There are two tiers of local government covering Lorton, at
parish and
unitary authority level: Lorton Parish Council and
Cumberland Council. The parish council meets at Yew Tree Hall, a late 18th or early 19th century maltings building at High Lorton which was formerly part of Jennings Brewery, but has now been converted into the village hall. The parish is wholly within the Lake District National Park, and so some functions are administered by the Lake District National Park Authority, notably
planning. The parish council works in partnership with the three neighbouring parishes of
Blindbothel,
Buttermere, and
Loweswater as the Melbreak Communities, particularly to respond to issues of flooding along the River Cocker. For national elections, the parish forms part of the
Penrith and Solway constituency.
Administrative history Lorton was historically a
township in the
ancient parish of
Brigham, in the
historic county of
Cumberland. The parish of Brigham was large, and its four south-eastern townships of
Brackenthwaite, Buttermere, Lorton, and
Wythop were served by a
chapel of ease at Lorton. Further chapels subordinate to the one at Lorton were subsequently also established at Buttermere and Wythop. The township of Lorton took on civil functions under the
poor laws from the 17th century onwards. As such, the township also became a
civil parish in 1866, when the legal definition of 'parish' was changed to be the areas used for administering the poor laws. The parish of Lorton was included in the
Cockermouth Rural District from 1894. Allerdale was in turn abolished in 2023 when the new Cumberland Council was created, also taking over the functions of the abolished Cumbria County Council in the area. ==Population==