Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn insisted "there is more to come" as his party failed to make the sort of gains it had hoped for in England's local elections.
The party failed to take several targets from the Tories, including Wandsworth, but won back Plymouth and became the largest party in Trafford.
The Tories won Barnet and gained from a collapse in UKIP's vote, celebrating wins in Basildon and Peterborough.
The Lib Dems regained control of Richmond, in London, from the Tories.
At-a-glance
- Ninety nine council results have been declared, with the remaining 51 being counted during the day on Friday with results expected between noon and 18:00 BST.
- The Conservatives have gained the London council of Barnet from no overall control, where they picked up seats from UKIP and held other London councils. They also won Basildon and Peterborough, which had both also been under no overall control. But they have lost control of their northern flagship Trafford Council after 14 years of Conservative rule.
- Labour had high hopes for the night, and have won Plymouth from the Tories but lost Nuneaton and Bedworth and Derby to no overall control.
- The Lib Dems are up one council having gained Richmond upon Thames from the Tories - and will be hoping to repeat the result in neighbouring Kingston-upon-Thames.
- The Greens are up six seats so far - taking some from Labour in Sheffield and from the Tories in Richmond upon Thames.
- UKIP, which performed strongly last time most of the seats were fought in 2014, has seen its vote collapse. It has lost 92 seats, winning just two.
What are the Conservatives saying?

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Conservative Party chairman Brandon Lewis acknowledged some disappointments, but told BBC Breakfast that voters had chosen the Tories after seeing "good, clear and strong leadership" from the prime minister, and they wanted to see the same on a local level.
"It is a good night for us, but it is just stage one. We have got work to do as we go forward towards the next general election and as part of that work we will want to win back those councillors across the country."
He added Labour was "claiming that the whole of London was going to turn red. They have not gained a single council".
Labour did pick up one seat in the Tory stronghold of Kensington and Chelsea Council, but the Conservatives retained control, despite criticism of their handling of the Grenfell Tower disaster. Tory leader of the council, Elizabeth Campbell, said they needed to "rebuild trust".
Energy minister Claire Perry said the Conservatives, who are defending about 1,350 seats, had been preparing to "batten down the hatches" after eight years in government but were not "taking the hit" they might have feared while International Trade Secretary Liam Fox said the results were at the "higher end" of expectations.
How have Labour reacted?
Labour has been defending the highest number of seats - more than 2,200 - and throughout the campaign were talking up their prospects in London, where they made gains in last year's general election.
However, the party's hopes of seizing control of Wandsworth and Westminster, held by the Tories for decades, proved unfounded while the party lost ground in Hillingdon.
Labour Leader Jeremy Corbyn said his party's win in Plymouth was a "fantastic result" and "a sign that Labour is back in this part of Britain".
Of the party's performance more widely, he said: "Obviously I'm disappointed at any places where we lost a bit of ground... but if you look at the overall picture, Labour gained a lot of seats across the whole country, we gained a lot of votes in places we'd never had those votes before."
His shadow chancellor John McDonnell criticised "some of the hype" during the campaign about Labour's chances in London while Shadow Communities Secretary Andrew Gwynne said he believed the anti-Semitism row had had an impact on the result in Barnet, north London, which the Tories took back from no overall control.
What about the Lib Dems?
The Lib Dems are confident of winning back control of Kingston-upon-Thames, in south-west London, which they lost to the Tories four years ago, after taking neighbouring Richmond - which had a large majority in favour of the remaining in the EU.
The party also withstood a strong Conservative challenge to hold onto Sutton in south-west London - while it picked up nine seats in Kingston-upon-Hull.
Liberal Democrat MP Sir Edward Davey described the party's advances in areas like Richmond as "a sign of things to come". He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "People are desperate for a voice that isn't a right-wing Brexit Tory voice or a left-wing Corbynista voice.
"Under Vince Cable, Liberal Democrats can become that and last night's results show we are becoming that."
Good result for the Greens?
It was also a positive night for the Greens, which took two seats off Labour in Sheffield, where the Labour-run council has been engulfed in a row over the felling of thousands of trees. They also took seats from the Conservatives in the London borough of Richmond-upon-Thames and added two new councillors in Trafford and one in Worcester.
Greens co-leader Caroline Lucas told the BBC: "I think the Greens have had a really good night and... even with a fraction of the resources, a fraction of the media time when people see Greens on the ground they like what they see and they elect more Greens. And that's what we are seeing from Richmond to Greater Manchester to the Midlands. We've had some great results."
UKIP vote collapses
The Eurosceptic party has, as predicted, haemorrhaged support, losing nearly all of the council seats it won in 2014, when it broke through into local government for the first time.
It put up candidates in only 540 seats compared with 2,193 in 2014, lost all ten seats it contested in Basildon, five in Thurrock and seven in Dudley. So far they have lost 92 seats and won two - including unseating Labour's council leader in Derby.
Former deputy chair Suzanne Evans said the fact it had taken two seats in Derby was a sign it could still "put the cat among the pigeons", adding: "If UKIP does crumble I think you could still arguably make the case that it's been one of the most successful political parties in history."
Its general secretary, Paul Oakley, told the BBC: "We were never going to do brilliantly in these elections, we knew that. We accepted that some time ago. If we had had the money to campaign, we would have done a lot better. We are never going to take over councils all over the country. Four years ago was our high point."
What do the experts say?
Analysis
By BBC Political Editor Laura Kuenssberg
Before the full picture is clear, it looks as if Labour has moved on slightly since the general election.
But, in the words of Sir John Curtice, Jeremy Corbyn's party has come out of this more or less "empty-handed", and they can't show the kind of progress they would be shouting about if they were truly convinced they were on a rapid march to Number 10.
The Tories have avoided the kind of wipe-out they feared and there will be huge relief in Conservative HQ this morning.

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Polling expert Professor Sir John Curtice said the Tories were performing relatively well in areas with a substantial Leave vote in the 2016 referendum, where they are picking up votes from UKIP, which did not stand candidates in many areas, while Labour were performing better in places where the Remain vote was stronger and with a higher proportion of younger voters.
In addition to the council polls, mayors are being elected in Watford, Hackney, Newham, Lewisham and Tower Hamlets while the first-ever mayor for the Sheffield City Region will also be chosen.
There are no local elections in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. However, a parliamentary by-election for the Westminster seat of West Tyrone took place, with Sinn Fein retaining it.
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