Labour leader of Gateshead Council loses seat to Reformpublished at 16:30 BST 8 MayBreaking
Mark Denten
BBC Look North
The Labour leader of Gateshead Council, Martin Gannon, loses his seat to Reform UK.
Image source, Transport North East136 of 136 councils Counting complete
Reform takes control of Sunderland City Council after more than 50 years of Labour leadership
Reform takes control of Gateshead Council after more than 50 years of Labour leadership
South Tyneside is now under Reform's control ending almost 50 years of Labour leadership
No party has a majority in Newcastle with the Liberal Democrats narrowly the largest party, followed by Reform and the Greens
Hartlepool was the only council which voted overnight - Reform won all the seats which were up for grabs
Labour is still in charge of North Tyneside Council but Reform is now the chief opposition
Written by Pamela Tickell and edited by Rachel Kerr
Mark Denten
BBC Look North
The Labour leader of Gateshead Council, Martin Gannon, loses his seat to Reform UK.
Image source, Transport North East
Richard Moss
Political editor, North East & Cumbria
Former Sunderland Labour council leader Graeme Miller, who was replaced by Michael Mordey, is another casualty as he loses his seat.
He joins Sunderland Conservative group leader Antony Mullen who has also lost his place on the council.
The Reform UK teal tidal wave seems to be washing away the Tories as well as Labour. Looks like there may be no Conservative presence on the new council.
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Luke Walton
Political correspondent, BBC North East and Cumbria
With half the Newcastle seats counted, Labour is still waiting to win its first council seat.
The city has been Labour-led since 2011 and the party has dominated local politics for four of the last five decades.
The Labour leader of the local authority Karen Kilgour lost her seat to Reform UK.
The city's first female leader fell victim to a Reform clean sweep in Blakelaw and Cowgate, an area where all three seats were previously held by Labour.
Only a third of seats were up for election in the Labour-led North Tyneside Council, so there was no chance of a leadership change.
Nevertheless, Reform surged in the seats that were available.
Results: Reform UK 10, Labour five, Conservative two, Green two, Independent one.
Newly-appointed Reform councillor Steven Robinson said: "We are now the chief opposition and next year we’ll take the whole council.”
Directly elected Mayor of North Tyneside, Karen Clark, said "it could have been worse" but reflected on the "sad loss of hardworking Labour councillors who’ve served their communities for decades".
The Green Party also made history picking up their first ever North Tyneside seats.

Richard Moss
Political editor, North East & Cumbria
Reform has taken control of Sunderland City Council after more than 50 years of Labour leadership.
It has 39 councillors - it needed 38 to take over. They still have more wards they can win too.
Richard Moss
Political editor, North East & Cumbria
In Sunderland, the Labour council leader Michael Mordey has lost his seat on the council.
Image source, Sunderland Labour GroupNewcastle's Labour leader Karen Kilgour has lost her seat, with all three seats up in the Blakelaw and Cowgate ward going to Reform UK.
Image source, Newcastle City Council
Richard Moss
Political editor, North East & Cumbria
Former Conservative Paul Donaghy is one of Reform UK's winners in Sunderland.
He says Reform has broken the two-party system and believes the city saw the vote as a referendum on Keir Starmer, but he recognises his party now needs to deliver the change the city voted for.
New Sunderland Reform councillor Chris Eynon says the party is benefiting from winning in Durham last year with more people in the region wanting a Reform council.
He reckons regeneration will continue but wants it to spread out of the city centre and into outlying estates and the former coalfields.

Paul Donaghy (left) and Chris Eynon were elected for Reform UK in Sunderland
Joshua Aitken
BBC Look North
Results are coming in from North Tyneside thick and fast now.
Dan Robson is the latest Reform UK win here, but upon his victory was nowhere to be seen. Instead we were met with this empty stage.
I'm told the newly-elected Howdon ward councillor was a "last minute candidate" and is currently on a family holiday. It left the returning officer looking lonely on the stage and he's therefore the first councillor not to deliver a victory speech.
Meanwhile, there were birthday blues for Labour's Sandra Graham, who lost her seat to the Greens on her 70th birthday.
In a speech, she thanked her supporters before rushing to the back of the hall where she was embraced by fellow campaigners and consoled by leader of the council Karen Clark.
At least three Labour cabinet members from North Tyneside council have now lost their seats, but no one party is coming out on top yet here. Reform is a touch ahead but Labour is losing seats to Greens and Conservatives also.

There was an empty stage as the winning Reform candidate was announced

North Tyneside elected mayor, Labour's Karen Clark, was subdued
Luke Walton
Political correspondent, BBC North East and Cumbria
We've seen the Greens get off to a fast start here in Newcastle.
The first five wards were: Green 11, Reform UK three, Liberal Democrats one.
Many of these wards were always promising targets for the Greens, so this doesn't mean the party is heading for a majority
However, the party has already more than doubled its local representation and activists are delighted.
Labour has seen significant losses and though it's early days, with the vast majority of wards still to declare, its domination of this council looks to be coming to an end.

Richard Moss
Political editor, North East & Cumbria
Sunderland Liberal Democrat group leader Paul Edgeworth tells me he expects his party to be the main opposition to Reform in the new council chamber.
Edgeworth says the Liberal Democrat vote has held up because of their record of representing local people. He says the task now will be to hold an inexperienced Reform UK leadership to account.
In the meantime, there have been more Reform wins in Sunderland - 12 of the 15 councillors declared so far. A big win looks likely.

Sunderland Liberal Democrat group leader Paul Edgeworth retained his seat

Reform UK have won 12 of the 15 seats so far
A short interlude to take a look back at some of the animal which joined their owners at polling stations on Thursday.

Penny carries out her civic responsibilities in Sunderland

Cookie showing an interest in the goings on at a polling station in Sunderland

Nina the dachshund waits patiently outside a polling station in North Tyneside

Luna the staffy sitting like a good girl outside a polling station in South Shields
Image source, JORDAN MCHUGHFerris the British Short Hair who was out voting for the first time in Washington Village

Wilf looks very pleased to have voted in Gateshead
BBC Radio Newcastle is covering the North East election results with a special programme which has just started.
You can follow council results as they are declared and analysis from BBC reporters at the counts.
Mark Denten
BBC Look North
Although only about half the wards have been counted so far, there is a definite mood of resignation from Labour here in Gateshead.
The party has three seats compared to 46 previously.
The big beneficiary has been Reform UK which so far has 15 councillors. They started the day with none.
The counting staff are taking a well-earned break at the moment but will back soon counting the remaining wards.
Reform need another 19 councillors to take control here.
Helen Richardson
Political correspondent, BBC Radio Newcastle
After four ward announcements, it’s looking like a battle between the Green Party and Reform UK in South Tyneside.
So far, Reform has won eight seats and the Greens have won four.
The leader of the Green group on South Tyneside, Rachael Taylor (pictured), has retained her seat. She says she's worried about sharing a chamber full of inexperienced politicians.
Very interesting to see how high turnout has been in some of the wards declaring so far. In Beacon and Bents it was 50.5%.

Joshua Aitken
BBC North East and Cumbria
We've had figures in for the turnout here in North Tyneside and it's 42.24%.
This is surprisingly high. Earlier we were told counting was taking longer than usual but when the number was revealed even some of the officials around us were exchanging shocked reactions.
It seems that the primary rivalry for the day will be between Reform UK and Labour but there is some excitement among Green candidates in some wards.
The same can't be said for the Lib Dems, Liberal Democrat candidate Alexander Martin (pictured) joked "there's no votes in my box! I looked and it was files, files, files... no files in mine!" But despite this he says he's pleased with the national picture for the party.

Richard Moss
Political editor, North East & Cumbria
The Liberal Democrats have got their first councillors in Sunderland, winning all three seats in the Grindon and Thorney Close ward.
Reform UK’s candidates were just behind with Labour’s three candidates a long way back.

Andy Watson
BBC North East and Cumbria
Tears of joy from Martin Osborne who becomes the first Green Party councillor on North Tyneside Council.
Osborne won a fiercely-contested race in North Shields as the Greens picked up 1,156 votes, with Labour trailing on 934, while Reform picked up 938.
The win was the first time Labour has lost the ward since 1990.
Osborne said: “I feel amazing, it’s a tough day for Labour but hopefully this is the beginning of a Green breakthrough.”

Luke Walton
Political correspondent, BBC North East and Cumbria
The second ward has been announced in Newcastle and Reform UK has won its first councillors, taking all three seats in Denton and Westerhope.
The ward previously had two independents and one Labour councillor.
The outer west neighbourhood was heavily targeted by Reform which is optimistic it will be the first of many gains here today.