The capital looks very different nowpublished at 00:05 BST 9 May
Karl Mercer
BBC London political editor
So the comfortable red blanket that cloaked London's councils is no more. The capital, which last night had 21 of is 32 boroughs run by Labour looks very different tonight.
For the first time, the capital got a directly elected Green mayor when Zoë Garbett won the former Labour stronghold of Hackney.
Hours later another one, as former Labour councillor Liam Shivastava became Lewisham's Green mayor.
And for the first time the Greens won a council in London, and took Waltham Forest from Labour before later taking Hackney.
For the first time the capital has a Reform UK council, with Nigel Farage announcing that Havering was "under new management".
Image source, Getty ImagesThere are more splashes of blue on the map too, with the Conservatives taking back control of Westminster, which they lost to Labour in 2022.
They became the largest party in Wandsworth, depriving Labour of the control the party won four years ago and the Tories held off a Reform challenge in Bexley and Bromley.
"I'm very proud of how we have done," said leader Kemi Badenoch.
It is not a pretty picture for Labour. While they may not have lost as high a percentage of their councillors as they did in the rest of the country, Thursday's results in the capital can't be glossed over.
Half the party's membership are in the capital - one in seven of its MPs are here - London has 6m people eligible to vote. The prime minister called it a "tough" night. That's putting it mildly.



















