Local non-party campaigners can spend up to £50 plus 0.5p per elector on campaigning for or against a candidate in the local authority area. This is the permitted sum. It applies once the candidate is officially a candidate (see When do you officially become a candidate?).
The number of electors is the number of local government electors registered to vote on the last day for publication of the notice of election in the local authority area.1
For example
If there are 500,000 registered electors in the local authority area, your spending limit for campaigning for or against a candidate for Mayor would be:
£50 + (500,000 x 0.5p)
£50 + (£2,500) = £2550
Your local elections office will be able to give you the number of electors in the local authority.
You should keep a record of your spending, to make sure that you do not exceed the spending limit.
Any spending over these limits must be authorised by the agent of the relevant candidate. The authorised spending will count as candidate spending and towards the candidate’s spending limit.2
1. Schedule 2, Table 1 The Local Authorities (Mayoral Elections) (England and Wales) Regulations 2007 (LAM Regulations 2007) and section 75(1ZZB) & (1ZA)(b) Representation of the People Act 1983 (RPA 1983)↩ Back to content at footnote 1