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UK native elections outcomes: Reform take 280 seats and are set to high 1,000 as Labour lose key London council to the Conservatives on horrific night time for Keir Starmer

Reform have won 280 seats overnight in the local council elections, on what is becoming a horrific night for Keir Starmer

Nigel Farage‘s Party is set to top 1,000 seats today as Labour lost a key London council, Wandsworth, to no party majority after shedding six seats.  

A jubilant Mr Farage heralded a ‘historic change in British politics,’ as he told reporters ‘there is no more left-right’ as his Party was ‘scoring stunning percentages in traditional old Labour areas’. 

Follow our live blog as we cover the results across the country. 

Follow live updates and reaction from the 2026 UK local election results 

Reform UK take Newcastle from the Conservatives

Nigel Farage’s Party has gained its first council of this year’s local elections, taking Newcastle-under-Lyme from the Conservatives.

A horrific night for the Prime Minister, as Labour takes a battering from Reform in their heartlands

The Prime Minister had a nightmare overnight as his Party took a battering in traditional Labour heartlands from Reform.

Nigel Farage even suggested Reform UK was on course for a general election victory after taking council seats from Labour in early local election results.

While Reform’s gains exceeded 180 seats when results were in from 26 of the 136 councils in the early hours of Friday, Labour lost more than 130, including in its traditional northern heartlands.

Keir Starmer’s Party lost key London council Wandsworth to no party majority after shedding six seats, leaving it with 28.

Sir Keir’s party went into Thursday’s local elections expected to lose up to 1,850 councillors, with senior figures describing the contest as ‘tough’.

Initial results painted a bleak picture for the Prime Minister.

Although Labour’s starting position means it retains control of Halton Council, the shift in vote share combined with losses elsewhere in the north west kicked off a difficult night for Sir Keir.

Those results included losses to Reform in Chorley, in Lancashire, and Wigan, in Greater Manchester.

A national drubbing is likely to reignite speculation about Sir Keir’s leadership of the party and the country.

Before polls closed, The Times reported that Energy Secretary and former Labour leader Ed Miliband had privately urged the Prime Minister to set out a timetable for his departure after the elections.

Hartlepool MP Jonathan Brash, whose wife Pamela Hargreaves lost her seat in Reform’s clean sweep, said Sir Keir should go.

He said: ‘It’s clear to me that the Prime Minister should take this opportunity to set out a timetable for his own departure, and then allow for the widest possible leadership election that includes all the talents of our party.’

But Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy urged his party not to play ‘pass the parcel’ with the leadership in response to the election results.

He told the BBC there were ‘questions that we have to answer’ but there were ‘no circumstances in which the answer to the questions that the British people are raising is to change the leader yet again’.

Labour sources also pointed to the heavy defeat suffered by the party in 1999 before Sir Tony Blair went on to win re-election by a landslide in 2001.

There were some bright spots for Labour as it clung on in Lincoln, Reading and Salford.

Victory for Reform as Nigel Farage heralds ‘historic change’

Nigel Farage’s Reform UK Party won 280 seats overnight, as the leader heralded a ‘historic change in British politics’.

He told reporters there was ‘no more left-right’ as his Party was ‘scoring stunning percentages in traditional old Labour areas’.

The Reform leader compared the substantial gains to clearing Becher’s Brook, a famously difficult jump in the Grand National.

He said: ‘If we cleared Becher’s Brook and landed well, we go on to win the Grand National.

‘What is very clear to me is that our voters will stick with us now all the way through.’

In Halton, in Cheshire, Labour held two of the 17 seats it was defending as Reform UK gained 15 councillors in the first council to complete its count on Friday morning.

In some wards, Reform won with more than 50% of the vote in an area where last year Mr Farage’s party won the Runcorn and Helsby by-election by just six votes.

In Hartlepool, Reform won all 12 seats on offer, pushing the previously Labour-held council into no overall control, while Labour also lost control of Redditch, Tamworth and Exeter.

In Tameside, a council in Angela Rayner’s Greater Manchester constituency, Labour lost its majority to no overall control as Reform took 18 of the 19 seats up for election.

Mr Farage’s Reform UK is set to make significant gains today, building on last year’s local elections that saw the party pick up almost 700 councillors and take control of 10 authorities.

Pointing to the fragmentation of the traditional two-party duopoly, Reform’s Zia Yusuf said he expected to see ‘a turquoise wave’ across Labour’s traditional heartlands, with Labour and the Tories struggling ‘to get 40 per cent between them’.

Early results also showed Reform success further south, with the party picking up seats in Brentwood, in Essex.

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage poses with local candidates in a pub garden in Jaywick, near Clacton-on-Sea, eastern England on May 7, 2026. UK polling stations opened on May 7 in local elections set to heap more pressure on beleaguered Labour Prime Minister Keir Starmer and showcase the rise of hard-right and left-wing populists. (Photo by Chris Radburn / AFP via Getty Images)

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