Labour has strengthened its grip on power at Sunderland City Council following the latest local elections, after taking several seats from opposition parties.
Senior figures in Wearside’s ruling Labour Group said they were pleased with the results of the 2024 polls, which saw the Labour Party increase its overall majority on the city council.
As the polls closed at 10pm on Thursday, May 2, candidates flocked to Silksworth Community Pool, Tennis and Wellness Centre where votes were verified and counted for the 25 seats contested across the city.
After the final ward was declared in the early hours of Friday, Labour had successfully defended all its seats while gaining seats in several wards including St Anne’s, Washington South, Barnes, St Peter’s and Hendon.
The Wearside Liberal Democrats failed to gain a third seat from the Conservatives in Fulwell, and also lost a councillor in Hendon to a Labour candidate.
Three Labour cabinet members, Kevin Johnston, Kelly Chequer and John Price, also defended their seats in Copt Hill, Southwick, and Houghton respectively.
As the city council holds its elections by ‘thirds’, only 25 of 75 seats on the council were contested on May 2, with around half involving opposition parties defending their seats.
Although Conservatives defended several key seats in Fulwell, St Chad’s and St Michael’s. they were left counting their losses after losing wards to Labour in Barnes, St Anne’s and St Peter’s.
This represented a loss of three councillors, and the Conservatives losing their status as the official opposition on the council to the Liberal Democrats.
Councillor Phil Tye, chair of Sunderland Labour Group, welcomed the results.
Speaking at the local election count, he said: “It’s been a really, really good night for us to be able to take seats from the Liberal Democrats and Conservatives and we thank the residents of the city for that.
“There’s a significant amount of work that we’re doing in the city that residents can now see.
“The difference in the numbers in some of the wards where we were really chasing, their majorities and Conservative majorities are well down.
“It’s a ringing endorsement for the Labour Party that the country is ready for change.
“It’s about time the Conservatives move aside and lets have an election and start putting this country back together”.
After losing a large number of Labour councillors over elections in 2019 and 2021, the Labour Party started to reverse the trend in 2023 when it picked up three seats.
Following local election results on May 2, 2024, and two Lib Dem councillors defecting to Labour in late-2023, the Labour Party has increased its overall majority on Sunderland City Council further.
Cllr Tye said the 2024 local election results represented increased confidence in Labour and its agenda for the city, from major regeneration plans, to policies supporting the most vulnerable.
He added local election results were an early message from voters ahead of the General Election.
Although the Liberal Democrats lost a councillor in Hendon, the party successfully defended seats in Doxford, Millfield, Pallion and Sandhill.
The tightly-contested Pallion ward, which was previously held by Lib Dem Cllr Colin Nicholson before he defected to sit as an independent, saw Lib Dem candidate Stephen Donkin elected with a majority over Labour.
Cllr Paul Edgeworth, leader of the Wearside Liberal Democrats, said the results mean his party is once again the official opposition on the city council.
The Lib Dem leader said he was hopeful the party’s fortunes would improve in future, including in ‘all-out’ council elections in 2026.
These elections will effectively reset the council under new ward boundaries, with all 75 council seats across 25 wards up for grabs.
Cllr Edgeworth, who was re-elected to the Sandhill ward at the May 2, 2024, elections, said he was “over the moon” and thanked residents for their support.
Cllr Edgeworth added: “I think it’s clear that our message of hard work all year round and proper representation, holding the council to account and getting things done for local people has really paid off”.
Reform UK, which stood candidates in all city wards, and the Green Party, which stood candidates in the majority of city wards, did not see any new councillors elected.
Councillor Paul Donaghy, a former Conservative who defected to the party in early 2023, lost his Reform UK seat in Washington South to Labour.
Mr Donaghy, who is also standing as Reform UK’s candidate in the North East Mayoral Combined Authority elections due to be declared this week, praised Labour’s local election campaign in Washington South.
He said: “I’ve been in and out of Washington South and I admit I didn’t do as much as I could there, so I think the writing was on the wall.
“Labour have put a lot of effort into it and I have congratulated the candidate [Brandon Feeley] who has worked hard.
“If he hadn’t done anything and just got in for being the Labour candidate I would have had a grudge to bear but the guy has worked for the last year so fair play to him”.
Mr Donaghy added that the “tide was turning” and that local election results showed Reform UK was “becoming the second party in Sunderland”.
The overall results on May 2 for Sunderland City Council’s 25 wards saw 18 Labour, three Conservative and four Lib Dem councillors elected, or re-elected.
The council’s overall make-up is now 53 Labour councillors, 12 Liberal Democrats and 10 Conservatives.
You can find out which candidate won in your ward here:
BARNES
Alan Bilton (Reform UK) 415
Richard Dunn (Local Conservatives) 1,019
Tim Ellis-Dale (Lib Dems) 203
Fiona Tobin (Labour and Co-operative Party) 1,191*
Mark Tyers (Green Party) 162
CASTLE
Mia Coupland (Lib Dems) 98
Dawn Jackson (Green Party) 62
Christopher Rose (Local Conservatives) 160
Keith Samme (Reform UK) 346
Denny Wilson (Labour Party) 1,130*
COPT HILL
Nana Boddy (Lib Dems) 105
Benjamin Davies-Scott (Local Conservatives) 316
Kevin Johnston (Labour Party) 1,432*
Michael Lorraine (Reform UK) 395
Andrew Robertson (Green Party) 245
DOXFORD
Martha Bradley (Green Party) 94
George Brown (Local Conservatives) 200
Paul Gibson (Lib Dems) 1,441*
Liz Highmore (Labour Party) 831
Susan Lathan (Reform UK) 359
FULWELL
Michael Hartnack (Local Conservatives) 1,379*
Lisa Hilton (Reform UK) 303
Kevin Lynch (Green Party) 127
Miguel Smith (Lib Dems) 1,254
Andy Stafford (Labour Party) 791
HENDON
Lynda Andrews (Reform UK) 258
Stephen Elms (Labour and Co-operative Party) 976*
Georgina Gould (Local Conservatives) 144
Helmut Izaks (Green Party) 125
Ciaran Morrissey (Lib Dems) 948
HETTON
James Blackburn (Labour and Co-operative Party) 1,153*
Ian Ellis (Lib Dems) 62
David Geddis (Independent) 721
Stephen Holt (Reform UK) 269
Rachel Lowe (Green Party) 123
Connor Sinclair (Local Conservatives) 145
HOUGHTON
Lynda Alexander (Reform UK) 79
Sharon Boddy (Lib Dems) 93
Alyson Kordbarlag (Green Party) 106
Craig Morrison (Local Conservatives) 249
John Price (Labour Party) 1,692*
Donna Thomas (Independent) 236
MILLFIELD
Syed Ali (Labour Party) 742
Hardipsinh Barad (Local Conservatives) 110
Richard Bradley (Green Party) 118
Kathryn Brown (Reform UK) 156
Niall Hodson (Lib Dems) 1,450*
PALLION
Steven Donkin (Lib Dems) 1,147*
Gwennyth Gibson (Local Conservatives) 73
Raymond Lathan (Reform UK) 255
Dorothy Lynch (Green Party) 38
Karen Noble (Labour Party) 869
REDHILL
Steven Dale (Lib Dems) 128
Chris Eynon (Reform UK) 579
Susan Leishman (Local Conservatives) 156
Alison Smith (Labour and Co-operative Party) 931*
RYHOPE
Janice Ellis (Lib Dems) 167
Helen Glancy (Labour Party) 1,356*
Kevin Leonard (Local Conservatives) 345
Tony Thompson (Reform UK) 656
SANDHILL
Adam Aiston (Local Conservatives) 60
Brian Alexander (Reform UK) 215
Dennis Carroll (Labour Party) 543
Paul Edgeworth (Lib Dems) 1,318*
Robert Welsh (Green Party) 42*
SHINEY ROW
Katherine Mason-Gage (Labour and Co-operative Party) 1,605*
Thomas Mower (Green Party) 252
Michael Peacock (Lib Dems) 89
Christine Reed (Local Conservatives) 358
Robert Snowdon (Reform UK) 466
SILKSWORTH
Mauro Amatosi (Lib Dems) 50
Sophie Clinton (Labour) 1,322*
Michael Ellis (Reform UK) 380
Rachel Featherstone (Green Party) 551
Owen Snaith (Local Conservatives) 243
SOUTHWICK
Kelly Chequer (Labour Party) 1,141*
Christopher Crozier (Green Party) 139
Michael Dagg (Lib Dems) 115
Bryan Reynolds (Local Conservatives) 227
James Wilson (Reform UK) 453
ST ANNE’S
Lynne Dagg (Labour and Co-operative Party) 869*
Simon Hughes (Green Party) 119
Greg Peacock (Local Conservatives) 429
Audrey Smith (Lib Dems) 96
Sam Woods-Brass (Reform UK) 420
ST CHAD’S
Chris Burnicle (Local Conservatives) 1,102*
Scott Burrows (Green Party) 113
Andrew Rowntree (Labour and Co-operative Party) 833
Sheila Samme (Reform UK) 254
Anthony Usher (Lib Dems) 106
ST MICHAEL’S
John Appleton (Green Party) 242
Jo Cooper (Labour Party) 1,201
Neil Farrer (Reform UK) 270
Lyall Reed (Local Conservatives) 1,525
Colin Wilson (Lib Dems) 102
ST PETER’S
David Craig (Reform UK) 411
Liam Dufferwiel (Green Party) 143
Sam Johnston (Local Conservatives) 1,074
John Lennox (Lib Dems) 255
David Newey (Labour and Co-operative Party) 1,167*
WASHINGTON CENTRAL
Audrey Jaitay (Local Conservatives) 445
Raymond Moore (Green Party) 133
Dianne Snowdon (Labour and Co-operative Party) 1,673*
Aimee Trow (Reform UK) 320
Linda Wood (Lib Dems) 90
WASHINGTON EAST
Hilary Johnson (Local Conservatives) 550
Sean Laws (Labour and Co-operative Party) 1,632*
Ashton Muncaster (Reform UK) 466
Crispin Welby (Lib Dems) 293
WASHINGTON NORTH
Elizabeth Brown (Reform UK) 478
Svetlana Rakhimova (Local Conservatives) 179
Michael Walker (Labour Party) 1,389*
Carlton West (Lib Dems) 123
WASHINGTON SOUTH
Michal Chantkowski (Green Party) 96
Paul Donaghy (Reform UK) 382
Brandon Feeley (Labour and Co-operative Party) 1,545*
Peter Noble (Local Conservatives) 890
Sean Terry (Lib Dems) 82
WASHINGTON WEST
Andrew Bex (Lib Dems) 215
Sam Cosgrove (Local Conservatives) 395
Paul Leonard (Green Party) 225
Deborah Lorraine (Reform UK) 492
Jimmy Warne (Labour Party) 1,412*
Caption: Councillors Phil Tye, Paul Edgeworth and Paul Donaghy
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules here