There are two tiers of local government covering Wokingham, at
civil parish (town) and
unitary authority level: Wokingham Town Council and
Wokingham Borough Council. The town council is based at
Wokingham Town Hall in the Market Place, which was built in 1860 on the site of an earlier
guildhall. The borough council is also based in the town, having its headquarters at Shute End. Wokingham forms part of the wider
Wokingham constituency. Its
MP is
Clive Jones, a
Liberal Democrat, who won the seat at the
2024 general election.
Administrative history Wokingham was historically part of the
ancient parish of
Sonning. Wokingham became a
chapelry in the Middle Ages; its church of All Saints was built in the 14th century, probably on the site of a 12th-century chapel. The chapelry of Wokingham was a separate civil parish from an early date, but remained part the
ecclesiastical parish of Sonning until 1812. By the 1830s, the borough extended beyond the Wokingham township to cover most of the parish. The borough was
left unreformed when most ancient boroughs were converted into
municipal boroughs in 1836. The borough corporation continued to exist, but as Wokingham was not a municipal borough, local government functions were gradually given instead to the
board of guardians of the Wokingham
poor law union. The
Municipal Corporations Act 1883 directed that unreformed boroughs such as Wokingham were either to be converted into municipal boroughs under a new charter by 1886, or would be abolished. Wokingham then secured a new charter converting it into a municipal borough in 1885. A new borough boundary was drawn, covering the built up area as it then was and some immediately adjoining areas. Under the
Local Government Act 1894, parishes were no longer allowed to straddle borough boundaries. The parish of Wokingham was therefore split into a 'Wokingham Within' parish covering the same area as the borough, and a
Wokingham Without parish covering the parts of the old parish outside the borough boundary. The municipal borough of Wokingham was abolished in 1974 under the
Local Government Act 1972, with the area merging with the surrounding
Wokingham Rural District to become a new
non-metropolitan district called Wokingham. District-level functions formerly performed by the borough council passed to the new Wokingham District Council. A
successor parish called Wokingham covering the area of the former borough was created in 1974, with its council taking the name Wokingham Town Council. Wokingham District Council became a unitary authority in 1998 when it took over county-level functions from the abolished
Berkshire County Council. == Geography ==