Police commissioner votes awaited

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 16 November 2012 | 15.36

16 November 2012 Last updated at 02:52 ET

The first police and crime commissioner in England and Wales has been decided in Wiltshire, as election counts are due to start in 40 other police areas.

Conservative Angus Macpherson was elected Wiltshire's PCC ahead of the Labour candidate after second preference votes were counted.

Meanwhile, Labour has held its seats in by-elections in both Manchester Central and Cardiff South and Penarth.

Labour is also hopeful of taking a seat from the Conservatives in Corby.

The first PCC elections look set to be mired in controversy amid reports of low turnout and deserted polling stations.

In Wiltshire, 81,477 people out of a total electorate of 520,000 voted - a turnout of 15.8%.

Continue reading the main story

PCC results on BBC News

  • BBC News online will have live coverage of the results of the police and crime commissioner elections on Friday
  • We will also provide full results for each of the 41 police force areas
  • See bbc.co.uk/policeelections for more

Returning officer Stephen Taylor said some people had complained about a lack of information.

"People have emailed and contacted us saying that they didn't know enough about the candidates in order to be able to make a choice and obviously that's something I have no control over," he told BBC News.

He added: "It would be good to have some analysis afterwards and see whether there's any lessons to be learned."

Mr Macpherson said: "There are several reasons why people didn't come out to vote: they didn't understand what the job is; they didn't know who the candidates were and couldn't make a judgement.

Voter in Wiltshire

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Residents of Wiltshire told the BBC's Jon Kay why they did, and didn't, vote

"And then, depressingly, there were a lot of people while we were out on the street saying, 'I don't [vote] for anything.'"

The Liberal Democrat candidate for Wiltshire PCC was beaten into fourth place by UKIP, although both were eliminated in the first round of voting.

Total turnout in the election for the Greater Manchester police and crime commissioner has been confirmed as 13.5%.

'Middle of winter'

The Electoral Reform Society has branded the government's handling of the elections a "comedy of errors".

The society has predicted a turnout of 18.5%, which would be below the previous record low in a national poll in peacetime of 23% in the 1999 European elections.

Continue reading the main story

What will police commissioners do?

  • PCCs will be responsible for appointing chief constables
  • They will set local policing priorities and report annually on progress
  • They will set the force budget and community safety grants
  • They will be overseen by police and crime panels
  • See our Q&A for more details

Policing minister Damian Green said the PCCs were a new idea that would need time for people to get used to.

"It would be better if more people voted but I think people will get more interested, when you try something new it takes people time to get up to speed on it," he told ITV1's Daybreak programme.

He added: "The measure of this policy is not the turnout, it's what the police and crime commissioners achieve over the next few years."

But Labour's Chuka Umunna said: "It has been a total shambles and the £100m spent on it could have been spent on 3,000 police officers.

"At least if you are going to have the elections, organise them properly and don't have them in the middle of winter."

The government insists whoever is elected will have a stronger mandate to set local crime fighting priorities than the unelected police authorities they will replace.

Continue reading the main story

Cardiff South and Penarth by-election

  • Stephen Doughty (Lab) 9,193
  • Craig Williams (C) 3,859
  • Bablin Molik (LD) 2,103
  • Luke Nicholas (PC) 1,854
  • Simon Zeigler (UKIP) 1,179
  • Anthony Slaughter (Green) 800
  • Andrew Jordan (Soc Lab) 235
  • Robert Griffiths (Comm) 213

Lab maj 5,334

In the Manchester Central by-election, Labour candidate Lucy Powell (11,507) won with a majority of 9,936. Liberal Democrat Marc Ramsbottom (1,571) was second and Conservative Matthew Sephton (754) came in third.

The turnout of 18.16% is believed to be the lowest in a UK parliamentary by-election since World War II.

Ms Powell said: "With this result Manchester Central has sent this Tory-Lib Dem government a message - a clear message that we think their policies are wrong and unfair."

In Cardiff South and Penarth, Labour's Stephen Doughty won with 9,193 votes, Conservative Craig Williams was second with 3,859 and Lib Dem Bablin Molik was third with 2,103. Labour's majority was 5,334 and the turnout was 25.65%.

Mr Doughty said his victory was a "condemnation" of the policies and priorities of the Westminster government.

The result is still awaited in the Corby by-election, which is seen as a crucial mid-term test of David Cameron's premiership.

Continue reading the main story

Manchester Central by-election

  • Lucy Powell (Lab) 11,507
  • Marc Ramsbottom (LD) 1,571
  • Matthew Sephton (C) 754
  • Chris Cassidy (Ukip) 749
  • Tom Dylan (Green) 652
  • Eddy O'Sullivan (BNP) 492
  • Loz Kaye (Pirate) 308
  • Alex Davidson (TUSC) 220
  • Catherine Higgins (Respect) 182
  • Howling Laud Hope (Loony) 78
  • Lee Holmes (People's Dem) 71
  • Peter Clifford (Comm Lge) 64

Lab maj 9,936

If Labour wins, it would be the first time in 15 years the party has taken a Tory seat at a by-election.

Counting will not get under way in Corby until Friday morning, with a result expected at about 13:00 GMT.

The Corby contest was triggered by the resignation of Louise Mensch, the high-profile former member of the Commons media select committee, who stood down after just over two years to spend more time with her family.

Mrs Mensch had a majority of less than 2,000 in a constituency that has regularly swung between Tory and Labour over the past 30 years - with voters always opting for the party that goes on to form a government.

On Twitter, she said her resignation sparked "entirely understandable local anger" and suggested that the Tories would lose the seat.

Voters in Bristol have also been to the polls to choose the city's first directly-elected mayor.


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