
"Reform needed to win 38 seats to take control of the council and has now secured 58. Among the Labour casualties to lose their seat was outgoing council leader Michael Mordey. Newly elected Reform councillor for Washington North Paul Donaghy said the results showed a clear message in Sunderland but he also believed his party received votes because people were "unhappy with the national picture"."
""We need to make sure we do not betray that trust and we need to deliver for the people of Sunderland and for Washington and Houghton," he said. The former Conservative politician said it would be a "learning curve" for many of his new colleagues who had never been councillors before. "We are under no illusion that we have a big task ahead of us," he said."
""But we are ready, we are equipped. We have a lot of experienced candidates who will hopefully become councillors and their background is exactly what we need." Donaghy said Reform had broken the two-party system. Voter turnout was 40.5% in Sunderland, which is considerably higher than the 30% turnout recorded during the area's last election in 2024."
"Labour's Sunderland Central MP Lewis Atkinson said the party's losses in the city were down to unhappiness with national politics, not the local Labour leadership. He said people were "fed up" that the cost of living had not improved over the last seven years, which was "really, really tough for any party that is in power". "I am really sad we have lost some really good Labour councillors in Sunderland tonight," he said."
Reform UK secured control of Sunderland City Council by winning 58 seats, surpassing the 38 needed to take charge and ending more than 50 years of Labour control. Outgoing Labour council leader Michael Mordey lost his seat. Newly elected Reform councillor Paul Donaghy said voters sent a clear message and that support reflected unhappiness with the national picture, adding that the party must deliver for Sunderland and local areas. He described the transition as a learning curve for new councillors and said Reform has experienced candidates. Voter turnout in Sunderland was 40.5%, higher than 30% in 2024. Labour MP Lewis Atkinson attributed losses to national factors and cost-of-living frustration rather than local leadership performance.
Read at www.bbc.com
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]