Who is in the running to be North Tyneside mayor?

The race is on to find a new mayor for North Tyneside - a role that effectively heads North Tyneside Council although, in many other authority areas, it is ceremonial.
Labour's Norma Redfearn is standing down after 12 years in the job.
Seven candidates have entered the contest to take on the top political position in the borough.
Whoever wins the election will become the council's main spokesperson, directing the authority and chairing cabinet meetings.

The Labour Party candidate, Karen Clark, is currently the cabinet member for public health and wellbeing for the council and a ward councillor for Longbenton and Benton.
Employment and the economy are her main priorities.
"People having a good quality job with some money in their pocket is the number one way to lift people out of poverty."
She said she would be working to support businesses and talking to the government about investment in the area.

Liam Bones is the leader of the Conservatives in North Tyneside - the largest opposition party.
He is a councillor for the Preston and Preston Grange ward.
He has vowed to improve road maintenance in the borough.
He said there was a backlog of roads and pavements which needed to be fixed and that about £36m needed to be spent tackling the problem.
He said people are seeing "damage to their cars and trip hazards in pretty much every street."

The Liberal Democrat Party has selected Dr John Appleby as their candidate.
He is a senior lecturer in engineering mathematics.
For Dr Appleby, the environment is a key issue.
"We can talk about good air quality for health and making walking safer and more pleasant."
He has also vowed to look after places like Marden Quarry and the Rising Sun Country Park.

Disability rights campaigner Chloe-Louise Reilly is the Green Party candidate.
She stood as the party's candidate for Tynemouth in the 2024 General Election, but lost out to Labour's Alan Campbell.
The party has vowed to abolish the role of the mayor, if Ms Reilly is elected. It believes the cabinet being chosen by the mayor, rather than via an election system, is undemocratic.
Young people are also a priority for her.
She said she would get them involved in projects like re-purposing empty buildings and would "give them the opportunity to decide what they want in the community."

Local resident John Falkenstein has lived in the borough for most of his life and has worked as a barrister for almost 30 years.
He is standing for Reform UK.
If elected, his top priority would be to "balance the books."
He has called for a review of spending and said "Vanity projects have to stop, finances have to be rationalised and this all has to be done publicly."

Two independent candidates have also entered the race.
Cath Davis is a former Labour councillor for the Preston ward who left the party in 2023.
She wants to abolish the role that she is standing for, also objecting to the cabinet being chosen by the mayor, rather than via an election system.
"One of the major things I want to do is scrap the system," she said.
"It's undemocratic."

A second independent candidate Martin Henry Uren has also entered the race.
A watersports enthusiast, his main priority is to restore Tynemouth's Lido.
He wants the pool to be council-run and for any profits to be invested in the area.
He said "It's such a lovely project that has been in the public eye for a few years.
"It's time now to just get it done."
The election is on 1 May and only residents living in the borough are eligible to vote.
The role is separate from the North East Mayor, a post held by Labour's Kim McGuinness, who represents the seven local authorities in the region, including North Tyneside.