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All Reading Local Election Results

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Below, you’ll find the complete compilation of results from May 2nd, 2024 – Reading local elections, providing a detailed overview of the outcomes across all wards and parties involved in the electoral process.

Abbey

Electorate: 6,689
Total votes cast: 1,854
Turnout: 27.75%
Spoilt: 13

CandidatePartyVotesElected
BATCHU
Santhosh Kumar  
The Conservative Party Candidate594
STEVENS
David
Labour Party820Yes
WHITHAM
Jamie
The Green Party250
WRIGHT
Henry David
Liberal Democrats177

Battle

Electorate: 7,648
Total votes cast: 2,047
Turnout: 26.77%
Spoilt: 24

CandidatePartyVotesElected
GRIFFITH
Wendy Pamela
Labour Party1, 290Yes
GROUT
John Berkeley
Liberal Democrats138
KULSOOM
Tahira 
The Green Party386
SOW
Abdoulaye Diouma 
The Conservative Party Candidate210

Caversham

Electorate: 7,595
Total votes cast: 2,916
Turnout: 38.39%
Spoilt: 14

CandidatePartyVotesElected
BURDEN
Christopher Simon
Liberal Democrats305
STOAKES
Chloe-Ann
Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition59
TAYLOR
Grace Holly
The Conservative Party Candidate494
WEST
Anthea Helen
The Green Party441
YEO
Matt  
Labour Party1,603Yes

Caversham Heights

Electorate: 7,507
Total votes cast: 3,432
Turnout: 45.72%
Spoilt: 23

CandidatePartyVotesElected
CARNELL
Paul Alan 
The Conservative Party Candidate1,183
COSTA-KROL
Vania
Liberal Democrats225
MCGROTHER
Jenny  
Labour Party1,405Yes
MCNAMARA
Danny
The Green Party597

Church

Electorate: 8,361
Total votes cast: 2,117
Turnout: 25.32%
Spoilt: 17

CandidatePartyVotesElected
COLE
Mark Clifford 
Liberal Democrats143
HORNSBY-SMITH
Andrew
Labour and Co-operative Party1,241Yes
PHELPS
Adam Iestyn
The Conservative Party Candidate453
SMITH
Brent
The Green Party263

Coley

Electorate: 7,157
Total votes cast: 2,261
Turnout: 31.59%
Spoilt: 12

CandidatePartyVotesElected
BYRNE
Casey George Christopher 
The Conservative Party Candidate444
HILL
Jon  
Liberal Democrats190
HOSKINS
Isobel Claire 
The Green Party287
KHAN
Sadiqua
Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition96
TERRY
Liz
Labour and Co-operative Party1,232Yes

Emmer Green

Electorate: 7,634
Total votes cast: 2,838
Turnout: 37.18%
Spoilt: 21

CandidatePartyVotesElected
DE BOISERIE
Pieter Herman M
Liberal Democrats258
ROBINSON
Simon Howard
The Conservative Party Candidate
1,035
ROOKE
Wendy Jane
The Green Party
376
SINGH
Daya Pal 
Labour Party1,148Yes

Katesgrove

Electorate: 7,825
Total votes cast: 2,340
Turnout: 29.90%
Spoilt: 9

CandidatePartyVotesElected
ANGUS
John David 
The Conservative Party Candidate240
CHURCH
Sam 
Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition25
GILL
Navjit Kaur
Labour Party861
MCNEILL
Margaret
Liberal Democrats115
NIKULINA
Kate  
The Green Party1,045Yes
PASCUAL
Jean-Louis
Independent27
TURBERVILLE
Michael Jeffrey
Independent18

Kentwood

Electorate: 6,720
Total votes cast: 2,375
Turnout: 35.34%
Spoilt: 13

CandidatePartyVotesElected
FUDGE
Nick
The Conservative Party Candidate852
HEARST
Caroline
The Green Party240
KEEPING
Mark
Labour Party1,136Yes
MANCUSO-MARCELLO
Riccardo Giovanni
Liberal Democrats134

Norcot

Electorate: 7,636
Total votes cast: 2,189
Turnout: 28.67%
Spoilt: 8

CandidatePartyVotesElected
BOTTOM
Jen 
Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition36
FRENCH
Marie
Liberal Democrats303
GRAHAM
Stephen Anthony
You Local Liberal Party39
GULLIVER
Alan John
Reform UK182
NAZ
Mamuna
Labour Party1,100Yes
SHEPPARD
Lizzy
The Conservative Party Candidate306
WALKEM
Richard Peter
The Green Party215

Park

Electorate: 7, 093
Total votes cast: 2,725
Turnout: 38.42%
Spoilt: 13

CandidatePartyVotesElected
DODSON
Chris 
Liberal Democrats71
MAGON
Sarah
The Green Party1,569Yes
MUGO
James Mwaniki
Conservative Party Candidate157
WILLIAMSON
Ollie  
Labour Party915

Redlands

Electorate: 8,363
Total votes cast: 2,742
Turnout: 32.79%
Spoilt: 19

CandidatePartyVotesElected
DENT
Melanie Samantha Jayne
Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition42
JAKEMAN
Francis David
Liberal Democrats101
LOBO
Sunila
Labour and Co-operative Party921
MCELROY
Dave
The Green Party1,478Yes
WILLIAMS
Richard
The Conservative Party Candidate182

Southcote

Electorate: 7,765
Total votes cast: 2,270
Turn out: 29.23%
Spoilt: 18

CandidatePartyVotesElected
CARNELL
Allison
The Conservative Party Candidate439
DOWNEY
Josie
The Green Party247
HOSKIN
Graeme William
Labour Party1,354Yes
SIMS
Benjamin Francis
Liberal Democrats212

Thames

Electorate: 6,054
Total votes cast: 1,930
Turnout: 31.88%
Spoilt: 8

CandidatePartyVotesElected
DAVIES
Richard
Labour Party1,015Yes
HARLING
Mike 
The Green Party315
HAWALDAR
Shivraj
The Conservative Party Candidate357
RAMSAY
Jo
Liberal Democrats235

Tilehurst

Electorate: 7,269
Total votes cast: 2,275
Turnout: 31.30%
Spoilt: 19

CandidatePartyVotesElected
BERRY-KHAN
Gabriel 
The Green Party154
BLACKMORE
Ben Michael Brereton  
The Conservative Party Candidate436
GARDINER
Elliott Oliver
Labour and Co-operative Party480
MOORE
James William John 
Liberal Democrats1,186Yes

Whitley

Electorate: 7,980
Total votes cast: 1,892
Turnout: 23.71%
Spoilt: 10

CandidatePartyVotesElected
GOEL
Vani  
The Conservative Party Candidate401
HUSSAM
Saffi
Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition36
LENG
Micky  
Labour Party1,091Yes
SMITH
Kathleen Anne
The Green Party179
WEIR
Thomas David Douglas
Liberal Democrats175

Make up of the council

Pre-election

Labour: 32
Green: 7
Conservatives: 5
Liberal Democrats: 3
Independent: 1

Post-election

Labour: 32
Green: 8
Conservatives: 4
Liberal Democrats: 3
Independent: 1

News

Lib Dems oppose Reading Council budget over governance and financial concerns

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Reading’s Liberal Democrat councillors have voted against the Council’s 2026/27 budget, citing concerns over depleted reserves and last-minute financial planning that leaves future years unbalanced.

Speaking at last night’s Full Council meeting, the three Lib Dem councillors challenged the Labour administration over a budget that was only balanced two weeks earlier through an emergency £3.6 million draw from the Financial Resilience Reserve, leaving the Financial Resilience Reserve set to fall to just £269,000 by 2027/28.

Reserves running on empty

Councillor Anne Thompson highlighted the scale of the Council’s financial pressures: “To balance the budget, we will draw down £7.302 million from reserves — almost double the size of the drawdown a year ago. Our reserves are shrinking. The General Fund Revenue Reserve has fallen from £49.8 million to a forecast of £30.2 million in just one year, a 39% decline. You don’t have to be a mathematical genius to know that this can’t go on much longer.”

Cllr Thompson criticised the government’s funding settlement, noting that Reading receives nothing from the £865 million Recovery Grant despite having above-average deprivation in income, education, crime and barriers to housing. “Had the Recovery Grant been distributed through the fair funding formula as originally intended, Reading would have received an additional £2.05 million. That is a deliberate political choice by the Labour government in Westminster, and it is not fair.”

She added: “Our Adult Social Care caseload has grown by 311 people in nine months. Our looked after children numbers are rising when numbers are falling nationally. Yet we have three Labour MPs. Where were their voices for Reading when these decisions were being made?”

Last-minute budget raises concerns

Councillor James Moore focused on the administration’s handling of the budget: “This budget was not balanced in December. It had a £4.4 million gap as recently as ten weeks ago. It was only finally closed two weeks before this meeting by drawing an additional £3.6 million from reserves at the last minute. That is not long-term planning. That is firefighting.”

Cllr Moore pointed to a pattern of financial management problems: “Year after year of overspending — £9.3 million last year, £4 million forecast this year. Year after year of underdelivering on savings. The savings programme has delivered 73% of what was planned last year, and KPMG’s own forward look suggests only 66% will be delivered this year.”

He highlighted what he described as misplaced priorities: “We have requested a hearing loop system for Tilehurst Community Centre — a permanent accessibility improvement that would benefit the one in six people in the UK who suffer from hearing impairment. We’ve been told there are cost pressures that prevent it. Yet there were no cost pressures when it came to funding the Mayor’s £920 flight to watch football in Germany last year.”

Council Tax rises continue

The budget approved by the Labour-controlled council includes a 4.99% Council Tax increase — the maximum permissible without a referendum — for the third consecutive year. For a typical Band C household, the Reading element of Council Tax will rise by around £94 per year.

Cllr Thompson noted that public support for the increases is weakening: “The budget engagement showed 50.5% of respondents now oppose the Council Tax increase — a significant shift from last year when 60% supported it.”

Future years unbalanced

Despite the reserve draw, the Medium Term Financial Strategy shows budget gaps of £1.996 million in 2027/28 and £207,000 in 2028/29 still to be found.

All three Liberal Democrat councillors voted against the budget.

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Call for end to 12-hour A&E waits as corridor care crisis worsens

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Photo is of Lib Dem Leader Ed Davey and Reading Lib Dems outside the RBH.

Reading Lib Dems call for end to 12-hour A&E waits as corridor care crisis worsens under Labour

  • NHS data shows 6,450 patients waiting 12 hours or more in the Royal Berkshire Hospital A&E in 2025.
  • Liberal Democrats propose a legal guarantee that no one will wait more than 12 hours in A&E, backed by a £1.5bn plan for extra beds and social care.

Reading Liberal Democrats are calling for a £1.5bn plan to end 12-hour waits in A&E within a year. This comes as A&Es across the country are facing rocketing waits for patients in desperate need of care.

The new Liberal Democrat plan would introduce a new law to enshrine the right for patients to be seen in A&E within 12 hours, warning that “18 months of Labour failure” has worsened the NHS crisis left by the Conservatives. 

Liberal Democrat analysis of the latest NHS England data shows that 2025 is projected to see the worst level of 12-hour trolley waits in A&E ever recorded. Locally, a shocking 6,450 patients waited 12 hours in the Royal Berkshire Hospital A&E in 2025.

The Lib Dem plan would end 12-hour waits and hospital ‘corridor care’ within a year. 

  • Making 6,000 extra hospital beds available to end corridor care within a year.
  • Investing in 1,000 more staffed hospital beds.
  • Extra investment in social care to reserve 1,600 “safety net” social care places each day, for hospitals to discharge into if they need to.
  • Extra step-down care – freeing up 1,200 beds a day.
  • Making more beds available in care homes and hospitals.

The proposal would be funded by cancelling the planned medicine price hike agreed with the Trump administration before Christmas, which is set to cost the NHS over £3bn a year despite minimal benefits for patients. 

Commenting, the Leader of the Liberal Democrats on Reading Borough Council, Councillor Anne Thompson, said: 

“For too long, people in Reading have suffered with degrading waits and treatment in hospital corridors. Our NHS staff are working so hard, but have been let down by those in power. It is a national emergency, and it is devastating our NHS – we need a real plan to fix it.

“Liberal Democrats are offering the bold solutions we need to free up our hospitals and end the A&E crisis once and for all. No government should tolerate this disaster, and ministers should be held legally accountable if they continue to fail in their duty to protect patients.”

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Shoplifting increases in the Thames Valley

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At a time when police stations and front desks are disappearing, people want visible, trusted officers and a clear local point of contact. Labour already promised the public 13,000 more police officers, but instead, officer numbers have fallen – by June 2025, we had 4,000 fewer frontline officers than the year before. Crimes like shoplifting, bike theft, tool theft and more are going unchecked, leaving ordinary people to pay the price.

Liberal Democrats Councillor for Tilehurst, Meri O’Connell, said:

“Promises by press release are all well and good, but the Government must deliver. The former Conservative Government destroyed neighbourhood policing and left our communities to pay the price.

“Labour already promised the public 13,000 more police officers, but instead officer numbers have fallen – by June last year, we had 4,000 fewer frontline officers than the year before.

“It’s the public that pays the price – in the Thames Valley, rates of shoplifting have gone up 14%.

“If the Government is serious about restoring neighbourhood policing, it needs to step up, get this right, and get more officers back onto our streets.”

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