Connect with us

News

John Hill ‘bags’ top role in Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined Authority mayoral election 2025

Combined Authority has allocated £1.04m for the 2025 elections

Avatar photo

Published

on

One result is in already for the May 2025 election of a new Mayor for the Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined Authority – that of John Hill as returning officer. Whilst political parties mull over their potential candidates (well apart from Labour of course who will stick with incumbent mayor Dr Nik Johnson), the Combined Authority is about to ratify the re-appointment of Mr Hill as returning officer.

On September 4 the Combined Authority board is being invited to re-appoint Mr Hill, East Cambridgeshire District Council chief executive, for the mayoral election on May 1, 2025.

Mr Hill was the Combined Authority Returning Officer (CARO) for the 2017 and the 2021 mayoral elections.

“He was also appointed as the Police Area Returning Officer (PARO) for the Police and Crime Commissioner elections for 2021 and 2024 and has extensive experience in the wider area roles for elections for a number of years prior to this too,” says a report to the board.

“The CARO is a significant and complex role responsible for the overall management of the mayoral elections with specific responsibility for administering the nomination process, calculating and declaring the result and production of candidates addresses.

“Co-ordination of the process, particularly in relation to polling day and the count is particularly complex given that it covers the full Combined Authority area.”

Matthew Cumberbatch, monitoring officer, says advice was sought from the Electoral Administration team within the Cabinet Office on such appointments.

“On this advice and the experience John Hill has, it would be correct and prudent to reappoint John as the person with the most experience in the region,” he says.

“However, to strengthen further resilience, the CARO will be asked to share their knowledge and processes with fellow returning officers in the region for any future elections.”

Mr Cumberbatch says the cost of the 2021 Mayoral elections was £0.96m. The Combined Authority has allocated £1.04m for the 2025 elections based on an annual provision of £0.26m over four years.

“However, due to the Police and Crime Commissioner elections not being held at the same time as the Mayoral election (unlike 2021) the costs associated with the election will be shared across fewer organisations,” he says.

“Taken together with the impact of higher inflation since 2021, this has resulted in early forecasts of costs approximately 50 per cent higher than originally set aside in the budget.”

Next year’s mayoral elections are scheduled to take place under a First Past the Post system – unlike earlier elections which used the Supplementary Vote system whereby voters were allowed to cast first and second preference votes.

Where no candidate receives more than half of first preference votes, the two candidates with the most votes go through to a second round. Every other candidate is eliminated, and second preference votes are transferred to that candidate.

The outcome of the second round is that the winner with the highest number of combined first and second preference votes wins.

Advertisements
canopyuk.com in-article

The Elections Act 2022 has meant elections such as the police and crime commissioner poll this year reverted to a First Past the Post system.

The Electoral Reform Society feels this is unfair and in a recent article pointed out that “this often leads to outcomes where many voters are ignored, and candidates are able to win on a low share of the vote”

It cites as an example Labour’s David Skaith who won the new position of York & North Yorkshire mayor with little more than one-third of the vote (35.1 per cent).

“Meanwhile, the Conservative’s Philip Wilkinson became Wiltshire’s PCC with fewer than one-third of votes cast (31.0 per cent),” says the article by research officer Ian Simpson.

“In the hotly contested West Midlands mayoral election, Labour’s Andrew Parker (37.8 per cent) beat the Conservatives’ Andy Street (37.5 per cent) by just 0.3 per cent, or 1,508 votes out of a total of 601,828 ballots cast.

On September 4 the Combined Authority board is being invited to re-appoint John Hill, East Cambridgeshire District Council chief executive, as returning officer for the mayoral election on May 1, 2025

On September 4 the Combined Authority board is being invited to re-appoint John Hill, East Cambridgeshire District Council chief executive, as returning officer for the mayoral election on May 1, 2025

“There are ways of voting for individual elected positions that would ensure fewer wasted votes and a greater democratic mandate for the victor. Unfortunately, the Election Act 2022 abolished such alternative voting arrangements for mayors and PCCs.”

Unless the Labour government changes the system, it will be First Past the Post come next May.

Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined Authority, in preparation for the election, has also published a protocol to allow engagement with mayoral candidates.

“This protocol is designed to ensure that the candidates for the office of Mayor of the CPCA are given all necessary and appropriate support during the campaign, whilst ensuring fairness and neutrality,” says a report agreed by the board last month.

“It is important that the candidates for the office are able to access all relevant and appropriate information about how the new arrangements will work and the existing policies of the CPCA, to enable them to develop their manifesto for office and set out their political position to the electorate of the Cambridgeshire and Peterborough.”

Under the heading ‘access to information’ the Combined Authority says all declared and confirmed candidates will be provided with information they request based upon the Freedom of Information Act standard of openness and transparency, without the need to submit an FOI request.

“It should be remembered that the candidates, for the moment at least, are ordinary members of the public and the fact that they are running for election does not give them the right to access information in the same way as an elected official,” says the protocol.

“Care should be taken not to divulge confidential information beyond the FOI threshold.”

The report protocol says contact between the candidates and officers will follow a similar set of rules as adopted in central government prior to General Elections – the Alex Douglas Home Convention (referred to as the Douglas-Home rules).

 

 

Facebook

Read More

News3 weeks ago

Cambs transport charity launches scathing attack after losing subsidised bus route to Stagecoach

FACT operated the 68 Wisbech service for a number of years

News3 weeks ago

Mayor attacks ‘cheap theatre of negativity’ over £48m Peterborough station facelift

Labour hopes Great Northern Hotel will be in future phase of re-development

News3 weeks ago

Opposition to 8am to 11pm pavement wining and dining in Wisbech by Wetherspoon

In Whittlesey Wetherspoon hope to use Market Place for outdoor drinkers

News3 weeks ago

Cambridge ‘drug lord’ caught with loaded gun, cash, and £500,000 worth of drug

Rahman ran a criminal enterprise across Cambridge

Mill Road, Cambridge: We should be following the lead of successful towns and cities around the globe in reducing traffic and making our shopping streets attractive places where people want to spend time. Mill Road, Cambridge: We should be following the lead of successful towns and cities around the globe in reducing traffic and making our shopping streets attractive places where people want to spend time.
News3 weeks ago

Opinion: We have a positive vision for a Mill Road Cambridge that is vibrant, attractive, safe, and healthy

'Surely it’s local residents who should decide the fate of a ‘C’ road'

News3 weeks ago

John Hill ‘bags’ top role in Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Combined Authority mayoral election 2025

Combined Authority has allocated £1.04m for the 2025 elections

Police are appealing for witnesses and dashcam footage after a man died in a collision on the B645 in Cambridgeshire Police are appealing for witnesses and dashcam footage after a man died in a collision on the B645 in Cambridgeshire
News3 weeks ago

Driver, 22, dies after B645 crash in Cambridgeshire

St Neots woman passenger has serious injuries

An electricity pylon in Oldfield Lane Wisbech caught fire after being used to illegally abstract power to run a cannabis factory in a neighbouring scrapyard. A second cannabis factory elsewhere was discovered. PHOTO: Policing Fenland/Cambs Fire and Rescue An electricity pylon in Oldfield Lane Wisbech caught fire after being used to illegally abstract power to run a cannabis factory in a neighbouring scrapyard. A second cannabis factory elsewhere was discovered. PHOTO: Policing Fenland/Cambs Fire and Rescue
News3 weeks ago

£700,000 worth of cannabis plants seized after ‘accidental’ Wisbech pylon fire

306 plants worth £257,000 were growing inside lorry trailers

A teenage boy has died following a collision on the A1M on Saturday (24 August). A teenage boy has died following a collision on the A1M on Saturday (24 August).
News3 weeks ago

Teenage Cambridgeshire crash victim, 16, dies in hospital

Crash victim named as Isaac Nockels

A 14-year-old girl was attacked at about 4.20pm on Wednesday, 21 August, in the red car park of Queensgate Shopping Centre, Peterborough. A 14-year-old girl was attacked at about 4.20pm on Wednesday, 21 August, in the red car park of Queensgate Shopping Centre, Peterborough.
News3 weeks ago

Wanted: Man in connection with sexual assault of 14-year-old girl in Peterborough

Assault happened at Queensgate shopping centre