Nigel Farage’s Reform UK Party won 280 seats overnight, as the leader heralded a ‘historic change in British politics’.
He told reporters there was ‘no more left-right’ as his Party was ‘scoring stunning percentages in traditional old Labour areas’.
The Reform leader compared the substantial gains to clearing Becher’s Brook, a famously difficult jump in the Grand National.
He said: ‘If we cleared Becher’s Brook and landed well, we go on to win the Grand National.
‘What is very clear to me is that our voters will stick with us now all the way through.’
In Halton, in Cheshire, Labour held two of the 17 seats it was defending as Reform UK gained 15 councillors in the first council to complete its count on Friday morning.
In some wards, Reform won with more than 50% of the vote in an area where last year Mr Farage’s party won the Runcorn and Helsby by-election by just six votes.
In Hartlepool, Reform won all 12 seats on offer, pushing the previously Labour-held council into no overall control, while Labour also lost control of Redditch, Tamworth and Exeter.
In Tameside, a council in Angela Rayner’s Greater Manchester constituency, Labour lost its majority to no overall control as Reform took 18 of the 19 seats up for election.
Mr Farage’s Reform UK is set to make significant gains today, building on last year’s local elections that saw the party pick up almost 700 councillors and take control of 10 authorities.
Pointing to the fragmentation of the traditional two-party duopoly, Reform’s Zia Yusuf said he expected to see ‘a turquoise wave’ across Labour’s traditional heartlands, with Labour and the Tories struggling ‘to get 40 per cent between them’.
Early results also showed Reform success further south, with the party picking up seats in Brentwood, in Essex.