Northern Ireland

Polls open for local government elections in Northern Ireland

DUP Gavin Robinson has been helping voters get to the polling station. Picture by Hugh Russell
DUP Gavin Robinson has been helping voters get to the polling station. Picture by Hugh Russell DUP Gavin Robinson has been helping voters get to the polling station. Picture by Hugh Russell

Polling stations have opened as voting begins in Northern Ireland’s local government elections.

Voters will be electing 462 councillors across the 11 councils in Northern Ireland.

Polling stations are open until 10pm tonight.

It is the first electoral test for the parties since last year’s Assembly elections and takes place against the backdrop of the continued Stormont stalemate with the powersharing institutions not operating as part of a DUP protest against post-Brexit trading arrangements.

The poll was pushed back by two weeks due to the coronation of King Charles on May 6.

Polling taking place in Belfast. Picture by Hugh Russell
Polling taking place in Belfast. Picture by Hugh Russell Polling taking place in Belfast. Picture by Hugh Russell

It has been a low-key election campaign, largely overshadowed by the visit to Northern Ireland of US President Joe Biden, commemorations of the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement and the coronation.

The 11 local councils are responsible for a number of services, including waste collection, street cleaning, local planning, leisure services and parks.

However, the elections may come to be seen as a measure of public feeling on larger political issues such as the ongoing suspension of powersharing and a budget crisis facing Stormont departments.

Sinn Féin, which currently has 105 councillors, is hoping to emulate last May’s Assembly election result and emerge as the largest party.

Polling taking place in Belfast. Picture by Hugh Russell
Polling taking place in Belfast. Picture by Hugh Russell Polling taking place in Belfast. Picture by Hugh Russell

The party is fielding 162 candidates and has predicted it could make gains in areas where it has not previously had an elected representative.

The DUP is currently the largest party in local government with 122 councillors.

The unionist party is running 152 candidates this time.

Party leader Sir Jeffrey Donaldson has pledged that his party will stand firm over any return to Stormont until political and trading concerns around the Windsor Framework are addressed.

Polling taking place in Belfast. Picture by Hugh Russell
Polling taking place in Belfast. Picture by Hugh Russell Polling taking place in Belfast. Picture by Hugh Russell

The cross-community Alliance Party made the largest gains in last year’s Assembly elections and will be hoping to increase the 53 councillors it currently has.

Alliance is running 110 candidates across the 11 council areas.

The UUP is running 101 candidates.

It suffered losses in both the last Assembly and local government elections.

It currently has 75 councillors.

The SDLP has similarly seen its vote squeezed in recent elections.

It currently has 59 councillors and is running 86 candidates this time.

The TUV has 46 candidates, the Green Party has 37, Aontu has 19 and People Before Profit has 16.

A number of smaller parties and independent candidates will also contest the election.

Belfast City Council is the largest local government area in Northern Ireland with 60 councillors to be elected.

Voting takes place in Belfast. Picture by Hugh Russell
Voting takes place in Belfast. Picture by Hugh Russell Voting takes place in Belfast. Picture by Hugh Russell

No party has overall control but Sinn Féin is currently the largest party in Belfast City Hall.

Voters have been reminded to bring photographic ID to the polling station to enable them to vote.

The elections use the single transferable vote system where voters rank candidates in order of preference.

Counting across 11 sites will begin on Friday morning and is expected to continue into Saturday.

Polling taking place in Belfast. Picture by Hugh Russell
Polling taking place in Belfast. Picture by Hugh Russell Polling taking place in Belfast. Picture by Hugh Russell