Where are elections taking place in the South West?

Martyn OatesSouth West political editor
BBC Aerial panorama of Tamar & Hamoaze, Plymouth, Devon, showing Devonport dockyard and Plymouth SoundBBC
Nineteen seats on Plymouth City Council are up for election

You need to look very carefully at the map to find somewhere in south-west England with an election this May.

Only voters in Plymouth and Exeter will get to vote on 7 May - and for just a third of the seats on each of the city councils.

This is the biggest set of elections since Labour swept to power in Westminster in the 2024 general election.

Voters will have their say on the make-up of the Scottish and Welsh Parliaments and 5,000 council seats across the country.

Both councils in the South West with elections are currently controlled by Labour, but the two administrations are in very different positions going into this election.

Aerial view of Exeter
Thirteen of the 39 seats on Exeter City Council are up for election

Labour has a huge majority on Plymouth City Council and will still be in charge whatever happens on 7 May.

By contrast, the party's longstanding control of Exeter City Council is now vulnerable.

With Labour holding 22 of the total 39 seats, a few losses would see the council slip into no overall control.

The dramatic upheaval in last year's Devon County Council elections has given Labour much food for thought.

All seven of its county seats in Exeter were lost – four to Reform UK and three to the Green Party.

The Greens have also been making inroads in city council elections for some time and currently hold six seats.

Reform won a seat in a by-election last year and have another councillor who was formerly a Conservative.

The Conservatives themselves have just two seats while the Liberal Democrats hold four.

While there is no prospect of regime change in Plymouth, the parties' fortunes will be keenly watched.

The Conservatives - Labour's traditional rivals in Plymouth - are now reduced to seven seats.

There are also five Independents and two Greens.

Reform and the Lib Dems have one councillor each - although both were originally elected for other parties.

Indeed, while the Lib Dems dominate much of the region, it is decades since one was elected to Plymouth City Council.

A polling station sign outside a community centre in Exeter. The sign is white with polling station written in black block capitals. An additional sign saying "way in" with an arrow pointing towards the door on the left is attached to the main sign.
Voters in Plymouth and Exeter will be heading to the polls on 7 May

What does the future hold?

These elections almost certainly mark the end of an era.

The government is redrawing the local government map of Devon to replace the county and district councils with new unitary authorities.

The future shape of the county's local government is due to be announced in the summer with the first elections to the new authorities expected next year.

Exeter City Council is a district council so is bound to disappear.

As an existing unitary authority Plymouth could conceivably continue with its present boundaries - or it may be subsumed into something new and bigger.

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