Last remaining Labour councillor on local elections wipeout
The May 7 local elections saw a major political shift at South Tyneside Council, with Reform UK taking 41 out of 54 seats available, leaving 10 Greens and two independents and almost wiping out Labour.
The May local elections were not the first election for Cllr Kilgour, who went on to successfully defend her position as a Fellgate and Hedworth councillor for the fourth time.
In recent years, the councillor has supported the Save the Fellgate Green Belt group raising concerns about huge housing plans in her ward, and made representations at a formal inquiry into the boroughβs local plan.
Although it βfelt very strangeβ to be the last Labour member post-election, Cllr Kilgour said she was βimmensely grateful to my amazing community for electing meβ and noted it was βthe second time when weβve bucked the trend as happened in 2014 against the rise of UKIPβ.
The Labour councillor, who grew up in the Fellgate and Hedworth ward, believes she kept her seat due to her βlongstanding promise to vote against any development on our precious Fellgate Green Beltβ, as well as community work.
Despite a Labour council administration bringing aboutΒ βreal constructive changeβΒ through the delivery of developments such as Jarrow Focus and The Word, flood defence schemes and more, Cllr Kilgour said the council had faced issues.
This included the lack of βadequate fundingβ for adults and childrenβs social care, in line with other councils across the country, as well as South Tynesideβs emerging local plan causing βserious divisionβ.
βI do believe that we fought local elections on national issues. A fight we could not win,β Cllr Kilgour added.
On the new Reform UK council administration, the Labour councillor said βany change of this magnitude is very unsettlingβ but described the new council leader, Cllr Paul Mackings, as a βvery capable gentlemanβ.
While respecting the electorateβs support for Reform UK, Cllr Kilgour raised concerns about the βwave of exceptionally inexperienced councillorsβ entering the town hall and said that, as a Labour councillor with socialist values, sheΒ does not share Reform UKβs politics.
βWe will see very quickly if the role of a councillor, which is essentially a community champion, is what was expected,βΒ Cllr Kilgour added.
βWe all have to learn and I eagerly await this administration unfolding.β
The Labour councillor said she would continue representing her community on key issues, including working to βsave Fellgate Green Belt from unwanted development as long as my residents seek that of meβ.
Other plans include βrefreshing our Labour movement alongside the amazing community champions that I work with, but also to recruit up and coming champions of the futureβ.
In terms of building back Labour support in South Tyneside, Cllr Kilgour stressed the βnational picture needs settlement urgentlyβ.
βOur community are our best asset and we need to galvanise them in unity to progress,β she added.
βThe core Labour vote tells us that there is Labour support and not the βsheepβ following that some accuse us of.
βLabour values must be at the core of everything we do. We must be selfless and demonstrate humility in everything that we do.
βWe must hold those in administration to account and I intend to do that constructively.
βWe will come back from this. I have every faith in our community. They are hurting and have demonstrated that.
βWhat we must not tolerate is divisive and dangerous behaviour from anyone.
βI acknowledge that we must deliver the right information at the right time and to do that we must speak openly to our community.β
Cllr Kilgour also acknowledged the election results were βpainfulβ for Labour councillors and activists, but urged them to have faith in the Labour movement, adding hard work was needed to win back residentsβ support.
βDespite significant work to engage with our residents it wasnβt enough to overcome the national trend,β she added.
βActivists will always be activists and for those we should be extremely grateful. I wish the many who stood down the very best.
βI thank those who stood in a very difficult election. It takes some bravery to do so.
βMoreover I urge them to have faith and hope in the work that we do and to change and flex with the community to win them back soon.β
Caption: Councillor Geraldine KilgourΒ
Caption: Geraldine Kilgour with fellow Labour candidates ahead of May 2026 local elections
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