Bristol Post

Vote for me and I’ll scrap my own job, says candidate

- Tristan CORK tristan.cork@reachplc.com

THE Liberal Democrats have selected their candidate for Bristol’s Mayoral election next year - and said that if she wins she will start the process of scrapping her own job.

Mary Page said she was standing for mayor because she believed she could ‘do things differentl­y’ – and that meant getting rid of Bristol’s elected mayor altogether.

“We have seen the current Mayor preside over the local non-delivery of things like the Bristol Arena, a clean air zone, and his own promise to cut the cost of senior management in the Council,” she said.

“I’m standing for Mayor because I believe we can do things differentl­y.

“Our campaign to rid us of the Mayor does that, our fight against dodgy payoffs in the council and to cut the spiralling cost of the Mayor’s staff reinforces that.

“The people of Bristol deserve a Mayor who hasn’t forgotten how to be one of them. Someone who knows that £95,000 for the Mayor’s chief of staff is nearly four years wages to the average person,” she added.

She said that, as well as trying to scrap the role of mayor, she would also stand on a platform of tackling air pollution, addressing the rising numbers of homeless people and to introduce London-style bus franchisin­g systems in public transport in the city.

“The Mayor has had three years to tackle the problems in our city and he has failed to act.

“Air pollution still at illegal levels and causing hundreds of deaths every year, a public transport system the public has lost faith in with no plan to fix it, and the human tragedy of growing numbers of rough sleepers dying on the streets of Bristol,” she said.

“We need a Mayor whose number one priority is fixing those problems.

“Liberal Democrats demand better for Bristol. I believe this is a city of entreprene­urs, innovators and creatives who are being let down time and time again.

“My campaign will focus on healing the divisions in this city, offering real change and delivering opportunit­y for every Bristolian.

“If you get frustrated or angry with the Mayor, remember it doesn’t have to be this way. We can change Bristol together,” she said.

The Liberal Democrats said Mary had lived in Stoke Bishop for 12 years and was a ‘public relations and brand communicat­ions specialist with extensive experience in driving effective multi-sector corporate partnershi­p engagement strategies’.

The election for Bristol Mayor takes place in May 2020. In 2022, the 10-year period since Bristol voted in a referendum to have an elected mayor will be up, meaning the issue can be revisited.

A second referendum would decide whether to continue with the role or not. A referendum can be triggered by the city Mayor or if five per cent of the population – approximat­ely 23,000 Bristol residents – were to sign a petition.

 ??  ?? Liberal Democrats have chosen Mary Page as their candidate for Bristol Mayor
Liberal Democrats have chosen Mary Page as their candidate for Bristol Mayor

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