party
 
Leader Nicola Sturgeon Adam Price Carla Denyer and Adrian Ramsay
Party SNP Plaid Cymru Green
Leader since 14 November 2014 28 September 2018 1 October 2021
Projected vote-share[n 1] 34.1%[n 5] TBC 8.2%
Swing[n 2] Increase1.8% TBC TBC
Councillors 453 202 159
Councillors ± Increase22 Decrease6 Increase87
Councils 1[n 3] 4 0
Councils ± Increase1 Increase3 Steady

Map showing party control of councils following the elections.
  •   No election
  • otherwise see analysis table
Local authorities with elections:
  •   London borough
  •   Metropolitan borough
  •   Unitary authority
  •   District council
  •   City of London Corporation
  •   No election

The 2022 United Kingdom local elections took place on Thursday 5 May 2022. These included elections for all London borough councils, and for all local authorities in Wales and Scotland. Most seats in England were last up for election in 2018 and in Scotland and Wales in 2017. The elections coincided with the 2022 Northern Ireland Assembly election. In 91 cases, most of them in Wales, council seats were uncontested, each having only one candidate. Three seats in Scotland remained unfilled as no one nominated to fill them.

The local elections took place amid the Partygate scandal, in which it was found that numerous parties had been held at 10 Downing Street during national COVID-19 lockdowns, and COVID-19 social distancing laws were breached by numerous individuals. Public dissatisfaction over the events led to a decline in public support for Boris Johnson, the government led by him, and the Conservatives as a whole.

Across Great Britain, the governing Conservative Party had a net loss of 485 seats in comparison to 2017 in Scotland and Wales and 2018 in England, whilst Labour gained 108 seats (22 in England, 20 in Scotland, and 66 in Wales). The Liberal Democrats and Greens made gains of 224 seats and 87 seats, respectively, which exceeded those of the Labour Party in England but were also seen to a more modest extent in Scotland and Wales.

Overall

[edit]

Across Great Britain, the Conservatives had a net loss of 485 seats in comparison to 2017 in Scotland and Wales and 2018 in England, whilst Labour gained 108 seats (22 in England, 20 in Scotland, and 66 in Wales). The Liberal Democrats and Greens made gains of 224 seats and 87 seats, respectively, which exceeded those of the Labour Party in England but were also seen to a more modest extent in Scotland and Wales. The Scottish National Party (SNP) gained 22 seats in Scotland whilst Plaid Cymru had a net loss of 6 seats in Wales.[5]

By party

[edit]
Results of the 2022 council elections in Great Britain
Party Councils Councillors Mayors
Number Change Number Change Number Change
Labour 74 Increase 5 3,073 Increase 108 4 Decrease 1
No overall control 66 Steady
Conservative 35 Decrease 11 1,403 Decrease 485 1 Increase 1
Liberal Democrats 16 Increase 3 868 Increase 224 1 Steady
Plaid Cymru 4 Increase 3 202 Decrease 6 0 Steady
Independent 3 Decrease 2 606 Increase 15 0 Steady
SNP 1 Increase 1 453 Increase 22 0 Steady
Aspire 1 Increase 1 24 Increase 24 1 Increase 1
Green[n 6] 0 Steady 159 Increase 87 0 Steady
Residents[6] 0 Steady 52 Increase 7 0 Steady
Reform UK 0 Steady 2 Increase 2 0 Steady
BUP[7] 0 Steady 1 Increase 1 0 Steady
Gwlad[8] 0 Steady 1 Increase 1 0 Steady
Liberal[n 7] 0 Steady 1 Increase 1 0 Steady
Propel[9] 0 Steady 1 Increase 1 0 Steady
SDP[10] 0 Steady 1 Increase 1 0 Steady
Rubbish[11] 0 Steady 1 Steady 0 Steady
UKIP 0 Steady 0 Decrease 3 0 Steady
Total 6,848 200 7 Increase 1

Used to project a general election

[edit]

The results may be further processed to project the result of a hypothetical concurrent general election.

Party Votes[12]
Votes Projected National Vote[n 1]
Labour 3,673,389 35%
Conservatives 2,772,087 30%
Liberal Democrats 1,496,309 19%
SNP 627,484 17%
Plaid Cymru 160,369
Greens[n 6] 862,657
Aspire 915,513
Reform UK
British Unionist[7]
Gwlad[8]
Liberal[13]
Propel[9]
SDP[10]
Rubbish[11]
UKIP
Residents' Association[6]
Independent
Total 10,507,808 100%

England

[edit]

By party

[edit]
Results of the 2022 council elections in England[14]
Party Councils Councillors Mayors
Number Change Number Change Number Change
Labour 65 Increase 3 2,265 Increase 22 4 Decrease 1
Conservative 35 Decrease 10 1,078 Decrease 336 1 Increase 1
No overall control 29 Increase 3
Liberal Democrats 16 Increase 3 712 Increase 194 1 Steady
Aspire 1 Increase 1 24 Increase 24 1 Increase 1
Independent 0 Steady 143 Increase 25 0 Steady
Green 0 Steady 116 Increase 63 0 Steady
Residents 0 Steady 51 Increase 7 0 Steady
Reform UK 0 Steady 2 Increase 2 0 Steady
Liberal[13] 0 Steady 1 Increase 1 0 Steady
SDP[10] 0 Steady 1 Increase 1 0 Steady
UKIP 0 Steady 0 Decrease 3 0 Steady
Total 4,393 146 7 +1

Councils

[edit]

Background

[edit]

In total, 4,411 council seats are being contested in England, including irregular by-elections.[15]

Most seats in England up for election in 2022 were last elected in 2018. The exceptions are local authorities which have undergone recent boundary reviews. In the 2018 local elections, the Labour Party made gains in London at the expense of the Conservative Party, who in turn made gains in the rest of England at the expense of the UK Independence Party (UKIP). Few councils changed overall control.[16] Overall, UKIP lost 237 of the 243 seats it had held before the elections.[17] According to the BBC's analysis, the results reflected a national political situation with Labour and the Conservatives "neck-and-neck".[18]

County councils

[edit]

County councils are the upper tier of a two-tier system of local government, with the area each council covers subdivided into district councils with different responsibilities. These are first-past-the-post or block voting elections, with a mixture of single-member and multi-member electoral divisions. County councils are elected in full every four years, with the last election having been in 2021. However, due to consultations about possible unitarisation, elections for three county councils were postponed to 2022.[19] The government has announced plans to replace the councils with unitary authorities pending Parliamentary approval.[20]

Elections to the new Somerset Council took place on 5 May 2022 for a unitary authority to run concurrently with the district councils until their abolition in April 2023.[21] In a similar way, members of North Yorkshire Council were elected at the same time, with its councillors to serve as county councillors for one year and then to serve an additional four-year term as unitary councillors.[22] Cumbria's two new unitary authorities were elected as "shadow authorities" which would go live after gaining their powers in 2023.[23]

London boroughs

[edit]

Elections for all councillors in all thirty-two London boroughs were held in 2022 in line with their normal election schedule. All twenty-five London borough councils which have not had a boundary review since before 2013 were elected based on new boundaries.[24] The previous elections to London borough councils were held in 2018, which saw Labour win its second-best result in any London election and the Conservatives return their lowest-ever number of councillors in the capital. In 2018, Labour won control of Tower Hamlets council which had previously been under no overall control, but did not gain control of Barnet, Wandsworth or Westminster councils, which the party had targeted. Meanwhile, the Liberal Democrats gained control of Kingston upon Thames and Richmond upon Thames borough councils from the Conservatives.[25]

The 2022 elections saw Labour gain all three of Barnet, Wandsworth and Westminster councils which they had unsuccessfully targeted in 2018. The Conservatives gained control of Harrow from Labour as well as winning the new position of mayor of Croydon, with Croydon's council under no overall control, having previously been control by Labour. Lutfur Rahman gained the position of mayor of Tower Hamlets from Labour, with his Aspire party winning a majority of seats.[26]

Council Seats Party control Details
Previous New
Barking and Dagenham 51[a] Labour Labour Details
Barnet 63[a] Conservative Labour Details
Bexley 45 Conservative Conservative Details
Brent 57[a] Labour Labour Details
Bromley 58[a] Conservative Conservative Details
Camden 55[a] Labour Labour Details
Croydon 70 Labour No overall control
(Conservative minority)
Details
Ealing 70[a] Labour Labour Details
Enfield 63[a] Labour Labour Details
Greenwich 55[a] Labour Labour Details
Hackney 57 Labour Labour Details
Hammersmith and Fulham 50[a] Labour Labour Details
Haringey 57[a] Labour Labour Details
Harrow 55[a] Labour Conservative Details
Havering 55[a] No overall control
(Conservative/independent coalition)
No overall control
(HRA/Labour coalition)
Details
Hillingdon 53[a] Conservative Conservative Details
Hounslow 62[a] Labour Labour Details
Islington 51[a] Labour Labour Details
Kensington and Chelsea 50 Conservative Conservative Details
Kingston upon Thames 48[a] Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
Lambeth 63[a] Labour Labour Details
Lewisham 54[a] Labour Labour Details
Merton 57[a] Labour Labour Details
Newham 66[a] Labour Labour Details
Redbridge 63 Labour Labour Details
Richmond upon Thames 54[a] Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
Southwark 63 Labour Labour Details
Sutton 55[a] Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
Tower Hamlets 45 Labour Aspire Details
Waltham Forest 60[a] Labour Labour Details
Wandsworth 58[a] Conservative Labour Details
Westminster 54[a] Conservative Labour Details
All 32 councils 1,817

Metropolitan boroughs

[edit]

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 2022. Birmingham City Council holds its elections on a four-year cycle from 2018, so is also due to hold an election in 2022. Due to boundary changes, three councils which generally elect their councillors in thirds will elect all of their councillors in 2022. They will then return to the thirds schedule, apart from St Helens Council, which is moving to all-out elections every four years starting in 2022. Several other boundary reviews have been delayed to 2023 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The scheduled elections in Liverpool in 2022 have been cancelled and instead the city is expected to move to all-out elections from 2023 on new ward boundaries.[27]

Elections for all councillors

[edit]
Council Seats Party control Details
Previous New
Birmingham 101 Labour Labour Details
Bury 51[a] Labour Labour Details
Rochdale 60[a] Labour Labour Details
St Helens 48[a] Labour Labour Details
4 councils 260

Election for one third of councillors

[edit]

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

Council Seats Party control Details
up of Previous New
Barnsley 21 63 Labour Labour Details
Bolton 20 60 No overall control (Conservative minority) No overall control (Conservative minority) Details
Bradford 30 90 Labour Labour Details
Calderdale 18 51 Labour Labour Details
Coventry 18 54 Labour Labour Details
Dudley 25 72 Conservative Conservative Details
Gateshead 22 66 Labour Labour Details
Kirklees 23 69 No overall control (Labour minority) Labour Details
Knowsley 15 45 Labour Labour Details
Leeds 35 99 Labour Labour Details
Manchester 32 96 Labour Labour Details
Newcastle upon Tyne 27 78 Labour Labour Details
North Tyneside 20 60 Labour Labour Details
Oldham 21 60 Labour Labour Details
Salford 20 60 Labour Labour Details
Sandwell 24 72 Labour Labour Details
Sefton 22 66 Labour Labour Details
Sheffield 28 84 No overall control (Labour/Green coalition) No overall control (Labour minority) Details
Solihull 17 51 Conservative Conservative Details
South Tyneside 19 54 Labour Labour Details
Stockport 21 63 No overall control (Labour minority) No overall control (Lib Dem minority) Details
Sunderland 25 75 Labour Labour Details
Tameside 19 57 Labour Labour Details
Trafford 22 63 Labour Labour Details
Wakefield 21 63 Labour Labour Details
Walsall 21 60 Conservative Conservative Details
Wigan 26 75 Labour Labour Details
Wirral 23 66 No overall control (Labour minority) No overall control (Labour minority) Details
Wolverhampton 20 60 Labour Labour Details
All 29 councils 655 1,932

District councils

[edit]

Election of all councillors

[edit]

Some councils which elect all their councillors every four years did so in 2022. Gosport usually elects its councillors in halves, but all seats will be up for election due to new election boundaries. St Albans usually elects by thirds but all seats were up on new boundaries. Harrogate was due to elect all its councillors, but the election was cancelled due to the unitarisation of North Yorkshire, with councillors' terms being extended to April 2023, after which the district councils in North Yorkshire will cease to exist.[28]

Council Seats Party control Details
Previous New
Gosport 28[a] Conservative Liberal Democrats Details
Huntingdonshire 52 Conservative No overall control (Lib Dem/Independent/Labour/Green coalition) Details
Newcastle-under-Lyme 44 Conservative Conservative Details
South Cambridgeshire 45 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
St Albans 56[a] Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
All 5 councils 225

Election of councillors by halves

[edit]

District councils which elect their candidates in halves did so in 2022.

Council Seats Party control Details
up of Previous New
Adur 14 29 Conservative Conservative Details
Cheltenham 21 40 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
Fareham 16 31 Conservative Conservative Details
Hastings 16 32 Labour No overall control (Labour/Green coalition) Details
Nuneaton and Bedworth 17 34 Conservative Conservative Details
Oxford 24 48 Labour Labour Details
All 6 councils 108 214

Election of councillors by thirds

[edit]

District councils which elect by thirds that held elections in 2022. Carlisle, Craven and South Lakeland had been due to have a third of councillors up for election but these were cancelled due to the creation of Cumberland, North Yorkshire, and Westmorland and Furness Unitary authorities.[29]

Council Seats Party control Details
up of Previous New
Amber Valley 15 45 Conservative Conservative Details
Basildon 14 42 Conservative Conservative Details
Basingstoke and Deane 19 54 Conservative Conservative Details
Brentwood 13 37 Conservative Conservative Details
Broxbourne 10 30 Conservative Conservative Details
Burnley 15 45 No overall control (Labour/Lib Dem coalition) No overall control (Labour/Lib Dem coalition) Details
Cambridge 16 42 Labour Labour Details
Cannock Chase 13 41 Conservative Conservative Details
Castle Point 14 41 Conservative No overall control (CIIP/PIP coalition) Details
Cherwell 17 48 Conservative Conservative Details
Chorley 14 42 Labour Labour Details
Colchester 18 51 No overall control (Conservative/independent coalition) No overall control (Lib Dem/Labour/Green coalition) Details
Crawley 12 36 No overall control (Labour/independent coalition) Labour Details
Eastleigh 14 39 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
Elmbridge 16 48 No overall control (Lib Dem/residents coalition) No overall control (Lib Dem/residents coalition) Details
Epping Forest 20 58 Conservative Conservative Details
Exeter 17 39 Labour Labour Details
Harlow 12 33 Conservative Conservative Details
Hart 11 33 No overall control (CCH/Lib Dem coalition) No overall control (CCH/Lib Dem coalition) Details
Havant 14 38 Conservative Conservative Details
Hyndburn 12 35 Labour No overall control (Labour minority) Details
Ipswich 17 48 Labour Labour Details
Lincoln 11 33 Labour Labour Details
Maidstone 18 55 Conservative Conservative Details
Mole Valley 14 41 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
North Hertfordshire 18 49 No overall control (Labour/Lib Dem coalition) No overall control (Labour/Lib Dem coalition) Details
Norwich 13 39 Labour Labour Details
Pendle 12 33 Conservative Conservative Details
Preston 17 48 Labour Labour Details
Redditch 11 29 Conservative Conservative Details
Reigate and Banstead 15 45 Conservative Conservative Details
Rochford 13 39 Conservative Conservative Details
Rossendale 12 36 No overall control (Labour minority) Labour Details
Rugby 14 42 Conservative Conservative Details
Runnymede 14 41 Conservative Conservative Details
Rushmoor 13 39 Conservative Conservative Details
Stevenage 13 39 Labour Labour Details
Tamworth 10 30 Conservative Conservative Details
Tandridge 14 42 No overall control
(independent/Residents Group Alliance coalition)
No overall control
(independent/Residents Group Alliance coalition)
Details
Three Rivers 14 39 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
Tunbridge Wells 16 48 No overall control
(Conservative minority)
No overall control
(Lib Dem/Labour/Tunbridge Wells Alliance coalition)
Details
Watford 12 36 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
Welwyn Hatfield 17 48 Conservative Conservative Details
West Lancashire 20 54 No overall control (Labour minority) No overall control (Labour minority) Details
West Oxfordshire 16 49 Conservative No overall control (Lib Dem/Labour/Green coalition) Details
Winchester 15 45 Liberal Democrats Liberal Democrats Details
Woking 10 30 No overall control (Conservative minority) Liberal Democrats Details
Worcester 13 35 Conservative No overall control (Conservative minority) Details
Worthing 14 37 No overall control (Conservative minority) Labour Details
All 49 councils 702 2,026

Unitary authorities

[edit]

Election of all councillors

[edit]

Reading Borough Council will have all its councillors elected on new ward boundaries. The new unitary authority Somerset Council will hold its first election under the old Somerset County Council boundaries, with twice as many councillors being elected as previously. Shadow authorities for the two new unitary authorities replacing Cumbria County Council and its districts will also be elected, as will councillors for the new North Yorkshire Council ahead of its creation in 2023.

Notably, the count for the Skipton West and West Craven seat ended in a tie between independent candidate Andy Solloway and the Labour candidate Peter Madeley. After various methods for deciding the tie were mooted, including drawing from a deck of cards, the candidates drew straws with Andy Solloway drawing the long straw, thus being declared the winner.[30]

Council Seats Party control Details
Previous New
Cumberland 46[b] No predecessor Labour Details
Reading 48[a] Labour Labour Details
North Yorkshire 90 Conservative Conservative Details
Somerset 110[c] Conservative Liberal Democrats Details
Westmorland and Furness 65[b] No predecessor Liberal Democrats Details
All 5 councils 359

Election of councillors by thirds

[edit]

Unitary authorities that elect councillors in thirds did so in 2022.

Council Seats Party control Details
up of Previous New
Blackburn with Darwen 18 51 Labour Labour Details
Derby 17 51 No overall control (Conservative minority) No overall control (Conservative minority) Details
Halton 18 54 Labour Labour Details
Hartlepool 13 36 No overall control (independent/Conservative coalition) No overall control (independent/Conservative coalition) Details
Hull 19 57 Labour Liberal Democrats Details
Milton Keynes 19 57 No overall control (Labour/Lib Dem coalition) No overall control (Labour/Lib Dem coalition) Details
North East Lincolnshire 16 42 Conservative Conservative Details
Peterborough 19 60 No overall control (Conservative minority) No overall control (Conservative minority) Details
Plymouth 19 57 No overall control (Conservative minority) No overall control (Conservative majority after party changes) Details
Portsmouth 14 42 No overall control (Lib Dem minority) No overall control (Lib Dem minority) Details
Slough 14 42 Labour Labour Details
Southampton 17 48 Conservative Labour Details
Southend-on-Sea 18 51 No overall control (Labour/independent/Lib Dem coalition) No overall control (Labour/independent/Lib Dem coalition) Details
Swindon 19 57 Conservative Conservative Details
Thurrock 16 49 Conservative Conservative Details
Wokingham 18 54 Conservative No overall control (Lib Dem/Labour/independent coalition) Details
All 16 councils 274 808

City of London Corporation

[edit]

The Court of Common Council is the main decision-making body of the City of London Corporation, which governs the City of London. The 100 councillors were elected across twenty-five wards. Elections were due on 18 March 2021, but as a result of the coronavirus pandemic were delayed to 23 March 2022.[31][32]

After 2017 election Before 2022 election After 2022 election
Party Seats Party Seats Party Seats
Independent 85 Independent 84 Independent 78
Temple and Farringdon Together 10 Temple and Farringdon Together 10 Temple and Farringdon Together 10
Labour 5 Labour 6 Castle Baynard Independents 7
Labour 5

Mayors

[edit]

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

Combined authorities

[edit]
Combined authority Mayor before Mayor-elect Details
South Yorkshire Dan Jarvis (Labour Co-op) Oliver Coppard (Labour Co-op) Details

Local authorities

[edit]
Council Mayor before Mayor-elect
Croydon New position Jason Perry (Con)
Hackney Philip Glanville (Labour Co-op) Philip Glanville (Labour Co-op)
Lewisham Damien Egan (Labour Co-op) Damien Egan (Labour Co-op)
Newham Rokhsana Fiaz (Labour Co-op) Rokhsana Fiaz (Labour Co-op)
Tower Hamlets John Biggs (Lab) Luftur Rahman (Aspire)
Watford Peter Taylor (Lib Dem) Peter Taylor (Lib Dem)

There was also a referendum in Bristol on whether to continue using the mayor-and-cabinet system or to change to the committee system, with 59% voting to abolish the position of mayor.[33]

Scotland

[edit]

By party

[edit]
By party cumulative results of the 2022 council elections in Scotland[34]
Party Councillors Councils
No. Change No. Change
No overall control 27 −2
SNP 453 +22 1 +1
Labour 282 +20 1 +1
Conservatives 214 −63 0 0
Liberal Democrats 87 +20 0 0
Greens 35 +16 0 0
British Unionist[7] 1 +1 0 0
Rubbish[11] 1 0 0 0
West Dunbartonshire Community Party[6] 1 0 0 0
Independents 149 −16 3 0
Total 1,223 32

Councils

[edit]
Ballot paper used for the elections in the Victoria Park ward of the Glasgow City Council. The vote is held using the single transferable vote, which allows voters to rank their choices.

Elections were held for all councillors in all 32 local authorities in Scotland. Local elections in Scotland are conducted by the single transferable vote (STV), which results in the number of seats won by each party more proportionally reflecting their share of the vote.[35] As a consequence, local elections in Scotland result more often in no overall control and local authorities being governed by minority or coalition administrations.[35] In this election two of the 32 councils came under one-party majorities - Dundee (SNP) and West Dunbartonshire (Labour).

Council Seats Party control Details
Previous New
Aberdeen 45 No overall control (Labour/Conservative/independent coalition) No overall control (SNP/Lib Dem coalition) Details
Aberdeenshire 70 No overall control (Conservative/Lib Dem/independent coalition) No overall control (Conservative/Lib Dem/independent coalition) Details
Angus 28 No overall control (Lib Dem/Conservative/independent coalition) No overall control (SNP minority) Details
Argyll and Bute 36 No overall control (Lib Dem/Conservative/independent coalition) No overall control (Lib Dem/Conservative/independent coalition) Details
Clackmannanshire 18 No overall control (SNP minority) No overall control (SNP minority) Details
Dumfries and Galloway 43 No overall control (Labour/SNP coalition) No overall control (Labour/SNP/Lib Dem/independent coalition) Details
Dundee 29 No overall control (SNP minority) SNP Details
East Ayrshire 32 No overall control (SNP minority) No overall control (SNP minority) Details
East Dunbartonshire 22 No overall control (Lib Dem/Conservative coalition) No overall control (SNP minority) Details
East Lothian 22 No overall control (Labour minority) No overall control (Labour minority) Details
East Renfrewshire 18 No overall control (SNP/Labour/Independent coalition) No overall control (Labour/Independent minority) Details
Edinburgh 63 No overall control (SNP/Labour coalition) No overall control (Labour minority) Details
Falkirk 30 No overall control (SNP minority) No overall control (SNP minority) Details
Fife 75 No overall control (SNP/Labour coalition) No overall control (Labour minority) Details
Glasgow 85 No overall control (SNP minority) No overall control (SNP minority) Details
Highland 74 No overall control (independent/Lib Dem/Labour coalition) No overall control (SNP/independent coalition) Details
Inverclyde 22 No overall control (Labour minority) No overall control (Labour minority) Details
Midlothian 18 No overall control (Labour minority) No overall control (SNP minority) Details
Moray 26 No overall control (SNP minority) No overall control (Conservative minority) Details
Na h-Eileanan Siar 29[a] Independent Independent Details
North Ayrshire 33[a] No overall control (Labour minority) No overall control (SNP minority) Details
North Lanarkshire 77 No overall control (Labour minority) No overall control (SNP minority) Details
Orkney 21[a] Independent Independent Details
Perth and Kinross 40 No overall control (Conservative/independent coalition) No overall control (SNP minority) Details
Renfrewshire 43 No overall control (SNP minority) No overall control (SNP minority) Details
Scottish Borders 34 No overall control (Conservative minority) No overall control (Conservative/independent coalition) Details
Shetland 23[a] Independent Independent Details
South Ayrshire 28 No overall control (SNP/Labour/independent coalition) No overall control (Conservative minority) Details
South Lanarkshire 64 No overall control (SNP minority) No overall control (Labour minority) Details
Stirling 23 No overall control (SNP/Labour coalition) No overall control (Labour minority) Details
West Dunbartonshire 22 No overall control (SNP minority) Labour Details
West Lothian 33 No overall control (Labour minority) No overall control (Labour minority) Details
All 32 councils 1,226

Wales

[edit]

Elections were held for all councillors in all 22 local authorities as well as for all community council seats in Wales. In all twenty-two councils, the elections were contested under new boundaries. This was the first time Welsh councils could choose between conducting the vote with the current first-past-the-post system or the proportional single transferable vote (STV) system, although practically this will not come into effect until at least 2027, as councils need to give advance notice of such a change.[36][37]

By party

[edit]
By party cumulative results of the 2022 council elections in Wales[38]
Party Councillors Councils
No. Change No. Change
No overall control 10 −1
Labour 526 +66 8 +1
Plaid Cymru 202 −6 4 +3
Conservatives 111 −86 0 −1
Liberal Democrats 69 +10 0 0
Greens 8 +8 0 0
Gwlad[8] 1 +1 0 0
Propel[9] 1 +1 0 0
Independents 314 +6 0 −2
Total 1,232 22

Councils

[edit]
Council Seats Party control Details
Previous New
Anglesey 35[a] No overall control (Plaid Cymru/independent coalition) Plaid Cymru Details
Blaenau Gwent 33[a] Independent Labour Details
Bridgend 51[a] No overall control (Labour minority) Labour Details
Caerphilly 69[a] Labour Labour Details
Cardiff 79[a] Labour Labour Details
Carmarthenshire 75[a] No overall control (Plaid Cymru/independent coalition) Plaid Cymru Details
Ceredigion 38[a] No overall control (Plaid Cymru/independent coalition) Plaid Cymru Details
Conwy 55[a] No overall control (Conservative/independent coalition) No overall control Details
Denbighshire 48[a] No overall control (Conservative/independent coalition) No overall control Details
Flintshire 66[a] No overall control (Labour minority) No overall control Details
Gwynedd 69[a] Plaid Cymru Plaid Cymru Details
Merthyr Tydfil 30[a] Independent No overall control Details
Monmouthshire 46[a] Conservative No overall control Details
Neath Port Talbot 60[a] Labour No overall control Details
Newport 51[a] Labour Labour Details
Pembrokeshire 60[a] No overall control (independent/Labour/Plaid Cymru/Lib Dem coalition) No overall control Details
Powys 68[a] No overall control (independent/Conservative coalition) No overall control Details
Rhondda Cynon Taf 75[a] Labour Labour Details
Swansea 75[a] Labour Labour Details
Torfaen 40[a] Labour Labour Details
Vale of Glamorgan 54[a] No overall control (Labour/independent coalition) No overall control Details
Wrexham 56[a] No overall control (independent/Conservative coalition) No overall control Details
All 22 councils 1,233

Opinion polling

[edit]

England

[edit]
Dates
conducted
Pollster Client Area Sample
size
Con Lab Lib Dem Green Independent
/others
Lead
22–26 Apr Survation Good Morning Britain England 2,587[d] 34% 47% 10% 4% 6% 13%
3 May 2018 2018 local elections[e] 32% 41% 14% 7% 6% 9%

Scotland

[edit]
First preference voting intention
Date(s)
conducted
Polling organisation/client Sample size SNP Con Lab Lib Dem Green Alba Others
5 May 2022 2022 Scottish local elections N/A 34.1% 19.7% 21.8% 8.6% 6.0% 0.7% 9.2%
29 Apr–3 May 2022 Survation 893 41% 17% 23% 8% 5% 1% 4%
24–28 Mar 2022 Survation/Ballot Box Scotland 1,002 44% 18% 23% 6% 3% 1% 4%
20–26 Oct 2021 Panelbase/Scot Goes Pop 1,001 45% 22% 21% 6% 4% 2% <1%
4 May 2017 2017 Scottish local elections 1,889,658 32.30% 25.30% 20.16% 6.82% 4.1% - 10.4%

Northern Ireland

[edit]

The 2022 election to the Northern Ireland Assembly took place on 5 May 2022.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b All vote shares in the infobox are projected national vote shares calculated by the BBC.
  2. ^ Swing figures are between the BBC national projected vote share extrapolation from 2021 local elections, and the BBC equivalent vote share projection from these local elections held in different areas.
  3. ^ a b One council was won in Scotland which uses the Single Transferable Vote for its voting system. The system means the number of Scottish councils won outright is far lower than in other parts of the UK.
  4. ^ Davey served as Acting Leader from 13 December 2019 to 27 August 2020 alongside the Party Presidents Baroness Sal Brinton and Mark Pack, following Jo Swinson's election defeat in the 2019 general election. Davey was elected Leader in August 2020.[4]
  5. ^ The SNP only ran in Scotland. The 34.1% result is the result within Scotland
  6. ^ a b Includes the Green Party of England and Wales (124 councillors, gain of 71), as well as the Scottish Greens (35 councillors, gain of 16).
  7. ^ Joy Andrews in Pickering, North Yorkshire.
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be New election boundaries
  2. ^ a b Shadow authority for a unitary council being created in 2023
  3. ^ Old boundaries, with twice as many seats as previously
  4. ^ Of these respondents, only those "in areas of England where there are local council elections in May 2022" were prompted.
  5. ^ The listed figures are according to Survation, released under its above polling.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Report on the May 2022 local elections in England". www.electoralcommission.org.uk. 21 September 2022. Retrieved 13 September 2023.
  2. ^ "Report on the May 2022 Scottish council elections". www.electoralcommission.org.uk. 21 September 2022. Retrieved 13 September 2023.
  3. ^ "Report on the May 2022 elections in Wales". www.electoralcommission.org.uk. 21 September 2022. Retrieved 13 September 2023.
  4. ^ Stewart, Heather (27 August 2020). "'Wake up and smell the coffee': Ed Davey elected Lib Dem leader". The Guardian.
  5. ^ "Election results 2022: How the parties performed in maps and charts". BBC News. 7 May 2022. Retrieved 8 May 2022.
  6. ^ a b c Includes Jim Bollan in Leven, West Dunbartonshire. BBC website includes him as an independent.
  7. ^ a b c John Jo Leckie in Fortissat, North Lanarkshire. BBC website includes him as an independent.
  8. ^ a b c Gwyn Wigley Evans in Llanrhystyd, Ceredigion. BBC website includes him as an independent.
  9. ^ a b c Neil McEvoy in Fairwater, Cardiff. BBC website includes him as an independent.
  10. ^ a b c Wayne Dixon in Middleton Park, Leeds. BBC website includes him as an independent.
  11. ^ a b c Sally Cogley in Irvine Valley, East Ayrshire. BBC website includes her as an independent.
  12. ^ "2022 local election results (Britain Elects aggregate)". Google Docs. Britain Elects. Retrieved 12 May 2022.
  13. ^ a b Joy Andrews in Pickering, North Yorkshire.
  14. ^ "Local Elections 2022 in England". BBC News. Retrieved 7 May 2022.
  15. ^ "Local elections 2022". Institute for Government. 30 May 2019. Retrieved 1 May 2022.
  16. ^ "Local election results 2018: The results in maps and charts". BBC News. 5 May 2018. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  17. ^ "The Guardian view on the 2018 local elections: few changes but big lessons | Editorial". The Guardian. 4 May 2018. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  18. ^ "Local election results 2018: No clear winner as Labour and Tories neck and neck". BBC News. 5 May 2018. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  19. ^ "Local elections postponed in three English counties". BBC News. 23 February 2021. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  20. ^ "Next steps for new unitary councils in Cumbria, North Yorkshire and Somerset". GOV.UK. Retrieved 22 July 2021.
  21. ^ Kenyon, Megan (3 December 2021). "Somerset unitary elections date confirmed". Local Government Chronicle (LGC). Retrieved 24 January 2022.
  22. ^ Council, North Yorkshire County (26 October 2021). "New Council elections". North Yorkshire County Council. Retrieved 24 January 2022.
  23. ^ "Transition". newcouncilsforcumbria.info. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  24. ^ "LGBCE | Local government in London is changing | LGBCE Site". www.lgbce.org.uk. Archived from the original on 12 September 2021. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  25. ^ Grafton-Green, Chloe Chaplain, Patrick (5 May 2018). "The full list of results for London's local elections". www.standard.co.uk. Retrieved 18 September 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  26. ^ "Local Elections 2022: Results in London region as Tories take Croydon mayoralty". ITV News. 9 May 2022. Retrieved 11 May 2022.
  27. ^ "Liverpool City Council: Government reveals 'reset' plans". BBC News. 10 June 2021. Retrieved 10 June 2021.
  28. ^ "Election of councillors that will represent North Yorkshire for the next 5-years". Harrogate Informer. 25 January 2022. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  29. ^ "The North Yorkshire (Structural Changes) Order 2022". Legislation.gov.uk. 18 March 2022. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
  30. ^ Tate, Lesley. "ELECTION RESULTS: Candidates draw straws after polling exactly the same number of votes". Telegraph & Argus. Retrieved 6 May 2022.
  31. ^ "Forthcoming elections". City of London. Retrieved 16 October 2021.
  32. ^ "Court of Common Council 8th October 2020" (PDF). City of London. Retrieved 16 October 2021.
  33. ^ "Bristol mayor vote: City decides to abolish mayor post". BBC News. 6 May 2022.
  34. ^ "Local Elections 2022 in Scotland". BBC News. Retrieved 7 May 2022.
  35. ^ a b Cromar, Chris (10 September 2021). "Should England introduce PR for local elections like Scotland?". Public Sector Executive. Retrieved 18 September 2021.
  36. ^ Cromar, Chris (10 September 2021). "Should England introduce PR for local elections like Scotland?". Public Sector Executive. Retrieved 13 September 2021.
  37. ^ "Local Government and Elections (Wales) Act 2021". legislation.gov.uk. Retrieved 5 March 2022.
  38. ^ "Local Elections 2022 in Wales". BBC News. Retrieved 7 May 2022.