Loughton is politically diverse and somewhat heterodox. The Urban District Council was not elected under party affiliations, but was largely shared by those of
Conservative and
Liberal backgrounds; conservatives generally after 1933. In 1981, the Loughton Residents' Association (LRA, and originally the Central Loughton Residents' Association) was formed to protest against what was said to be a planning decision in the town centre taken improperly behind closed doors. During the 1980s, the LRA ousted the previous
conservative-held seats in Loughton with the exception of the eastern part of the town. Since 2000 the Town Council has largely been dominated by
independent Loughton Residents Association Councillors. In the period between 1950 and 2004, the
Labour Party predominated in the east of the town, but lost all their District seats there to the BNP in 2004–06. This part of Loughton became for a few years one of the strongholds of the BNP nationally. At district council level, Loughton has been represented since re-warding in 2002 by two Councillors from each of the 7 wards, one elected in every even year for a four-year term. After the 2008 elections, six of these were from the
Loughton Residents Association, four
British National Party, three Conservative and one Independent. However, at the 2010 elections, LRA made substantial gains, deposing a Conservative party cabinet member in one ward, one further Conservative, and three candidates from the British National Party, reducing that organisation to a lone member. The LRA made these gains despite the election being held on the same day as a
General Election that gave rise to huge Conservative gains nationally. An LRA Councillor had also defected in April to the Conservatives. In the 2012 election, when seven district seats were contested, a further two seats were won by the LRA, one gained from the Conservatives and one from the BNP, whose incumbent candidate polled only 94 votes. The composition of district members from Loughton was thus LRA 12, Conservative 1, and independent 1, and the BNP lost all representation in the town. In the 2014 election, all six LRA seats were retained, with proportion of the vote ranging from 41% to 70%, and the independent retained his with over 80%. The LRA gained the last conservative held seat after the longstanding incumbent stood down in the 2016 election. There was no change at the 2018 or 2021 District elections. The 2021 town election was the first in which there was no Labour councillor elected. At
county council level, Loughton is split. One division (Central) is entirely within Loughton, the others are combined with wards from neighbouring towns,
Buckhurst Hill & Loughton South,
Chigwell & Loughton Broadway. Each returns one councillor elected for a four-year term. In the 2017
Essex County Council election, Loughton Central division was won with 70% of the vote by Dr
Chris Pond (Independent
Loughton Residents Association), Chigwell & Loughton Broadway division by
Gagan Mohindra (Conservative), and Buckhurst Hill & Loughton South by Valerie Metcalfe (Conservative). Similar results obtained in 2021. Loughton forms part of the
Epping Forest parliamentary constituency, which is regarded as a safe Conservative seat. ==Chairmen of Loughton Urban District Council==