Jacob Mark photograph

Jacob Mark

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Gender Male
Age 32
Date of birth October 16,1991
Zodiac sign Libra
Born Koge
Denmark
Job Politician
Education Roskilde University
Køge Gymnasium
Party Green Left
Previous positionMember of the Danish Folketing (2015–2021)
ParentsBjarne Mark
Lise Mark
BooksWrigley Field: A Celebration of the Friendly Confines
Position Member of the Folketing since 2015
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID489334
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Jacob Mark Life story


Jacob Rene Mark is a Danish politician, who is a member of the Folketing for the Socialist People's Party. He was elected into parliament at the 2015 Danish general election.

Local Elections 2023: Is there an election in my area?

Apr 6,2023 10:10 pm

This May sees the biggest round of local council elections in England and Northern Ireland since 2019, with 40 million people able to choose new councillors.

In England , 230 councils will be electing some or all of their councillors on Thursday 4 May.

About 8,000 councillors are being elected in all.

Bedford, Leicester, Mansfield and Middlesbrough will also elect mayors.

In Northern Ireland , 462 council seats are being contested across all 11 councils on Thursday 18 May.

Use our lookup to see if there is an Election in your Area .

A modern browser with JavaScript and a stable internet connection is required to view this Interactive .

Is there an Election in my Area ?

Enter your full postcode, or the name of your council Area to find Out

Map showing types of council: 2022 Metropolitan Unitary District Northern Ireland No Election

Note : This lookup covers The Council and mayoral elections in England and Northern Ireland . There may be parish, town or community council elections or council by-elections where you are. In council areas where not all the seats are up for Election there may be wards that have no elections in May. Check your local council website for full Details .

England

Most of the seats up this year were last contested in May 2019.

Back Then , Theresa May was The Conservative Prime Minister and she was struggling to find a Brexit deal that would get through The House of Commons. Jeremy Corbyn was leader of the opposition Labour Party .

The Conservatives lost More Than 1,000 council seats in that Election . Labour slipped back slightly, losing 84 councillors, and UKIP lost most of the seats they had gained in the run-up to Brexit.

The Liberal Democrats , The Greens , independent councillors and local parties all increased their representation.

The 2023 elections are mostly taking place in rural areas where the Conservatives still hold many councils. They are defending More Than 3,300 seats.

There are also elections in urban areas in the north of England where Labour are more dominant. They are defending More Than 2,000 seats.

After their gains in 2019, Liberal Democrats won More Than 1,200 seats and the Green Party are defending 240.

What do the councils do?

Most of the councils up for Election in May are district councils. They look after services including bin collections, parks, Public Housing and local planning applications.

Other services in these areas such as highways, schools, social and care services are managed by county councils which are elected at a different time.

The rest of the councils are a mixture of metropolitan and unitary councils. These areas have a single local authority that deals with all local services.

Bedford, Leicester, Mansfield and Middlesbrough will all be electing mayors, the directly elected leaders of The Council .

They are responsible for all of the services controlled by The Council from leisure services to social care, and appoint members of The Cabinet who each have responsibility for specific council services.

Northern Ireland

In Northern Ireland there is only one layer of local government. Councils here have responsibility for services such as bin collections, planning, street cleaning, sport and leisure centres, parks and open spaces.

Northern Ireland uses a type of proportional representation to choose councillors called the single transferable vote.

The effect of this system is that No One party controls a council and most work by forming a series of cross-party decision making committees.

Eleven parties and independents won seats at The Last Election in 2019. The Democratic Unionist Party are defending The Most seats, followed by Sinn Féin, the Ulster Unionist Party , the SDLP and The Alliance Party.

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Source of news: bbc.com

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