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A Tory MP and a former Labour minister confirmed as East Midlands mayoral candidates

The winner of the mayoral election will head the new East Midlands Combined County Authority

An East Midlands Combined County Authority will cover Nottingham and Derby and their counties(Image: Joseph Raynor)

The Conservative MP who also leads Nottinghamshire County Council and a former Labour Cabinet Minister have been picked as their respective party’s candidates for the East Midlands mayoral election next year.

Ben Bradley, the Conservative MP for Mansfield said he was “delighted” to have been confirmed as the party’s candidate for the election on May 2 2024.

Meanwhile, Claire Ward, who was MP for Watford from 1997 to 2010, has been confirmed as Labour’s candidate. Ms Ward served as a junior justice minister, and is now the chairwoman of the Sherwood Forest Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.

Speaking on the BBC’s Politics East Midlands on Sunday, Ms Ward said: “I think (there) is a sense of frustration that the East Midlands has been left behind for so long, and we haven’t got the investment that we need.

“I stepped away from politics in the sense I moved up here, I brought my children up here, I’ve lived up here for over 10 years, got involved in my local community, but I just feel that we have to make the case for better jobs, better schools, (and) new opportunities.

“I don’t want my family to feel that there’s nothing here in the East Midlands when I know that there is so much opportunity, and I want to be able to grasp that as the mayor and make the best for our communities and our towns and our cities.”

The winner of the mayoral election will head the new East Midlands Combined County Authority, a new devolution model being introduced through the Levelling-Up and Regeneration Bill, which is currently going through Parliament.

Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire County Councils, and Derby and Nottingham City Councils, will be involved in the devolution, which will give the region £38 million of funding a year for 30 years, or a total of £1.14 billion.