Two new faces will be representing border wards on Wrexham Borough Council after last week's local elections.

No party gained an overall majority at the Wrexham local election as independents still held the most seats with 23.

However, both Labour and Plaid Cymru, who were in opposition during the last administration, made inroads, with the former gaining three seats and the latter four.

In the reshaped wards near Whitchurch, two Conservatives were returned – Robert Ian Williams in Bangor-is-y-Coed and Jeremy Alexander Newton in Bronington and Hanmer. Both will be new additions to the council chamber.

A more familiar candidate was successful in Overton and Maelor South, as Independent candidate John Bernard McCusker was elected to the council.

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The borough results took Labour's total number of councillors to 14 and Plaid's to nine, with the Conservatives also winning nine seats, an increase of one, and the Liberal Democrats standing still on one.

It leaves question marks over who will rule Wrexham Council for the next five years following the election count held at the Glyndwr University sports hall in Wrexham on Friday, 6 May.

Power previously lay with a coalition of two independent groups run by incumbent council leader Mark Pritchard and deputy leader David A Bithell, alongside the Conservatives.

But before polling day on Thursday there were rumours of friction between the two independent groups, meaning a new alliance could be in the offing.

Cllr Pritchard, who was re-elected in Esclusham after his seat was uncontested, told the Local Democracy Reporting Service talks would be held over the next few days over the future composition of the council.

Meanwhile, Labour group leader Dana Davies, who faced a scare in Ruabon after winning by just four votes, also said she would be open to discussions with other groups.

Several changes were made to ward boundaries in the area ahead of the election following a review by the Local Democracy and Boundary Commission.

It saw the overall number of councillors in Wrexham increase from 52 to 56 and the number of wards from 47 to 49.

One of the shocks of the day saw Liberal Democrat Alun Jenkins lose his seat in Offa by just six votes after holding it for more than 50 years.