Norfolk County Council produced a hung result on Thursday 7 May 2026. Reform UK won 40 of 84 seats, three short of the 43-seat majority threshold. Great Yarmouth First, the localist slate fielded by Restore Britain's Rupert Lowe, took 9 seats in Great Yarmouth and surrounding divisions; the Liberal Democrats took 13, the Greens 12, the Conservatives 8, with the remaining seats distributed across independents and smaller groupings.
PollCheck had projected Reform control of Norfolk, Essex and Suffolk in its April outlook , forecasts that materialised in Essex (53 of 78) and Suffolk (41 of 70) but missed in Norfolk. The Restore Britain decision to field 13 candidates as Great Yarmouth First was the variable PollCheck's uniform-swing model could not capture: the slate split the right-of-centre vote in Great Yarmouth, Caister and Lothingland, taking enough seats from Reform's projected pile to flip the council from majority to hung. Rupert Lowe, expelled from Reform UK in 2025, has now demonstrated that a localist breakaway can deny Reform single-party control in its strongest counties.
The coalition arithmetic on 84 seats is constrained. No two-party combination including Reform reaches the 43-seat threshold without bridging Reform and the Liberal Democrats, Greens or Conservatives, none of whom have signalled willingness to coalesce. Norfolk will likely operate as a minority Reform administration, governing without a working majority on every contested vote. In practice, that means each council motion, including the budget, the local plan, and adult social care commissioning, requires either a confidence-and-supply arrangement with one of the smaller groups or vote-by-vote whip negotiation across the chamber.
The wider read is that the Restore Britain mechanism, fielding a localist slate where Reform polls strongly enough to win outright, is now an instrument any disaffected former Reform organiser can replicate. Derbyshire, North Yorkshire and other counties where Reform's MRP projection placed it within five seats of a majority become the next candidates for the same split. The Reform UK whip's response to Norfolk, whether to engage with Lowe or cordon the slate sanitaire, sets the template for how Reform handles internal breakaways through the rest of the council cycle.
