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UK Local Elections 2026
26APR

Reform takes Salford ward off Labour

3 min read
13:33UTC

Michael James Felse won 676 votes against Labour's Catherine Goodyer on 643 in the Barton and Winton ward by-election on Wednesday 22 April, giving Reform UK its first seat on Salford City Council on a turnout of 17.82%.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

A 33-vote margin in Salford put Reform on the council and Labour 29 points down on its 2024 share.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Salford is a city in Greater Manchester. Its city council has been controlled by Labour for most of the past 80 years. On 22 April, a single ward (local area) on the council held a by-election , a one-off vote to fill a seat that became vacant when a Labour councillor died. Reform UK won that by-election by 33 votes: 676 to 643. Only about 18% of eligible voters cast a ballot, meaning the entire contest was decided by a small number of people. This was Reform UK's first-ever seat on Salford Council. One ward does not change council control; Salford remains Labour-controlled. But the result is real ballot-box evidence, distinct from polling projections, that Reform can win votes in traditional Labour strongholds in northern England, where Labour holds its largest stockpile of council seats.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Salford's political geography is a product of the post-industrial north-west: a borough where Labour's dominance since 1945 was built on trade union membership, which has declined from roughly 50% of the workforce in the 1970s to under 20% in 2026. The cultural issues that drive Reform's vote , immigration, public order, NHS waiting times , poll at above-national levels in Salford's higher-deprivation wards, which is where Barton and Winton sits.

The 17.82% turnout is structurally low for a standalone by-election, favouring a highly motivated Reform base over a Labour electorate that tends to rely on social infrastructure (union networks, community organisers) to mobilise at higher rates. The 7 May main election will run at significantly higher turnout, making the Salford by-election result an unreliable direct predictor of council control.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The Salford result is the first live data point confirming PollCheck's projection that Reform can gain seats in Labour metropolitan heartlands, adding credibility to projections of Reform control in Sunderland and Wakefield (ID:2411).

First Reported In

Update #5 · 11 Days to Go: Six-of-six, RPA dies, Welsh lead flips

Salford City Council· 26 Apr 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Reform takes Salford ward off Labour
The win sits outside the PollCheck projected map for Reform council gains, supplying a directional signal that the urban Labour collapse measured in Westminster polling is reaching northern English wards the projections did not flag.
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