Elections
In order to become a candidate at a Parish Council election you must be sure
you are eligible to stand, and then submit a set of nomination papers.
Who can be a candidate?
To be qualified to be elected a member of the Parish Council you must be 18
years of age or over at the date of your nomination, and a British or
Commonwealth citizen, a citizen of the Republic of Ireland or a citizen of
another Member State of the European Community, and either:
be a registered local government elector for the Parish both on the day your
are nominated and election day or
you must have occupied as owner or tenant any land or other premises in the
Parish during the whole of the twelve months before the day you are nominated
and election day; or
your principal or only place of work in the twelve months before the day you
are nominated and election day has been in the Parish; or
you must have lived in the Parish or within 4.8 kilometres (3 miles), during
the whole of the twelve months before the day you are nominated and election
day.
Who cannot be a candidate?
Certain people are disqualified from being elected. You cannot be a candidate
if you:
hold a paid office under the Parish authority or a politically restricted
post (as defined in Part I of the Local Government and Housing Act 1989); or
have been adjudged bankrupt or made a composition or arrangement with
creditors; or
have been sentenced to a term of imprisonment of three months or more
(including a suspended sentence) without the option of a fine, during the five
years before election day; or
have been disqualified under part III of the Representation of the People
Act 1983 or under the Audit Commission Act 1998. |