Reform UK won its first seat on Salford City Council on Wednesday 22 April, taking the Barton and Winton ward by-election from Labour 1. Michael James Felse won 676 votes (34.9%) against Labour's Catherine Goodyer on 643 (33.2%). The Greens came third on 363 (18.7%, +4.0). Turnout was 17.82%, on a vacancy created by the death in February of Labour Councillor David Lancaster MBE.
Labour's vote share in the ward fell 29.1 points against the 2024 general election. Salford is a Labour metropolitan authority that retains 45 seats after the by-election; Reform now holds one. The ward is not on PollCheck's projected map for Reform council gains, which extends from Essex, Norfolk and Suffolk to Sunderland and Wakefield . Felse's win sits outside that projection.
A 33-vote margin on a 17.82% turnout is small in absolute terms and supplies a directional signal rather than a magnitude. Twelve days from full metropolitan elections, the signal matters: the urban Labour collapse logged in YouGov's Westminster polling, where the Greens at 17% pulled ahead of Labour at 16% on 19-20 April fieldwork, is converting to ballot results in northern English wards the projections did not flag. The Greens' third place in Salford on 18.7% mirrors the London-Manchester pattern logged in earlier briefings.
