Who wants to be the first elected mayor of Essex?

Essex is set to vote for its first mayor in May 2026
- Published
Essex is set to have its first elected mayor representing 1.9m people next year.
The mayor is set to get power and money from Westminster over house building, infrastructure, transport and adult training and skills.
The election will take place on 7 May and a combined authority of unitary and county councils will join the mayor in making key decisions.
Parties and people have started to declare that they will stand to represent Southend to Saffron Walden, Clacton to Corringham.
It is early days, there are no manifestos yet. But in alphabetical order, these are the candidates who have declared so far and what they stand for:
James Allen - Liberal Democrat

Liberal Democrat James Allen said he would tackle the housing crisis with "genuinely affordable homes"
The Liberal Democrats have selected James Allen from Southend.
A former magistrate he stood for the party in Southend East and Rochford in last year's general election.
Mr Allen said in a statement: "As mayor, I will focus on improving transport and infrastructure, boosting skills and jobs, tackling the housing crisis with genuinely affordable homes, and building safer, healthier communities through joined-up work with Essex Police, Fire Services, and the NHS."
The BBC is set to interview the Lib Dem candidate later in November.
Adam Fox - Labour

Adam Fox was previously the deputy leader of Colchester City Council
Adam Fox, 42, has been deputy leader of Colchester City Council and stood for Labour to be Essex Police Fire and Crime Commissioner.
He has worked in the charity and health sector and currently works for local MP Pam Cox.
"What I want to deliver is real fairness and opportunity for people across the county. That's about providing good jobs and skills," he said. "Making sure people have genuinely affordable homes to live in."
Mr Fox said new housing should be built around existing transport infrastructure like train stations and said garden communities built with infrastructure first is the right approach.
"We have one of the best rail networks in the country, Greater Anglia just brought back into public ownership and C2C," he continued. "But we haven't got the best buses.
"One of the things I want to look at is a franchising model and bring down fares particularly for younger people.
"One brand, one fare system."
He added he wanted to see "people being able to use their ticket across multiple different bus companies" like in London and Manchester.
Louise McKinlay - Conservative

Louise McKinlay said the economy would be her focus if elected
Louise McKinlay, 47, is deputy leader of Essex County Council.
Born in Rochford hospital, she lives in Brentwood with her family and she used to be the local council leader. She runs a property management company with her husband.
"I want to be a mayor that can be advocating for business, particularly small businesses, they are the backbone of the Essex economy," she said.
"They need somebody who understands the county and who has run a business themselves."
Mrs McKinlay said the economy is her priority: "If we get the economy really firing on all cylinders then that means people will have better standards of living."
She says the county has great opportunity with the two freeports and "driving forward the investment that we need in our infrastructure whether that is on our roads or public transport" would be her focus.
Mrs McKinlay said she is campaigning to widen the A12 to three lanes in both directions between Chelmsford and Colchester - a project which was scrapped by the government in the summer.
James Miller - Conflecity

James Miller said he wanted to protect green belt land
James Miller, 44, is operations director of Stockvale group whose businesses include Adventure Island in Southend.
He founded a local party called Conflecity which means "joy in other people's happiness".
Mr Miller said it is neither left or right and policy is decided by its 100 members.
Conflecity has fielded candidates across Southend in local elections, but has no councillors.
"If there is one thing I would do if I was elected is stop all the building on the green belt land," he said.
"It was protected for a reason by people that came before us and we should honour that. I really dislike this idea that they [the government] transferred green belt into grey belt."
Mr Miller said he is not against house building, "but I am saying lets get an accurate demand for housing".
He supports local referendums on key decisions and would not bring in an emissions zone like ULEZ in Essex.
Philip Miller - Independent

Independent Philip Miller would prioritise backing the police force
Philip Miller, 70, is the executive chairman of Stockvale Group that runs Adventure Island and Sealife Adventure in Southend where he was born.
He said he was "standing as a businessman".
"Every time I see another crackers decision whether it is government or council, I always think why on earth are they doing this. I just thought I can just do a better job."
Mr Miller would "have a cull as much as possible as there are far too many chiefs and not enough Indians".
His priority is backing the police and having "stop and search back in really strong" and "old fashioned policing".
Mr Miller said he has a "dad's army" team of retirees who will help him, including a former senior Essex police officer.
Mr Miller wants free parking for the first two hours on every high street in Essex to give "all the retailers a boost". Though parking restrictions are usually decided by councils.
He is against building on the green belt and backs building homes on high streets.
Natasha Osben - Green

Green candidate Natasha Osben believed public transport needed to be looked at in Essex
Natasha Osben, 37, lives and grew up in Clacton. She stood there as the Green party candidate in the 2024 general election and for Labour in 2017 when Jeremy Corbyn was leader. She is an academic and mother of four children.
She said there was "not a single policy" of the Green party she did not disagree with.
"My first priority would be to ensure that the combined county authority is accountable and transparent.
"There's the prospect for people having less opportunity to have a say on decisions that effect their daily lives. Things from housing and planning.
"My top priority would be ensuring there are the processes in place for people to be consulted, to have public forums and assemblies."
Ms Osben said a priority would be fixing public transport "which is absolutely dire in Essex".
She added "buses often run on an hourly schedule and frequently don't turn up", it is "a failing service" and she would take more public control.
Reform UK?

Nigel Farage said Reform's candidate would be from Essex
Reform UK has said its selection process for its Essex mayoral candidate is "ongoing and once completed we will make an announcement".
Clacton MP and party leader Nigel Farage told BBC Essex in the summer the candidate would be from Essex.
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