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Map shows where local elections will take place in May after Keir Starmer’s U-turn

metro.co.uk

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

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Hundreds more council seats will now be up for grabs on May 7 (Picture: In Pictures via Getty Images) Keir Starmer suffered his 14th U-turn of premiership after he dropped plans to delay 30 council elections. Nigel Farage launched a legal battle, accusing Labour of trying to avoid bruising el...

Members of the public head to their local polling stations to vote in the local council elections for their next council leaders on the 1st of May 2025 in Folkestone, United Kingdom. Polling stations have been set up all across the UK today, in churches, schools, community rooms, and even on farms. (photo by Andrew Aitchison / In pictures via Getty Images)
Hundreds more council seats will now be up for grabs on May 7 (Picture: In Pictures via Getty Images)

Keir Starmer suffered his 14th U-turn of premiership after he dropped plans to delay 30 council elections.

Nigel Farage launched a legal battle, accusing Labour of trying to avoid bruising election defeats to Reform in the May 7 ballots.

The government then changed their mind after they received legal advice over their court fight with Reform.

The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government will now provide an extra £62 million to help local authorities undergoing a restructure.

A Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) spokesperson said today: ‘Following legal advice, the Government has withdrawn its original decision to postpone 30 local elections in May.

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‘Providing certainty to councils about their local elections is now the most crucial thing and all local elections will now go ahead in May 2026.’

The government also agreed to pay Reform’s £150,000 legal costs for mounting the challenge.

Mr Farage, who spearheaded the fight against the government’s original plans, said: ‘It’s a victory for Reform, but more importantly, it’s a victory for democracy in this country.

‘It seems to me that if a government minister does something illegal, they really ought to resign.’

The Labour Party now has to defend 2,558 seats from potential challengers, while the Conservatives are hoping to hold 1,362 seats.

The elections, taking place in councils across England, as well as the Scottish and Welsh Parliaments, are expected to be painful for the Labour Party as it suffers from low poll ratings.

Reform UK Holds Rally In Wales
Farage claimed victory in his legal fight over Reform (Picture: Jon Rowley/Getty Images)

Labour-led Worthing council said they were ‘disappointed’ by the government’s decision.

Council leader Sophie Cox told Metro that concerns ‘about our capacity to deliver local government reorganisation whilst also holding elections…remain entirely valid.’

She added: ‘It is therefore frustrating that financial compensation is now being offered, when this option was not put forward at the time those concerns were raised.’

Full list of local authorities in England hold elections on May 7

County councils

  • East Sussex – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Essex
  • Hampshire
  • Norfolk – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Suffolk – Election taking place following U-turn
  • West Sussex – Election taking place following U-turn

EMBARGOED TO 0600 THURSDAY JUNE 13 File photo dated 24/05/24 of Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer at the launch of Scottish Labour's General Election campaign at City Facilities in Glasgow. Four in 10 voters think Labour???s policies will make a positive difference to the country, a poll has found as the party prepares to unveil its manifesto. Labour will launch its manifesto at an event in Manchester on Thursday, the last of the main parties to do so. Issue date: Thursday June 13, 2024. PA Photo. See PA story POLITICS Election Difference. Photo credit should read: Andrew Milligan/PA Wire
Starmer was accused of trying to avoid a difficult set of election results (Picture: Andrew Milligan/PA Wire)

District councils

  • Adur – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Basildon – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Basingstoke & Deane
  • Brentwood
  • Broxbourne
  • Burnley – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Cambridge
  • Cannock Chase – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Cheltenham – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Cherwell
  • Chorley – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Colchester
  • Crawley – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Eastleigh
  • Epping Forest
  • Exeter – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Fareham
  • Gosport
  • Harlow – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Hart
  • Hastings – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Havant
  • Huntingdonshire
  • Hyndburn – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Ipswich – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Lincoln – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Newcastle-under-Lyme
  • Norwich – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Nuneaton & Bedworth
  • Oxford
  • Pendle – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Preston – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Redditch – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Rochford
  • Rugby – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Rushmoor
  • South Cambridgeshire
  • St Albans
  • Stevenage – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Tamworth – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Three Rivers
  • Tunbridge Wells
  • Watford
  • Welwyn Hatfield – Election taking place following U-turn
  • West Lancashire – Election taking place following U-turn
  • West Oxfordshire
  • Winchester
  • Worthing – Election taking place following U-turn

HULL, ENGLAND - MAY 01: A sign reading "Polling Station" is seen during local elections on May 01, 2025 in Hull, England. Voters across England will elect four regional mayors and 1,750 councillors on Thursday, 1 May 2025. (Photo by Ian Forsyth/Getty Images)
Labour and the Tories are both defending thousands of seats (Picture: by Ian Forsyth/Getty Images)

London boroughs

  • Barking & Dagenham
  • Barnet
  • Bexley
  • Brent
  • Bromley
  • Camden
  • Croydon
  • Ealing
  • Enfield
  • Greenwich
  • Hackney
  • Hammersmith & Fulham
  • Haringey
  • Harrow
  • Havering
  • Hillingdon
  • Hounslow
  • Islington
  • Kensington & Chelsea
  • Kingston upon Thames
  • Lambeth
  • Lewisham
  • Merton
  • Newham
  • Redbridge
  • Richmond upon Thames
  • Southwark
  • Sutton
  • Tower Hamlets
  • Waltham Forest
  • Wandsworth
  • Westminster

Metropolitan boroughs

  • Barnsley
  • Birmingham
  • Bolton
  • Bradford
  • Bury
  • Calderdale
  • Coventry
  • Dudley
  • Gateshead
  • Kirklees
  • Knowsley
  • Leeds
  • Manchester
  • Newcastle upon Tyne
  • North Tyneside
  • Oldham
  • Rochdale
  • Salford
  • Sandwell
  • Sefton
  • Sheffield
  • Solihull
  • South Tyneside
  • St Helens
  • Stockport
  • Sunderland
  • Tameside
  • Trafford
  • Wakefield
  • Walsall
  • Wigan
  • Wolverhampton

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Thomas Krych/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock (16066044be) Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government STEVE REED, leaves 10 Downing Street after a Cabinet Meeting. Cabinet Meeting In Downing Street, London, England, United Kingdom - 09 Dec 2025
Steve Reed has been criticised for his handling of the May 7 elections (Picture: Thomas Krych/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock)

Unitary authorities

  • Blackburn with Darwen – Election taking place following U-turn
  • East Surrey (newly-created authority)
  • Halton
  • Hartlepool
  • Hull
  • Isle of Wight
  • Milton Keynes
  • North East Lincolnshire
  • Peterborough – Election taking place following U-turn
  • Plymouth
  • Portsmouth
  • Reading
  • Southampton
  • Southend-on-Sea
  • Swindon
  • Thurrock – Election taking place following U-turn
  • West Surrey (newly-created authority)
  • Wokingham

Electoral officials are now warning that they face an ‘uphill struggle’ to be ready to conduct the elections in the regions which expected not to hold them this year.

The Association of Electoral Administrators (AEA), which provides training for electoral officials in the UK, said on Monday it was ‘extremely disappointed’ that months of ‘essential planning time’ had been lost.

The AEA’s deputy chief executive Laura Lock said returning officers, electoral registration officers, and electoral administration teams ‘face an ”face an uphill struggle to catch up to where they should be’.

She added: ‘They have paused planning to avoid unnecessary cost, but this means they are now playing catch-up.’

However on Tuesday Lock was more optimistic that election stationary and polling booth venues would be ready in time for the May 7 election day.

She said: ‘The sector as a whole is pulling together and rapidly getting back up to speed to administer these elections.’

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