According to the latest annual accounts of the party, Labor has lost around 200,000 members in the last five years.
The party’s membership has been continuously falling since the summit of Sir Kir Stmper in April 2020, from the summit of 532,046 at the end of 2019.
Despite the election victory of the party’s landslide in the last summer, it shed 37,215 members during 2024, about 10%of its total membership at the beginning of the year.
However, it is still the largest political party in the UK, with 333,235 members at the end of last year.
Labor sources said that membership numbers ups and downs between elections and the party was still proud to be the largest in the country.
Meanwhile, reform UK, which saw success in last year’s general election and said in the local elections of May that its membership has increased.
Nigel Faraj’s party did not include membership data in its own annual accounts published by the Election Commission on Thursday, but a tick claims on the reform website that it has more than 234,000 members.
Despite achieving their best election results last year, Liberal Democrats faced a slight decline in membership from 86,599 to 83,174.
The Green Party of England and Wales, who won the record four seats in the general election, received around 5,000 new members in 2024.
The Conservative Party regularly does not publish its membership data in its annual accounts, but recorded an increase in income from a membership fee of about 500,000 pounds.
Around 131,680 people were eligible to vote in last year’s Tory leadership elections, which were 40,000 less than the 2022 competition.
Former labor leader Jeremy Corbin has said that more than 650,000 people have signed their new party – which has not yet an official name – the following Its launch in July,
However, these are the only people who shared their contact details rather than paid members, and the party has not yet registered with the Election Commission.
Prior to falling from 2018, the number of labor members increased in the early years of Corbin’s leadership.
Labor and conservatives reported financial deficit in 2024.
Labor accounts stated that the loss of £ 3.8M last year reflected “the need to react to speed to move the circumstances in the general election campaign”.
The party spent £ 94.5m during the year.
Orthodoxs said that they had fought the most expensive election campaign in the party’s history, spent £ 52m a year, with a loss of £ 1.9m.
Liberal Democrats, Reform UK and Greens all recorded surplus at the end of the year.
While accounts for other parties Was published by Election Commission on ThursdayLabor figures The party was published on its own website,
The Watchdog said the party had not included its accounts and a labor spokesperson said they expected to be “adjacent” by the Commission.
It is understood that he was presented a little late due to unexpected administrative delays.