in

Mapped: All the local elections that have been postponed – check to see if you can still vote


Dozens of councils across England have postponed local elections this year, affecting millions of voters across the country.

On Thursday, local government secretary Steve Reed confirmed 29 of the 136 council elections due to be held this year will now be delayed until 2027.

The government has explained that the delays were requested by local councils due to a lack of capacity amid an ongoing overhaul of local government structures.

Although Mr Reed told the Commons the “vast majority” of polls will take place in May as planned, the government has faced criticism from political rivals that Labour is “scared of the voters”.

The delays come amid Labour plans to reorganise local government in England by scrapping two-tier authorities and merging them into single unitary councils by 2028.

Last month, the government said some 63 council areas could postpone elections until 2027 after some told ministers they lacked the capacity to reorganise in time.

On Thursday, Mr Reed confirmed his decision to bring forward legislation to postpone 29 of the elections.

City councils in Lincoln, Exeter, Norwich, Peterborough and Preston are among the authorities where votes will not take place on 7 May, alongside several districts such as Cannock Chase, Harlow, Welwyn Hatfield and West Lancashire.

Polling day has also been postponed for county council voters in East Sussex, West Sussex, Norfolk and Suffolk.

Mr Reed said: “I have received one further representation this morning and I will consider, then report back to the house on my decision.

“In all other areas, council elections will go ahead as planned, many having offered no evidence that it would delay reorganisation in their areas.

Critics have said the postponement is undemocratic (PA Archive)

“This means, of the 136 local elections across England that were scheduled for May, the vast majority will go ahead as planned.”

The Electoral Commission has criticised the delays, saying it risks “damaging public confidence”. The decision has also prompted claims from opposition parties that the postponements are politically motivated.

James Cleverly, the shadow housing, communities and local government secretary, accused Mr Reed of trying to score a “political gotcha”.

He said: “It is clear what he wants – he wants to cancel all these elections. So, why does he not simply say so? Why does he not have the courage of his own convictions?”

Nigel Farage – who launched plans for a judicial review in an attempt to make the elections go ahead – has accused communities secretary Steve Reed of an “abuse of power”.

“We will use every means possible, starting with our judicial review,” he added.

Labour is facing a potential wipeout at the upcoming local elections, with Mr Farage’s Reform UK surging in polls across the country.

Mr Reed denied the government had imposed the delays and said: “To those who say we’ve cancelled all the elections, we haven’t. To those who say it’s all Labour councils, it isn’t.

“I’ve asked, I’ve listened, and I’ve acted. No messing about, no playing politics, just getting on with the job of making local government work better for local people.”


Source: UK Politics - www.independent.co.uk

Tagcloud:

Will Andy Burnham stand as an MP and what would a challenge to Starmer look like?

Voices: ‘Andy Burnham could save Labour’: Readers back Manchester mayor’s potential Westminster return