Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
This is a list of mayors and shire presidents of the City of Lake Macquarie and its predecessors in the Hunter Region of New South Wales. The Shire of Lake Macquarie was proclaimed on 6 March 1906. It became a municipality on 1 March 1977 and a city on 7 September 1984. [1] [2] The Shire was represented by a Shire President and 16 aldermen.
Port Stephens Council is composed of three three-member wards, as well as a directly-elected mayor. [34] "Save Port Stephens" has been formed as a group for the election, contesting the mayoral election, Central Ward and East Ward. [35] The group also chose Neil Turner as their West Ward lead candidate, but ended up not contesting that ward ...
Kay Fraser − Lake Macquarie, announced 8 March 2024 [11] Carolyn Corrigan (Serving Mosman) − Mosman, announced 1 May 2024 (contesting as councillor candidate) [12] [13] Amanda Findley − Shoalhaven, announced 6 May 2024 [14] Gordon Bradbery (Wollongong Independents) − Wollongong, announced 16 May 2024 [15]
Lake Macquarie is an electoral district of the Legislative Assembly in Greater Newcastle, ... Candidate Votes % ±% Independent: Greg Piper: 29,093 57.5 +3.0 Labor:
The National Party does not endorse candidates for local elections. Coffs Harbour MP Gurmesh Singh , the deputy leader of the NSW Nationals, endorsed Nikki Williams (Team Nikki), George Cecato (Better Coffs Coast) and Tegan Swan ( Independent ) in the mayoral election . [ 10 ]
Lake Macquarie, an electoral ... 2011 New South Wales state election: Lake Macquarie [13] Party Candidate Votes % ±% Independent: Greg Piper: 19,678 43.7 +13.4 ...
2021 New South Wales mayoral elections: Lake Macquarie; Party Candidate Votes % ±% Labor: Kay Fraser 69,105 53.0 +8.3 Liberal: Jason Pauling 28,824 22.1 +1.6 Lake Mac Independents: Luke Cubis 16,206 12.4 +7.7 Independent: Rosmairi Dawson 16,201 12.4 +12.4 Total formal votes 130,336 96.1 Informal votes 5,265 3.9 Turnout: 135,601 84.6
In August 2021, Saskatchewan's Chief Electoral Officer Michael Boda proposed changing election dates in the province in 2024, given that the provincial and municipal elections were, as in 2020, schedule to take place within three weeks of each other.