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The candidates vying to be Mayor of Doncaster

The candidates vying to be Mayor of Doncaster

Yahoo03-04-2025
The campaign to become the next directly-elected Mayor of Doncaster is under way and parties have announced their candidates.
Twelve hopefuls are standing in the election on Thursday, 1 May, when there will also be council elections for all wards, plus town and parish council elections for all areas.
The Mayor is chosen every four years and is elected by voters, unlike traditional council leaders who are chosen by councillors.
They lead the council and have a cabinet of councillors to support them.
The candidates who are standing are listed in alphabetical order and you can find a summary of each of their key pledges.
Frank Calladine was born and bred in Doncaster. The 42-year-old works for his family-run business in Mexborough.
"I have lived in Doncaster my entire life; this city is my heart and soul. Local housing should prioritise Doncaster residents and veterans over migrants.
"No more buildings on the Green Belt or flood plains, new developments should only occur on brownfield sites. We should protect agricultural and ancient woodland.
"I call for a public inquiry into grooming gangs.
"We must stop outsourcing council services and bring them in-house. I oppose Conisbrough and Moss solar panel farms and Thorpe Mars battery storage.
"The Mayor's cabinet should be talent-based and reduced from nine to five members."
Nick Fletcher, 52, is a former Doncaster MP and local businessman.
"I'm standing for Mayor to stop the spiral of decline, especially in the town centre where beggars and anti-social behaviour are rife.
"I campaigned hard to save the airport and will always put Doncaster first, fighting for local issues.
"The Mayor of Doncaster can't stop the boats, but the Mayor can stop the rot.
"For too long, people here have been forgotten.
"I am determined to make Doncaster safe again and also to make Doncaster great again. It's time for a change."
Alexander Jones, 30, is self-employed at the company WitnessInvest Ltd and is an occasional model.
"Doncaster requires a Mayor that prioritises the needs of its residents who want safer streets, jobs and upskilling opportunities, financial prosperity, and wellbeing.
"I want to lead the future of Doncaster by improving infrastructure and housing, protecting existing businesses whilst also attracting emerging sectors such as AI.
"The Labour-led council is broken; spending money on bureaucracy and unnecessary projects whilst not investing sufficiently in vital services, and facing interest payments on debt of £48,000 daily.
"This isn't good enough and must change. The people of Doncaster matter, they deserve a smarter, leaner council that works for everybody. Doncaster needs Reform."
Ros Jones, 75, was first elected as Mayor in May 2013 and was re-elected in 2017 and 2021.
"Being your Mayor has been the greatest privilege of my life.
"Doncaster is such a special place, and it deserves an experienced Mayor who will deliver for local people.
"We have already achieved so much together, but there is still work to be done.
"At this election, only a Labour Mayor can give Doncaster a seat at the table and deliver for our city and our communities."
Andrew Walmsley, 35, works as a design engineer in vehicle conversions.
"I joined the Yorkshire Party because I believe in stronger local powers and fairer funding.
"The devolution bill gives councils more powers over adult skills training. A key focus must be on having training providers for the reopening airport.
"I also want to see more adult and 16-19 technical training - it forms a great foundation for many career paths.
"I'm a worker in Doncaster just like you. I want decisions to be made here and I will use my powers and influence as mayor to fight for stronger devolution and fairer funding for Doncaster."
Also standing are:
David Bettney - Social Democratic Party
Julie Buckley - Green Party
Andy Hiles - Trade Union and Socialist Coalition
Ahsan Jamil – Workers Party of Britain
Mihai Melenciuc – Liberal Democrats
Richie Vallance - Independent
Doug Wright – Independent
The full list of all the candidates, including those standing for the council and parish elections, can be found at Doncaster Council.
This story will include details for more candidates when they are received. Information and inquiries can be submitted to lucy.ashton@bbc.co.uk
Listen to highlights from South Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North
When and where are the May local elections and who can vote?
Local elections 2025: Is there an election in my area?
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At least 30 are killed in Israeli strikes in Gaza as war deaths top 58,000, officials say
At least 30 are killed in Israeli strikes in Gaza as war deaths top 58,000, officials say

Hamilton Spectator

timean hour ago

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At least 30 are killed in Israeli strikes in Gaza as war deaths top 58,000, officials say

DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip (AP) — Israeli strikes in the Gaza Strip killed at least 30 people on Sunday, including six children at a water collection point, local health officials said, despite attempts by mediators to bring about a ceasefire. Israel and Hamas appeared no closer to a breakthrough in talks meant to pause the 21-month war and free some Israeli hostages. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was in Washington last week to discuss the deal with the Trump administration, but a new sticking point has emerged over the deployment of Israeli troops during the truce, raising questions over the feasibility of a new deal. Israel says it will only end the war once Hamas surrenders, disarms and goes into exile, something it refuses to do. Hamas says it is willing to free all the remaining 50 hostages, less than half said to be alive, in exchange for an end to the war and the full withdrawal of Israeli forces. Gaza's Health Ministry said Sunday that more than 58,000 people have been killed in the war. The ministry doesn't differentiate between civilians and combatants in its count but says more than half of the dead are women and children. In the Oct. 7, 2023, attack that sparked the war, Hamas-led militants killed some 1,200 people and abducted 251 in a raid on northern Israel. Throughout the war in Gaza, violence has also surged in the Israeli-occupied West Bank , where funerals were held Sunday for two Palestinians, including Palestinian-American Sayfollah Musallet, 20, who was killed in an attack by Israeli settlers, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry. Children killed at a water collection point In central Gaza, officials at Al-Awda Hospital said it received 10 bodies after an Israeli strike on a water collection point in nearby Nuseirat. Among the dead were six children, the hospital said. 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One of the ministry's spokespeople, Zaher al-Wahidi, told the AP that Qandil was on his way to Al-Ahli Arab Baptist Hospital when the strike happened. All bodies and those wounded were taken to Al-Ahli hospital, according to al-Wahidi. In the central town of Zawaida, an Israeli strike on a home killed nine, including two women and three children, officials at Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital said. The military said it was unaware of a strike on the home, but has struck over 150 targets over the past 24 hours, including what it said are weapons storage facilities, missile launchers and sniping posts. Israel blames Hamas for civilian casualties because the militant group operates out of populated areas. Funeral held for Palestinian-American killed in the West Bank In the West Bank, where violence between Israeli troops and Palestinians has been compounded by attacks on Palestinians by Israeli settlers, funerals were held for a Palestinian-American and a Palestinian friend of his. 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Bernie Sanders Reveals the AI ‘Doomsday Scenario' That Worries Top Experts
Bernie Sanders Reveals the AI ‘Doomsday Scenario' That Worries Top Experts

Gizmodo

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Bernie Sanders Reveals the AI ‘Doomsday Scenario' That Worries Top Experts

Artificial intelligence promises a future of unprecedented productivity and wealth, but for Senator Bernie Sanders, the crucial question isn't if the technology will change the world, but who will benefit from that change. As a lifelong champion for workers' rights, Sanders sees the rapid advancement of AI not just as a technological revolution, but as the next major battleground in the fight against corporate greed and inequality. In a conversation with Gizmodo, the Vermont senator, who revealed he had just spoken with one of the world's leading AI experts, laid out his fears that the technology will be used to suppress wages, break unions, and further enrich the billionaire class. He also shared his concerns about AI's impact on our collective mental health and discussed the 'doomsday scenario' that has some top minds in the industry worried that humanity could lose control of its own creation. The conversation has been edited for clarity and formatted as a Q&A. All quotes are verbatim and unaltered. Gizmodo: Senator, you've long fought for worker dignity. In an economy increasingly shaped by AI, what do you believe should be the new definition of meaningful work? Sen. Sanders: Well, that is a very good question, and I don't know that I can give you an intelligent answer to it right now, but this is what I will say. What I think is being lost in the discussion over AI is what we have seen over the last 50 years: a huge increase in worker productivity. Almost all of the benefits of that productivity have gone to the corporations and to the companies that developed that technology. In fact, workers today, in real inflation-accounted-for wages, are earning less, and I fear very much that almost all the new benefits of worker productivity will go to the people on top at the expense of working people. That is something that concerns me very much. So, the first point to be made: Technology and AI is neither good nor bad. It depends on how it is used, and it depends upon who benefits from it. Unless we change the political dynamics, the benefits are going to accrue to the people on top at the expense of working people. That to me is the most important issue. I want workers to benefit from this new technology, not just the people on top. Historically, I mean forever—in human existence—people have had to struggle to put food on the table, to farm, to grow food, just to survive. And AI is going to change all that, and we want to make sure that this creates a better, wealthier future for ordinary people, not just the people on top. Gizmodo: In terms of protection, what protections are needed for American workers to avoid being left behind in this transition? Sen. Sanders: I think we have got to make it clear in some formulation or another, and some of the unions are beginning to negotiate for this. 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Gizmodo: What do you mean by that, Senator? Sen. Sanders: People interact more every day with artificial intelligence, with robotics. What is the impact on the mental health and the well-being of human beings? If you spend your entire day interacting with a chatbot rather than talking to friends or family, what happens to you? What kind of problems develop? We know that in America right now, a lot of young people are having a hard time interacting with other human beings because they spend so much time on the internet. And there are people out there, literally, people in the technology world, who are saying, 'Look, if you can't make any friends, if you're very lonely, go to a chatbot and you can develop a friend right there.' I'm not sure that this is good for human beings. Gizmodo: There's a sense that people are lost, that AI is erasing our identity, our role in society… Sen. Sanders: Well, do you know the expression, 'The operation was a success, unfortunately the patient died'? In this context, the system is working well. We're developing all kinds of technology: you're going to be able to do this, you're going to be able to do that. Unfortunately, human beings are going to get lost in that development. And they will become more and more unhappy, more and more mentally unstable, more and more lonely. So, we want to make sure the technology benefits human beings, economically as well as emotionally. That has got to be the driving force. Gizmodo: Have you spoken to tech CEOs or experts about this? Sen. Sanders: I have talked to CEOs. Funny that you mention it. I won't mention his name, but I've just gotten off the phone with one of the leading experts in the world on artificial intelligence, two hours ago. Gizmodo: Did they share your concern? Did they offer any solutions? Sen. Sanders: They're all different. He did. Somebody I talked to yesterday, not so much. There are differences of opinion. On several major issues. Number one: What impact will AI have on the economy? Some people say there will be massive job losses. I tend to agree with them. Other people say not so much, new jobs will be created. It will be like every other technological revolution. Jobs lost, jobs created, not such a big deal. So people disagree. I happen to believe this is not like the Industrial Revolution. I think this could be a lot more severe. Second point: This is not science fiction. There are very, very knowledgeable people—and I just talked to one today—who worry very much that human beings will not be able to control the technology, and that artificial intelligence will in fact dominate our society. We will not be able to control it. It may be able to control us. That's kind of the doomsday scenario—and there is some concern about that among very knowledgeable people in the industry. Gizmodo: Are you personally optimistic or pessimistic about AI, for workers, for society? Sen. Sanders: That's a broader question. We have the worst president in the history of the United States in office right now. We're seeing, all over the world, democracy itself being threatened. We see a terrible war in Ukraine, a terrible war in Gaza. So I think this is not a great moment for humanity. I would hope, however—there are ups and downs—that we can turn this around. And among many other things, use the benefits of artificial intelligence and robotics to improve human life. To make sure we can wipe out poverty. That all of our people can have a decent standard of living. This is doable. The greed of billionaires controls the process. But ordinary people must control the future. Gizmodo: One final question: Do you believe AI could in any fashion be used to strengthen unions and worker rights, or is it inherently a threat to organized labor? Sen. Sanders: I think at this moment it is more of a threat. And I think in some ways it is being used the way bad trade policies in the United States were used in the 70s. In other words, what employers will say is: 'Look, I want you to take a cut in pay. Or I want you to pay more for healthcare. And if you don't do that, by the way, we've got machines. We've got robots that can replace you. We've got artificial intelligence that can replace you. It's your choice. Take a cut or we replace you as human workers. So I think we've got to mobilize the trade union movement to be militant in standing up against the dangers of AI to workers' rights.

Israeli strikes in Gaza kill at least 19, hospitals say, as ceasefire talks drag on
Israeli strikes in Gaza kill at least 19, hospitals say, as ceasefire talks drag on

Hamilton Spectator

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  • Hamilton Spectator

Israeli strikes in Gaza kill at least 19, hospitals say, as ceasefire talks drag on

DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip (AP) — Israeli strikes in the Gaza Strip killed at least 19 people on Sunday, including six children at a water collection point, local health officials said, despite attempts by mediators to bring about a ceasefire. Israel and Hamas appeared no closer to a breakthrough in talks meant to pause the 21-month war and free some Israeli hostages. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was in Washington last week to discuss the deal with the Trump administration, but a new sticking point has emerged over the deployment of Israeli troops during the truce, raising questions over the feasibility of a new deal. Israel wants to keep forces in what it says is an important land corridor in southern Gaza. Hamas views the insistence on troops in that strip of land as an indication that Israel intends to continue the war once a temporary ceasefire expires. Israel says it will only end the war once Hamas surrenders, disarms and goes into exile, something it refuses to do. 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Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .

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