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Elections to Hertfordshire County Council took place on 6 May 2021 alongside other local elections in the United Kingdom.All 78 seats to the council were elected. [2]The Conservative Party won 46 of the 78 seats, winning a majority and thus retaining control of the council, [3] [4] despite making a net loss of five seats, with leader David Williams losing his seat of Harpenden North East.
Council leader and Conservative councillor Robert Gordon CBE (Goffs Oak and Bury Green) died in October 2017. [25] The seat was held for the Conservatives by Lesley Greensmith in the by-election on 22 February 2018. [26]
The 2025 Hertfordshire County Council election is due to take place on 1 May 2025 to elect members to Hertfordshire County Council in Hertfordshire, England. [1] All 78 seats will be elected. This will be on the same day as other local elections .
The council remained under no overall control. Labour overtook the Conservatives to become the largest party on the council for the first time since 1999. The Liberal Democrats took the most votes across the district. [1] The Labour and Liberal Democrat coalition continued running the council after the election. [2]
The 2024 North Hertfordshire District Council election was held on Thursday 2 May 2024 to elect members of North Hertfordshire District Council in Hertfordshire. It was held alongside the other local elections in the United Kingdom. [1] New ward boundaries come into effect for this election, increasing the number of councillors from 49 to 51. [2]
The leader of the council, Chris White, did not stand for re-election in 2024. [1] Following the election, the Liberal Democrats retained their majority. They chose Paul De Kort to be their new group leader, who was formally appointed as the new leader of the council at the subsequent annual council meeting on 22 May 2024. [2]
The 2023 East Hertfordshire District Council election took place on 4 May 2023 to elect members of East Hertfordshire District Council in Hertfordshire, England. This was on the same day as other local elections. The council had been under Conservative majority control since 1999.
The election saw the Conservatives nearly wiped out of the council entirely, with them only holding onto one seat in Woodfield. [4] [5] All of their other seats went to the Labour Party. The Liberal Democrats held on to all their seats, becoming the official opposition in Stevenage. [6] No other party made any notable impact or gains in the ...