Lancaster City Council provides
district-level services.
County-level services are provided by
Lancashire County Council. Much of the district is covered by
civil parishes, which form a third tier of local government. In the part of the district within the Yorkshire Dales National Park,
town planning is the responsibility of the
Yorkshire Dales National Park Authority. The city council appoints one of its councillors to serve on the 25-person National Park Authority.
Political control The first election to the city council as enlarged by the Local Government Act 1972 was held in 1973, initially operating as a shadow authority alongside the outgoing authorities before coming into its powers on 1 April 1974. Political control of the council since 1974 has been as follows: In the late 1990s and early first decade of the 21st century, the city council was under the control of the
Morecambe Bay Independents (MBIs), who campaigned for an independent Morecambe council. In 2003, their influence waned and
Labour became the largest party on the council. They formed a coalition with the Liberal Democrats and Greens. At the May 2007 local elections, Labour lost ground to the
Greens in Lancaster and the MBIs in Morecambe, resulting in
no overall control, with all parties represented in a PR administration. The 2011 elections saw Labour emerge as the largest party. They reached a joint administrative arrangement with the Greens. The
2019 Lancaster City Council election results put no party in overall control. The council was run by a coalition of Labour, Green, Eco-Socialist Independent and Liberal Democrat councillors, supported by the Independent Group, with Conservatives and MBIs in opposition. The cabinet consisted of 4 Labour, 4 Green, 1 Eco-Socialist, 1 Independent Group. At 10 seats, Lancaster had one of the country's largest Green Party representations. The
2023 Lancaster City Council election resulted in a council with Labour as the largest party but not in overall control, with 24 of the 61 seats.
Leadership The role of mayor is largely ceremonial in Lancaster, with political leadership instead provided by the
leader of the council. The leaders since 1993 have been:
Composition Following the
2023 election, and subsequent changes of allegiance up to June 2025, the composition of the council was: Two of the three independent councillors sit together as a group. The next election is due in 2027. The district contains parts of two parliamentary constituencies:
Lancaster and Wyre and
Morecambe and Lunesdale. Both have been held by
Labour since 2024. The district contains 10 of the 82 electoral divisions for elections to
Lancashire County Council: Heysham, Lancaster Central, Lancaster East, Lancaster Rural East, Lancaster Rural North, Lancaster South East, Morecambe Central, Morecambe North, Morecambe South, and Skerton. Elections are held every four years. In the
2025 county council elections,
Reform UK won control of the county and seven of the district's seats, the other three being won by the
Green Party of England and Wales.
Premises , Dalton Square, Lancaster The council has two main meeting places, both inherited from predecessor authorities:
Lancaster Town Hall and
Morecambe Town Hall. Full council meetings are held in the larger council chamber of Morecambe Town Hall, but Lancaster Town Hall is also used for committee meetings and houses administrative functions. ==Demography==