Lancashire County Council

Lancashire County Council
Type
Type
Established1 April 1889, reformed 1 April 1974
Leadership
Alf Clempson,
Conservative
since 22 May 2025
Stephen Atkinson,
Reform UK
since 22 May 2025
Mark Wynn
since 1 August 2024
Structure
Seats84 councillors
Political groups
Administration (53)
  Reform UK (53)
Opposition (31)
  Conservative (8)
  Labour (5)
  Liberal Democrats (5)
  Green (3)
  Your Party (3)
  Our West Lancashire (2)
  Independent (5)
Joint committees
Lancashire Combined County Authority
Length of term
4 years
Elections
First-past-the-post voting
Last election
1 May 2025
Next election
to be Abolished
Meeting place
County Hall, Fishergate, Preston, PR1 8XJ
Website
www.lancashire.gov.uk

Lancashire County Council is the upper-tier local authority for the non-metropolitan county of Lancashire, England. The non-metropolitan county of Lancashire is smaller than the ceremonial county, which additionally includes Blackburn with Darwen and Blackpool. The council is based in County Hall, Preston, and consists of 84 councillors. It is a member of the Lancashire Combined County Authority.

Since the 2025 local elections the council has been under the majority control of Reform UK; this is the first time since the creation of the current council in 1974 that the Conservative Party or Labour Party has not been the largest party. The leader of the council, Stephen Atkinson, chairs a cabinet of eight councillors. The Chief Executive and Director of Resources is Mark Wynn.

The council is the successor to the county council of the administrative county of Lancashire, which was created on 1 April 1889. The council was abolished and reconstituted in 1974, when local government in England was reformed and a non-metropolitan county of Lancashire was created, governed by a county council and thirteen district councils. The districts of Blackpool and Blackburn with Darwen became unitary authorities in 1998, meaning they are no longer governed by Lancashire County Council.