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UK Local Elections 2026
26APR

Reform loses 22 councillors in 14 days

3 min read
13:33UTC

Reform UK shed 22 councillors in the fortnight after 7 May (five lost seats, eight resignations, four defections, five suspensions), at an annualised rate of roughly 27%, against the 4-6% baseline NatCen records for newly elected parties.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

The departure rate runs roughly five times the NatCen baseline for newly elected parties, with active defections driving the figure.

Reform UK lost 22 councillors in the 14 days after polling against an elected base of 2,126 , per political scientist Mark Pack's detailed tally. The breakdown runs five lost seats, eight resignations, four defections, five suspensions. At 1.57 departures per day the annualised rate sits at roughly 573, or 27% of the elected base, against Reform's own projected 10% that would have implied 200 over a year.

The NatCen Local Election Cohort Study baseline for any newly elected party runs 4-6% in the first year. Reform's 14-day rate annualised is roughly five times that figure. Defections, the rarest of the four categories, are the qualitative signal: movement to Restore Britain and to independents indicates ideological rejection rather than personal exit. Suspensions are the second analytical signal because suspended councillors continue to count in the headline seat total but cannot vote on cabinet or committee decisions. The party's effective working numbers on affected councils have therefore dropped further than the public count shows.

This matters for the live LGR judicial reviews running in Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk. Committee balances on the three challenger councils are shifting before the Administrative Court has heard a substantive application. If the rate holds to 22 a fortnight, roughly 40 to 50 will have departed by the end of June, against a party simultaneously running three judicial reviews and a Standards Commissioner investigation into its leader. Defections are also the category most likely to compound: each public departure produces evidence other waverers cite as justification.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Reform UK won over 2,000 council seats on 7 May 2026, making it one of the biggest council forces in England. But since then, the party has been losing councillors quickly. In just two weeks, 22 have gone: some lost their seats in recounts, some resigned, some were suspended by the party for misconduct, and four switched to other parties entirely. This rate of loss is much higher than normal. Research organisation NatCen found that newly elected parties typically lose around 4-6% of their councillors in their first year. Reform is currently on track to lose about 27% in a year, which is five times the normal rate. This matters because Reform controls several councils, including Essex, and is fighting court battles to block government restructuring plans. If Reform keeps losing councillors, its majorities on those councils could disappear before the court cases are resolved.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The structural cause runs through Reform's candidate recruitment mechanism. The party's 2026 candidate slate was assembled from its activist and donor networks rather than through local Conservative or UKIP infrastructure that might have filtered for prior governance experience.

HuffPost UK and HOPE not hate's pre-election reporting documented Reform's vetting as minimal: cold-call recruitment of sitting councillors from rival parties five days before the nomination deadline. Candidates recruited under those conditions have no loyalty to the party organisation and no pre-existing integration into council governance culture.

The suspension category reveals a second structural problem. Suspensions follow disciplinary processes within the party, not the council. A councillor who holds a council seat but is suspended from the party group cannot participate in group decisions, attends council as an independent, and reduces the group's effective voting bloc on committee decisions.

Reform suspended five councillors within 14 days of polling, meaning the party's disciplinary machinery moved faster than its governance onboarding. The suspensions preceded any vote on substantive council policy, suggesting the triggers were pre-election conduct discovered post-election rather than post-election governance failures.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If defections to Restore Britain continue at the current rate, Reform may lose working majorities on one or more of its 14 new councils before the LGR pre-action deadlines resolve, complicating the legal challenge's political mandate.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    Each publicly named defection produces evidence other wavering councillors can cite, creating a compounding dynamic where attrition generates further attrition at an accelerating rate through the summer recess.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Opportunity

    Labour and Liberal Democrat council groups in No Overall Control councils have gained minority negotiating leverage at 61 councils as Reform majorities thin, opening dealmaking opportunities on committees and planning decisions.

    Short term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #9 · Three constitutional contests open

Mark Pack· 22 May 2026
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