Mayor of the West of England

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mayor_of_the_West_of_England

The Mayor of the West of England is the directly elected mayor responsible for the strategic government of the West of England, including planning, transport and skills. For this purpose the West of England is defined as the local authority areas of Bristol, South Gloucestershire, and Bath and North East Somerset. The creation of the role was agreed in 2016 by the then Chancellor George Osborne and the leaders of the three councils. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Mayor of the West of England
xsd:integer 53782600
xsd:integer 1101194064
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xsd:double 40.5 48.4 51.6 59.5
rdf:langString the West of England
rdf:langString Samuel Williams
rdf:langString Darren Hall
rdf:langString John Savage
rdf:langString Lesley Mansell
rdf:langString Aaron Foot
rdf:langString Jerome Thomas
xsd:integer 2017
xsd:integer 200
rdf:langString Logo of the West of England Combined Authority.svg
rdf:langString Conservative Party
rdf:langString Green Party of England and Wales
rdf:langString Labour Party
rdf:langString Liberal Democrats
rdf:langString UK Independence Party
rdf:langString Independent
xsd:gMonthDay --05-04 --05-06
xsd:integer 53796 125482
xsd:integer 8182 22054 29500 39794 41193 43627 53796 54919 72415 84434
rdf:langString The Mayor of the West of England is the directly elected mayor responsible for the strategic government of the West of England, including planning, transport and skills. For this purpose the West of England is defined as the local authority areas of Bristol, South Gloucestershire, and Bath and North East Somerset. The creation of the role was agreed in 2016 by the then Chancellor George Osborne and the leaders of the three councils. Elections use the supplementary vote system, where electors can vote for "first preference" and "second preference" candidates. If no candidate receives a majority of first-choice votes, all but the two leading candidates are eliminated and the votes of those eliminated are redistributed according to their second-choice votes to determine the winner. The first election took place on 4 May 2017, and was won by Tim Bowles with a total of 70,300 votes, including second preferences. The turnout was 29.7%, with 199,519 voting out of the possible 671,280.
rdf:langString Electorate of the West of England
xsd:date 2021-05-10
rdf:langString Mayor
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xsd:integer 12974 16504 22296 41048
rdf:langString £67,000-£87,000
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 8123

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