Tory mayor hopeful defends £1m campaign

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Tory mayor hopeful defends £1m campaign

Postby dutchman » Mon May 01, 2017 2:53 pm

The Conservative candidate in the West Midlands metro mayor race has defended spending up to £1m on campaigning

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Andy Street said he "had not spent quite £1m" as reports suggested but accepted he had "spent a substantial amount more than my opponents".

The ex-John Lewis boss said the cost was "absolutely appropriate" and the 4 May election was "a new start in democracy" for the region.

Other candidates said it was unfair and called for the rules to be tightened.

Spending in the final weeks of campaigning is capped at £130,000, but there is no limit before then.

On Thursday, six people will bid to become the region's first metro mayor, taking on powers over economic development, education and skills, housing and transport.

All six raised £5,000 to be included in a West Midlands Combined Authority booklet.

Mr Street said: "Everyone has the same rules to work within, we were able to raise that money."

The candidate was asked by BBC Radio 4's Today programme about being referred to as the "Donald Trump of British politics".

He replied: "Everyone loves that line. There's one similarity of course, a business background... but there the similarity ends in terms of our beliefs."

Labour's candidate Sion Simon told Today the regulated period begins much earlier for general elections.

He added: "You can't blame Andy for sticking to the rules but it does beg the question whether the rules are right.

"No rules at all, a complete free-for-all, until six weeks before polling day - I don't think that's the right way to go about this.

Labour's campaign, which was partly focused on social media campaigning, has cost up to £200,000.

"We've spent nowhere near - not even in the region of - what the Tories have spent," a campaign spokesman said.

Beverley Nielsen, the Liberal Democrat candidate, said she had raised about £50,000 for campaigning and could not afford to leaflet every house.

She said mayoral elections should have the same funding regulations as other elections, adding: "The public should hear the voice of all parties."

UKIP's Pete Durnell said a spending cap was needed to give "small parties a chance".

"Aside from the booklet, my campaign would have cost £3,000. It is not a level playing field - we are not even on the same field."

James Burn is representing the Green Party and Graham John Stevenson is the Communist candidate.

:bbc_news:


Threw my glossy brochure in the bin where it belongs! :fuming:
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Re: Tory mayor hopeful defends £1m campaign

Postby Melisandre » Mon May 01, 2017 3:43 pm

Same place as mine then I find this amount on any campaign sick when there are children having to eat from food banks in this day and age.
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Re: Tory mayor hopeful defends £1m campaign

Postby rebbonk » Mon May 01, 2017 4:00 pm

I didn't get one! :?
Of course it'll fit; you just need a bigger hammer.
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Re: Tory mayor hopeful defends £1m campaign

Postby dutchman » Fri May 05, 2017 9:51 pm

West Midlands mayor results: Andy Street wins for Tories as Labour suffer huge blow

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Conservative Andy Street was announced as the first West Midlands mayor, pipping Labour's Sion Simon to the post.

The former John Lewis boss secured less than 4,000 votes more than his Labour rival.

Overall, Mr Street secured 238,628 votes. Mr Simon took 234,862.

Coventry declared support for Mr Simon in the first preference voting, with 24,331 votes to Mr Street's 20,345. In the second round of voting, Mr Simon took 3,236 to Mr Street's 2,213.

Voters in Coventry , Birmingham, Solihull, Walsall, Dudley, Sandwell, Wolverhampton and Solihull went to the polls yesterday to elect the first ever West Midlands mayor.

The metro mayor will oversee the new West Midlands Combined Authority (WMCA) - dubbed ‘Greater Birmingham' - and be responsible for strategic housing, transport, skills and economic policy.

Labour candidate Sion Simon, an MEP, and Conservative Andy Street, former managing director of John Lewis, were seen as the frontrunners.

Other candidates included James Burn, for the Green Party; UKIP candidate Pete Durnell; Liberal Democrat Beverley Nielsen, and Graham Stevenson, of the Communist Party of Britain.

There was one candidate for each party and voters marked a first and second choice.

Mr Simon and Mr Street went through to a run-off round - where all the second-preferences of people who voted for other candidates are reallocated.

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