Local elections: voters head to the polls across England – UK politics live | Politics

Local elections: voters head to the polls across England – UK politics live | Politics

Voters head to polls in local elections in England

Good morning. It’s started. People are already voting in the 2025 local elections. They are England-only, and there are around 1,600 council seats up for grabs (in some other years, there are more than 8,000 seats up for election in England alone), and so in some respects it’s a minor set of local elections. But you will never find a political commentator willing to say an election is not important and this year there is plenty to get excited about. That is partly because it is Labour’s first electoral test since the general election (and no governing party in modern times has seen its popularity collapse so quickly, as John Curtice pointed out this week). But mostly it is because two-party politics has collapsed, there are now five political parties that are competitive in England and the rise of Reform UK means a realignment of the right is already happening. These elections will show how developed that process is.

Today people are voting for:

  • More than 1,600 councillors in 14 county councils, eight unitary authorities, one metropolitan council, and in the Isles of Scily.

  • Six mayors – two of them are regional mayors where Labour won last time (West of England, and Cambridgeshire and Peterborough), two of them are regional mayors where elections are being held for the first time (Greater Lincolnshire, and Hull and East Yorkshire), and two of them are single-authority mayors where Labour won last time (Doncaster, and North Tyneside).

Here is Peter Walker’s morning preview story.

And, in his First Edition briefing, Archie Bland sets out what would count as a good result for all the main parties.

On polling day itself not a lot normally happens. But we’ve always got dogs at polling stations.

A dog walker passing a polling station in Runcorn, Britain, this morning.
A dog walker passing a polling station in Runcorn, Britain, this morning. Photograph: Adam Vaughan/EPA

And there may be some non-election politics too. Here is the agenda for the day.

9.30am: Jonathan Reynolds, business secretary, takes questions in the Commons.

After 10.30am: Lucy Powell, leader of the Commons, takes questions on next week’s Commons business.

11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.

Noon: John Swinney, Scotland’s first minister, takes questions from MSPs.

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Key events

Unite urges Birmingham council to ‘come to its senses’ ahead of resumed talks on resolving bin strike

Sharon Graham, the Unite general secretary, said Birmingham council needed to “come to its senses” ahead of talks today intended to resolve the bin strike in the city.

As PA Media reports, Graham is leading the union’s negotiating team in talks under the auspices of the conciliation service Acas over the council’s plans to delete the role of waste recycling and collection officer. The union says this will lead to some workers losing up to £8,000 a year, but the council says it is “undertaking a fair and transparent job evaluation process of the driver/team leader role, working with all trade union partners to ensure a fair outcome”.

Speaking outside Unite’s regional office in Birmingham before the talks resumed today, Graham said the city council’s leader John Cotton needed to be involved in the negotiations – something he has previously made clear he would not do.

She said:

We want the council to come to their senses today. We want the leader of the council John Cotton to come into the negotiating room. He has not yet been in the negotiating room and he needs to be so we can get this dispute solved.

He is the leader of the council, this is happening to his residents. This is happening across the board, there’s rubbish piling up. When you’re the leader, then you must take the accountability and the responsibility.

Graham said Unite wanted “to do a deal” but that it was up to the council. She went on:

Forty-eight hours ago, they announce the drivers who are likely to be losing £8,000. Why would you do that 48 hours before talks are due to take place? I hope that we can come to a deal, we’re here to do a deal, but really the ball is in the council’s court here.

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