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Photos of all six PCC candidates l-r Liz Webster (Lib Dem), Jonathon Seed (Cons), Brig Oubridge (Greens), Mike Rees (Independent), Julian Malins QC (Reform UK), Junab Ali (Labour) Voters will head to the polls this Thursday (May 8) to decide who will be the next Police & Crime Commissioner for Swindon and Wiltshire. In the last in a series, we asked each candidate what they would do in the role to build good community relationships between residents and Wiltshire Police. Brig Oubridge, who is the candidate for the Green Party, said good relationships are built on trust, and through his proposed advisory panel – which would be made up of 50 per cent women with people of colour included – he would help present the whole community of Wiltshire.
Can I take children with me to vote? - latest guidance for 2021 local elections
The Electoral Commission has answered the question for parents
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Tomorrow (May 6) people across England will head to the polls to vote in this year s local elections.
In the Bristol region, residents will be voting in up to four elections.
And the Electoral Commission has now confirmed that children will be allowed at polling stations this year.
But he later resigned from the party, citing a series of concerns with how it operated. Writing on his Facebook page, Mr Copner claimed the “behaviour of the national moment is getting out of control”. “I resigned from Plaid because of my serious concerns on Welsh Indy (independence) and what it means for our families,” he said. “I still remain deeply concerned about this and now with the toxic nature of some of the nationalists it’s time to calm things down. “I believe it is now in our best interests to support Abolish to help provide a brake to this movement, to provide arguments that provide different views and to enable far more effective solutions to be achieved in the Senedd.”
Bradford City Hall. ALTHOUGH major political parties make up the bulk of the 90 members of Bradford Council, independents and smaller parties have had a major impact on the Council in recent years. And at tomorrow’s elections, where 33 seats are up for grabs, there will be a number of candidates either not aligned to any political party, or acting as sole candidate for their party in the district. And some standing independent Councillors are hoping to retain their seats. Running as a candidate for one of the major political parties is the route most prospective Councillors follow, and it gives candidates the support and resources of a national organisation.