Massive win for Tory Cleveland PCC candidatepublished at 14:35 British Summer Time 7 May 2021
Former councillor Steve Turner wins with nearly double the number of votes of his nearest rival.
Read MoreFormer councillor Steve Turner wins with nearly double the number of votes of his nearest rival.
Read MoreThe Conservatives gain the council after two winners were decided by picking lots out of a box.
Read MoreConservative Steve Turner easily beat off the other candidates for the Cleveland police and crime commissioner.
Here are the full results:
Steve Turner (C) 74,023
Matthew Storey (Lab) 39,467
Barrie Cooper (Ind) 16,667
Christopher Jones (LD) 6,540
The Conservative candidate has been elected as the Cleveland police and crime commissioner.
Steve Turner, a political advisor and former Redcar and Cleveland borough councillor, gained almost twice as many votes as his nearest rival, Labour's Matt Storey, to win in the first round.
Lisa Oldroyd, who was appointed as acting PCC when Barry Coppinger stepped down in in September, did not stand.
Votes are being counted for the Northumbria police and crime commissioner (PCC) role.
Counting started about an hour ago and a declaration is expected this afternoon between 15:00 and 16:00.
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Results are being counted for the Cleveland Police and Crime Commissioner.
Early indications are that it's good news for the Conservatives, and bad news for Labour.
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Results are still being counted for other council elections, as well as for two mayors and four police and crime commissioners, and it may not be until Monday before they are all announced.
Ones due today are the Cleveland and Northumbria PCCs, and the Tees Valley Mayor.
North Tyneside Council could be today or Saturday.
On Saturday there will be the Durham PCC, North Tyneside Mayor, and Durham County Council along with Hartlepool Council.
All eyes are likely to be on the latter in the light of the Tories winning the parliamentary seat.
The council's 36 seats are up for grabs, and currently with no overall control, it is led by a coalition involving Conservatives, all manner of independents and other groups.
Cumbria PCC results are then due to be announced on Monday.
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Read MoreLord Peter Mandelson, the former Labour MP for Hartlepool, has told BBC Radio 4's Today programme he feels "fairly gutted" at the result in Hartlepool and also "a mild fury".
The Conservatives beat Labour, with a Tory MP - Jill Mortimer - elected for the first time in the current constituency's history
He said: "I feel fairly gutted by this result that will obviously certainly please Boris Johnson.
"I feel sad, disappointment above all, for the excellent campaign workers and party staff and volunteers and our excellent candidate, Paul Williams, who fought such a strong campaign."
He added: "I also feel, I have to say, a mild fury, that the last 10 years of what we have been doing in the Labour Party nationally and locally has brought us to this result, because that is above all fundamentally an explanation of what's happened today."
He said he had been knocking on doors in Hartlepool during the campaign and said he knew the reasons for Labour's defeat - "If I really had to boil them down to two things I would say they were two Cs - Covid and Corbyn.
"With a bit of Brexit, previous Brexit Party voters backing the man, Boris Johnson, who delivered them Brexit, and also promises of a large dollop of Tory Government money thrown in for good measure.
"All this as a whole turned out to be too heady a cocktail for Labour's campaign to take on."
The Tories win five vacant seats on the council and defend three seats in Redcar.
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Read MoreHartlepool's new Conservative MP has been congratulated by the two other female North East MPs.
Jill Mortimer is the first Conservative to gain the seat since the constituency was created in its current form in 1974.
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Congratulations have been flooding in to Jill Mortimer after she won the Hartlepool seat.
It is the first time a Conservative has gained the seat since the constituency was created in its current form in 1974, and the first woman MP to represent the town.
Defence Secretary Ben Wallace tweeted congratulations, and said "fashionable left elites" were paying the price.
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Northumberland is a "funny place" according to the council leader, and he was not talking about the election count, where for the second time running dead heats had to be decided by a draw.
Speaking after the Conservatives took overall control, with a majority of one, Glen Sanderson so described the area because it "tends not to follow national trends".
However, in this case, it did - with the Tories gaining seats, as they have in many places elsewhere.
In Northumberland's case he put it down to the council's record in doing "important, every day stuff".
He said: "I think it's because people realise in troubled times we've shown leadership, we've shown courage and our staff have worked fantastically well providing frontline services.
"I think our record speaks for itself, and that's the reason."
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As local election votes were counted on Thursday evening, it emerged rivals have put plans in motion to try to replace the Labour party's figurehead, Nick Forbes.
Byker councillor Nick Kemp, who quit the council’s cabinet last summer in a split from Labour’s leaders, confirmed he is putting himself forward to become leader.
it will be decided at the Labour group’s annual general meeting on Monday evening.
Mr Forbes (pictured) said: “I have both a strong track record of delivery and ambitious ideas for the future to put to the Labour group.”
Mr Kemp has sat on the council since 2002 and had previously had responsibility for issues such as trading standards and bin collections in his role as cabinet member for environmental and regulatory services.
Daniel Holland
Local Democracy Reporter
Labour lost two seats in Newcastle and council leader Nick Forbes is to face a leadership challenge next Monday from one of his former cabinet members, Nick Kemp.
The city’s ruling party, which still boasts a heavy majority on the council, saw two seats in the outer west of Newcastle fall to the Newcastle Independents party.
Labour manage to hold off challenges from the Liberal Democrats and the Conservatives’ long run without an election win in Newcastle continued.
The Green Party’s hopes of securing a first seat on the city council were also dashed
There were 28 seats up for grabs - 18 were held by Labour, six held by the Lib Dems, two won by the Newcastle Independents, and two held by independents.
The overall political makeup of the council is now: Labour 52, Lib Dem 20, three Newcastle Independents and three independents.
If you're just joining us, good morning and here is a round-up of what has happened so far:
Laura Kuenssberg
Political editor
The rickety folding tables looked like they could hardly cope with the weight of votes for the Tory's candidate, and now elected MP Jill Mortimer, in Hartlepool.
The result: more evidence for the Conservatives that they are digging further and further into territory where once they were total outsiders.
They didn't just win here, they romped home.
Hartlepool, as it's constituted now, has never had a Tory MP. It's also unusual that governments win by-elections - they are often moments when voters remind the administration of the day who is really in charge.
Not this time.
Boris Johnson's party has also scooped up council seats in places like Harlow and Nuneaton, with swings - at what is still, remember, an early stage - that give the impression the Tories really are consolidating their dominance in England.
Despite a bumpy few weeks, it's a reminder for the Tory party of Mr Johnson's record as an election winner.
The Hartlepool result is not a surprise for Labour. And it's important to remember that about 10,000 people voted for the Brexit Party in 2019 there, and at an early glance it seemed many of those voters switched across to the Tories.
But that doesn't mean it's not a setback. The result is more evidence of the long term shift in politics where areas that had chosen Labour for decades were less and less convinced.
Here's the full breakdown of results in Hartlepool - there were 16 candidates:
Local Democracy Reporting Service
Chris Binding
Labour has kept control of South Tyneside Council.
The party lost four seats but easily retained control, taking 16 out of the 20 seats which were contested across the borough.
Now the council’s overall make-up is 44 Labour councillors, five independents, three Greens, one Conservative and Jeff Milburn who is listed on the council’s website as an Independent Conservative.
The council's leader Tracey Dixon, who retained her seat in Whitburn and Marsden with 1,337 votes, said she was “slightly disappointed” with the result.
She said: “We were hoping that we would retain 20 Labour councillors but unfortunately we have lost four seats and that isn’t for the want of the candidates trying, it’s been a very difficult year for this year’s election."