Labour implements sweeping changes to English local government, eliminating 800 elected councillors and abolishing 43 councils by 2028. The reforms target structures in Hampshire, Essex, Norfolk, and Suffolk, while redrawing boundaries in cities like Ipswich, Norwich, Portsmouth, and Southampton to boost housebuilding.
Opposition Labels Reforms ‘Outright Gerrymandering’
Critics argue the moves favor Labour by creating larger urban authorities where the party holds stronger sway. Shadow Local Government Secretary Sir James Cleverly denounces the plan as ‘outright gerrymandering,’ claiming it engineers council sizes to bolster faltering support and bypasses standard processes.
Nigel Farage, Reform UK leader and MP for Clacton in Essex, highlights community opposition. ‘Nobody here has asked for massive local government change,’ he states. ‘The idea that you take the county of Essex, carve it into unitaries, and impose a mayor—nobody asked for that. You risk losing the identity of Essex as a county.’
County Reorganizations Detailed
Essex sees its county council and 12 districts merge into five unitary authorities. Norfolk and Suffolk each transition to three unitary councils, while Hampshire forms four new ones. The shift collapses the two-tier system—where counties handle transport and social care, and districts manage waste and planning—into streamlined single-tier bodies.
Additionally, 29 English council elections face postponement amid the restructuring.
Government Cites Efficiency and Growth
Proponents emphasize cost savings of about £6 million annually across the four counties by removing duplicated roles like chief executives and finance directors. Local Government Secretary Steve Reed describes the overhaul as a ‘once-in-a-generation chance’ to align councils with modern community needs. ‘Outdated boundaries constrain growth, especially in towns and cities,’ he adds, noting misalignment with how people live today.

