Mayor of Bedford explained

Post:Mayor
Body:Bedford
Insigniasize:75px
Insigniacaption:Arms of the Bedford Borough Council
Incumbent:Tom Wootton
Incumbentsince:4 May 2023
Style:Mr. Mayor
Appointer:Electorate of Bedford
Termlength:Four years
Inaugural:Frank Branston

The Mayor of Bedford is a directly elected mayor responsible for the executive function, and ceremonial duty of Bedford Borough Council in Bedfordshire. The incumbent is Tom Wootton of the Conservative Party, elected in May 2023.

History

See main article: List of mayors of Bedford (England). The first known reference to a Mayor of Bedford in England was in 1264.

Prior to the Municipal Corporations Act, 1835, the Mayor of Bedford came into office on 29 September. The first Mayor of the reformed Corporation came into office on 1 January 1836, and subsequent Mayors on 9 November. After the Local Government Act, 1948, and the Local Government Act, 1972, the Mayors from 1949 onwards came into office in May. The civic mayor was replaced by a directly elected mayor in 2002.

Since April 2009 the Borough of Bedford is a unitary authority, with the executive having the powers and functions of both a non-metropolitan district and a non-metropolitan county.

Referendum

Bedford held a referendum on 21 February 2002 on whether to introduce a directly elected mayor after a petition was signed by at least 5% of the electorate. The move was approved with 11,316 voting in favour and 5,357 against on a turnout of 15.5%.[1]

Elections

The first mayoral election on 17 October 2002 saw independent Frank Branston elected as mayor.[2]

2007

In 2007 Frank Branston was re-elected as mayor.

2009 By-Election

A by-election took place on 15 October 2009 after the death of the previous incumbent, Frank Branston in August 2009.[3] The by-election was won by the Liberal Democrat, Dave Hodgson.[3]

2011

Dave Hodgson was elected to a full term as mayor on 5 May 2011 after being elected to finish the term of Frank Branston in 2009.

2015

The 2015 mayoral election took place on 7 May 2015, the same day as elections of Bedford Borough Councillors, and the UK General Election. Hodgson was re-elected.

2019

The 2019 mayoral election took place on 2 May 2019, the same day as the 2019 Bedford Borough Council election, as part of the 2019 United Kingdom local elections.

2023

The 2023 mayoral election took place on 4 May 2023, the same day as the 2023 Bedford Borough Council election, as part of the 2023 United Kingdom local elections. The candidates were Saqhib Ali (Labour Party), the incumbent Dave Hodgson (Liberal Democrats), Adrian Spurrell (Green Party), Alberto Thomas (Heritage Party), and Tom Wootton (Conservative Party).[4]

The result was declared on the night of 5 May, with Wootton defeating Hodgson by 145 votes. Unlike previous elections, this election did not provide for transfer votes due to the passing of the Elections Act 2022, which mandated that mayoral elections in England should be conducted using first-past-the-post rather than the supplementary vote system.

Notes and References

  1. News: Bedford wants a mayor . 2009-12-11 . 2002-02-22 . . London . Simon . Parker.
  2. News: Maverick mayors add to Labour's embarrassment . 2009-12-11 . 2002-10-19 . . London . Jill . Sherman.
  3. Web site: Lib Dems claim victory in Bedford mayor race . 2009-10-17 . 2009-10-16 . 24dash.com . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20091020042916/http://www.24dash.com/news/Local_Government/2009-10-16-Lib-Dems-claim-victory-in-Bedford-mayor-race . 20 October 2009 .
  4. Web site: Statement As To Persons Nominated . Bedford Borough Council . Laura . Church . 5 April 2023 . 13 April 2023.