Local government For 12 years from the creation of Greater Manchester in 1974, the borough had a two-tier system of
local government, and
Wigan Council shared power with the
Greater Manchester County Council. The county council was abolished in 1986 by the
Local Government Act 1985. Since April 2011, some of the borough's responsibilities have been pooled with neighbouring authorities and subsumed into the
Greater Manchester Combined Authority, which covers ten boroughs including Wigan. The first
elections to the borough council were held on 10 May 1973. The Metropolitan Borough Council is divided into 25 wards, each of which elects three councillors. Elections are by thirds, with one councillor from each ward up for re-election in each election year. who took over from
Peter Smith, who resigned in May 2018, having been leader since 1991. The council rejected the idea of a
directly elected mayor following a consultation in 2001. The Metropolitan Borough of Wigan is traditionally a Labour Party stronghold—the council has been Labour-controlled since its creation. The
local elections in 1998 resulted in a council with only two non-Labour members. Labour had a majority with 43 seats at the 2006 election. The second-largest party was the local
Community Action Party which had 15 seats. Community Action first contested Wigan elections in 2002, and won 18 seats in the
2004 election following the re-warding - their councilors are for wards in the middle of the borough, between Wigan and Leigh. The
Conservative Party had nine seats, and the
Liberal Democrats eight. At the 2008 elections Labour was the largest party with 41 seats out of a total of 75; the Conservative Party had 14 seats, Community Action Party eight seats, Independent seven seats, Liberal Democrats four seats, and one was vacant. In November 2010 (after elections in May), Labour was the largest party with 51 seats out of a total of 75; the Conservative Party had eight seats, Independents seven seats, Community Action Party four seats, Liberal Democrats three seats (one member currently suspended) and two members were 'Independent Conservative'. As of June 2011 (after May elections), Labour continued to be the largest party with 58 seats out of 75, the Independent Councillor group with 8 seats form the official opposition, the Conservative Party had 5 seats, the Liberal Democrats hold 2 seats, Community Action Party 1 seat and 1 Independent councillor. In May 2012 (post 2012 Local Elections) the composition of the council was Labour 63 (+5), Others 9 (-1), Liberal Democrats 2 (No change) and Conservatives 1 ( -4). Presently in May 2018, the Council's political composition is: Labour 60, Conservatives 7, Independent 4, Independent Network 2, Shevington Independents 1, and Standish Independents 1. The council uses
Wigan Town Hall as its main headquarters.
Leigh Town Hall is used as a secondary base.
Localities and wards . The borough is divided into 25 electoral wards, each of which elect three councillors. The present wards were adopted in 2023, following a review by the Boundary Commission, the previous review took place in 2003. Prior to 2003 the borough was divided in 24 wards. From the 2003 Boundary Review until the 2020s, Wigan Council divided the borough into ten areas by the name of
townships, each with a Township Manager (council liaison) and a regularly scheduled Township Forum meeting. However with
Austerity cuts This has been replaced with an ad hoc community consultation structure without regularly scheduled community forums or permanent council liaisons consisting of 16 communities or 'Places' divided into 3 unnamed 'Localities', the Locality at the centre of the Borough consists of Ashton, Bryn, Abram, Platt Bridge, Hindley and Hindley Green with all areas to the northwest forming a locality centred on Wigan and all areas to the southwest forming one centred on Leigh. However two Town Centre Managers were appointed in Wigan and Leigh primarily to act as liaisons between the Council and local business.
Civil & ecclesiastical parishes The borough has three civil parishes: Haigh, Shevington and Worthington. The rest of the borough is an
unparished area. Church of England
ecclesiastical parishes in the west of the borough are part of the
Diocese of Liverpool, those in the east of the Metropolitan Borough are part of the
Diocese of Manchester and the northern section part of the
Diocese of Blackburn.
Parliamentary The Wigan Metropolitan Borough is currently covered by four parliamentary constituencies,
Wigan,
Makerfield,
Leigh, and
Bolton West. (Atherton is the only Wigan ward included in Bolton West, with the rest of the constituency made up of wards from Bolton Borough). New constituency boundaries recommended by the
Boundary Commission for the
2010 general election saw the link to Salford broken by the removal of Wigan areas from the
Worsley constituency. This resulted in the Worsley constituency wards of Tyldesley and Astley-Mosley Common being placed in the
Leigh Constituency with the Atherton ward becoming part of Bolton West. Makerfield is the only constituency to have returned Labour MPs continuously since 1906.
Coat of arms Wigan council's new coat of arms is based on various elements from the arms of the councils of its predecessor districts. ==Demography==