Summary

  • Elections in 16 councils across South

  • Tories hold councils including Havant, Winchester. Gosport. and West Oxfordshire

  • Labour gains in Portsmouth, which stays no overall control

  • Labour holds Reading, Southampton and Oxford

  • Southampton Labour and Conservative leaders both lose seats

  1. Oxford City Council election resultspublished at 09:40 British Summer Time 4 May 2018

    The political make-up of Oxford City Council is now:

    Labour 36; Liberal Democrats 9; Green 2; Independent 1.

    Half of the 48 seats were up for election, with Labour winning two seats from the Greens.

    More detailed results can be found here, external.

  2. Wokingham Borough Council election resultspublished at 09:37 British Summer Time 4 May 2018

    The political make-up of Wokingham Borough Council is now:

    Conservatives 42; Liberal Democrats 8; Labour 3; Independent 1.

    The Conservatives lost four councillors in Wokingham, including their Deputy Leader David Lee.

  3. Slough Borough Council election resultspublished at 09:37 British Summer Time 4 May 2018

    The political make-up of Slough Borough Council is now:

    Labour 34; Conservative 7; Independent 1.

    Labour gained two seats from the Conservatives in the Upton and Wexham Lea wards.

    Fourteen out of 42 seats were up for election, with a third of seats elected every four years.

    The overall turnout was 31.5% with 29,679 votes cast.

  4. Reading Borough Council election resultspublished at 09:32 British Summer Time 4 May 2018

    The political make-up of Reading Borough Council is now: Labour 30; Conservative 12; Green Party 3; Liberal Democrat 1.

    Eighteen out of 46 seats were up for election yesterday, with a third of seats elected every four years.

  5. Gosport Borough Council resultspublished at 09:06 British Summer Time 4 May 2018

    The political make-up of Gosport Borough Council is now: Conservative 18; Liberal Democrats 14; Labour 2.

    Every two years, half of the seats on the council come up for election.

    This year the total was 18 because of a resignation before the election, the authority said.

    For more detailed results click here, external.

  6. Portsmouth City Council resultspublished at 09:04 British Summer Time 4 May 2018

    The political make-up of Portsmouth City Council is now: 19 Conservative; 16 Liberal Democrats; 6 Labour; and 1 non-aligned independent.

    One seat in each of the council's 14 wards was up for election this year.Prior to the election the council comprised: 20 Conservatives; 15 Liberal Democrats; 2 UKIP; 2 Labour; 2 non-aligned independent; 1 vacant seat.

  7. Havant Borough Council resultspublished at 09:04 British Summer Time 4 May 2018

    The Conservative party remains the biggest political group at Havant Borough Council after winning 13 of 15 seats up for election, gaining two seats from UKIP.

    A total of 52 candidates contested the 15 seats, one in each ward, with an extra seat available due to a vacancy in Hayling West.

    The Conservatives now have 30 seats, Labour has two, the Independents have two, UKIP has two and the Lib Dems have one.

    The overall turn-out at the polls was 28.78%, the council said.

  8. Conservative position in Portsmouth 'precarious'published at 09:01 British Summer Time 4 May 2018

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    A meeting will be held in just over a week to decide what happens next.

  9. Tory-Lib Dem collabortion 'very unlikely' in Portsmouthpublished at 08:49 British Summer Time 4 May 2018

    Hannah Bewley
    Political reporter, BBC Radio Solent

    The Conservatives are still the largest group in Portsmouth, but don't have a majority.

    Whereas before they were able to run the council in this way with support from UKIP - that party lost all its seats.

    Labour have reason to celebrate as they started the night with two councillors and ended with six.

    The Liberal Democrats are the second largest party, and the numbers are very tight on who could work with who to wield the power.

    However, when asked about the Lib Dems working with the Conservatives, Gerald Vernon Jackson said a working relationship was "very unlikely, in reality".

  10. Unseated Labour council leader 'looking for new job'published at 08:36 British Summer Time 4 May 2018

    Simon Letts who lost his Bitterne seat on Southampton City Council said he was looking for a new job after almost two decades in local government.

    Simon LettsImage source, Southampton City Council

    Speaking on BBC Radio Solent he said: "I'll have to go away and reflect on that, I imagine I'll have to find some sort of paid employment.

    "If anybody is out there that needs an ex-council leader as an employee, get in touch," he said.

  11. Labour lose Oxford seatpublished at 08:28 British Summer Time 4 May 2018

    There were no big surprises in Oxford where Labour kept control of the city council and gained a seat overall.

    But the party did suffer a blow in Quarry and Risinghurst where Roz Smith beat Dee Sinclair to take the seat.

    Andrew Gant, leader of the Lib Dem group on the council, believes it's the first time Labour has lost an Oxford City Council seat for more than a decade.

    A good fact if true, we'll get our fact checkers on the case and let you know!

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  12. 'Delight' for Portsmouth South Labour MPpublished at 08:03 British Summer Time 4 May 2018

    Labour MP for Portsmouth South Stephen Morgan says he is "absolutely delighted" with the local election results.

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  13. Labour and Tories profit equally from UKIPpublished at 07:53 British Summer Time 4 May 2018

    Professor of politics at Oxford University, Ian McLean has provided his assessment of UKIP and the Liberal Democrat performance.

    "It is very variable across the piece, Lib Dems formed the opposition in Oxford City Council, as they have done for a number of years.

    "The Lib Dems should have, or it could be argued, they should have been making big picks ups in remain voting parts of the country... But it's not been a general thing.

    "As for the collapse of UKIP, most of the evidence is that the Conservatives have benefited approximately equally."

  14. 'Results prove nothing' warns professorpublished at 07:44 British Summer Time 4 May 2018

    BBC Radio Oxford

    Conservatives celebrating in Swindon
    Image caption,

    Prof McLean says the Tories holding Swindon fitted a pattern also seen in West Oxfordshire

    You can be sure each political party will be picking over last night's results in detail to understand where they succeeded and failed.

    But they are misguided if they try to predict how they might have fared in a general election, says Ian McLean, professor of politics at the University of Oxford.

    "People say 'if there was a general election what do these results prove', I want to say absolutely nothing", Prof McLean told BBC Radio Oxford.

    That warning aside, he said there was a pattern of areas which chose to leave the EU voting Conservative and areas which voted to remain backing Labour.

    He mentioned West Oxfordshire and Swindon, where the Tories held control, as examples.

    "Labour was quite confident of winning the council [in Swindon] and they failed to do so... And Swindon was a leave voting area."

  15. Parties maintain control of Oxfordshire councilspublished at 06:56 British Summer Time 4 May 2018

    Bethan Phillips
    Political reporter, BBC Radio Oxford

    Media caption,

    Round-up of results and reaction

    In West Oxfordshire there was disappointment for the ruling Conservatives - they lost five seats in total to Labour and Lib Dems.

    Meanwhile, Labour also did well in Oxford - the party has a strong majority in the city and last night gained another seat.

    Counting for Cherwell District Council is due to take place later today.

  16. Reading round-uppublished at 06:55 British Summer Time 4 May 2018

    Matt Graveling
    BBC South Today Oxford

    A round-up of results and reaction at the Reading Borough Council count.

    Media caption,

    A round-up of results and reaction at Reading Borough Council

  17. Weymouth by-election resultpublished at 06:24 British Summer Time 4 May 2018

    There were no council elections in Dorset this time round - they were postponed because elections to the two new unitary authorities in the county will take place in May next year.However, there was a Weymouth and Portland Borough Council by-election in the West Borough ward - it was won by Conservative Richard Nickinson - who took the seat from the Greens.

  18. Gosport turnout figures after mandatory voter IDpublished at 05:53 British Summer Time 4 May 2018

    Polling station

    Turnout in Gosport does not appear to have been affected by the town taking part in a pilot for mandatory voter ID.

    Voters had to take official identification, such as a passport or driver's licence, to the polling station.

    This year's turnout was 33%. It was 32% in the 2016 local elections and 33.5% in 2014.

  19. No change at Wokingham and Sloughpublished at 05:39 British Summer Time 4 May 2018

    Patrick O'Hagan
    BBC Berkshire political reporter

    There’ve been no huge swings in either Wokingham or Slough.

    In darkest blue Wokingham the Conservatives have lost three seats, one of those belonging to their deputy leader David Lee. Gasps echoed round the count as that most unexpected of results result came through.

    That still leaves the Tories with a huge majority though with 42 councillors as opposed to the Liberal Democrats’s eight.

    In Slough the ruling Labour group put in another strong showing to increase their majority by two, both at the expense of the Conservatives.

    Labour now hold an overall lead of 27 seats over their rivals.

  20. Labour hails Portsmouth advancespublished at 05:38 British Summer Time 4 May 2018

    UKIP lost six seats, Labour gained four seats and the Conservatives and Lib Dems gained one apiece in the local elections in which a third of the authority's seats were contested.

    Labour leader Stephen Morgan MP hailed the results as showing the party was "gaining seats in places we've never won before".

    Media caption,

    Stephen Morgan MP on local election results