Published on 07/05/2026 – 12:27 GMT+2•Updated
12:28
Voters across Britain are casting their ballots in local elections today, choosing councils and mayors in parts of England, and parliaments in Scotland and Wales.
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The vote comes at a tumultuous time in British politics, with the long-standing dominance of Labour and the Conservatives increasingly under threat from two insurgent parties: Nigel Farage’s Reform UK and the Greens, under leader Zack Polanski.
Despite limited experience in the day-to-day mechanics of local government — from waste collection to road maintenance — both parties have built support by capitalising on national and international issues.
Reform UK has focused heavily on Brexit and immigration, while the Greens have mobilised voters around environmental concerns, pro-European sentiment and, increasingly, the war in Gaza.
With Prime Minister Keir Starmer facing plummeting approval ratings and the Conservatives still struggling to recover from their 2024 election defeat, many voters appear increasingly ready to look beyond Britain’s two traditional governing parties.
Polling projections suggest Labour could lose a major chunk of its local council seats, while also facing mounting pressure in its traditional strongholds in Wales and Scotland.
Although Starmer is not personally on the ballot, a poor result for Labour could add to his domestic issues – and potentially prompt a leadership challenge – while also complicating his hopes for a broader reset in UK-EU relations.
Yet the elections also expose a deeper political contradiction, a decade after the Brexit referendum. Polling shows that a strong majority of British voters now back rejoining the European Union, with support particularly high among Labour and Green voters.
At the same time, Reform UK — one of the country’s most explicitly pro-Brexit parties — is enjoying a sharp rise in support, arguing that Brexit itself was not the problem, but rather the way it was implemented. Most polls show the party ahead of its rivals and the likely winner of the next general election.
So, while these elections may appear to be about local services and potholes, they also reveal a country still deeply unsettled in its broader political direction.
Watch the Euronews video in the player above for the full story.
