Candidates must be 18 or over. In England, candidates must be
registered to vote at local elections at an address within the police area on the date of nomination; in Wales, they must be registered to vote in parliamentary elections, except that overseas electors cannot stand and a local election registration is sufficient for certain people who cannot vote in parliamentary elections, namely peers, "qualifying EU citizens", and "EU citizens with retained rights" (see below for definitions of these terms). Members of the
House of Lords are not barred from standing (with the above exception in Wales that they must be registered to vote in local elections in the area). Members of the
House of Commons, the European Parliament and the UK's devolved legislatures are not barred from standing but, if they win, they must resign before they can take up a PCC appointment. Those disqualified from standing or continuing to hold office include: • Anyone who is, or is nominated as a candidate at an election taking place on the same day for, the police and crime commissioner for a different police area. This includes combined authority mayors exercising the responsibilities of a PCC. • Anyone who is not: • a
British citizen, • a
citizen of the Republic of Ireland, • a "qualifying
Commonwealth citizen" (meaning a Commonwealth citizen who either
does not need leave to enter or remain or has
indefinite leave to remain in the UK), • a "qualifying EU citizen" (a citizen of a country listed in Schedule 6A of the
Representation of the People Act 1983 – currently Luxembourg, Poland, Portugal, Spain, or Denmark – who does not need leave to remain or has infinite right to remain), or • an "EU citizen with retained rights" (meaning a
European Union citizen who was settled in the UK at the time of
Brexit and has been allowed to retain some rights associated with their citizenship, such as residence and voting in local elections). • Anyone who has ever been convicted of an imprisonable offence. This applies even if they were not actually sentenced to imprisonment, or if the conviction is "spent". • Anyone who is a police officer or is directly or indirectly employed by the police, as well as staff of a PCC (except a deputy PCC, who must be temporarily acting as PCC if it is a by-election), the
Mayor of London, members of the
Common Council of the City of London, and that council's staff in its capacity as police authority. "Staff" in this sense includes contractors. • Anyone who is disqualified under certain provisions of the
House of Commons Disqualification Act 1975 including civil servants, members of the regular armed forces or the holders of any judicial offices specified in Part 1 of Schedule 1 of the House of Commons Disqualification Act 1975 (as amended). • Anyone who is a member of the legislature of any country or territory outside the UK. • Anyone who is a member of staff of a local council that falls wholly or partly within the police area in which the election is to be held – including anyone employed in an organisation that is under the control of a local council in the police area for which the election is to be held. Fire and rescue authorities are also covered if the PCC in question is also
ex officio a fire and rescue authority. • Anyone who is the subject of a debt relief order or interim order, a bankruptcy restrictions order or interim order, or a debt relief restrictions undertaking. • Anyone who is disqualified under the
Representation of the People Act 1983 (which covers corrupt or illegal electoral practices and offences relating to donations) or under the Audit Commission Act 1998. Candidates must secure the signatures of 100 people registered to vote within the force area in which they wish to stand and must pay a deposit of £5,000. A person with an anonymous entry in the register of electors cannot nominate a candidate for election. The appointed Deputy PCC is held to similar criteria as the PCC. The Association of Police and Crime Commissioners published a candidate briefing prior to the 2021 elections, setting out "Guidance, advice and information for anyone interested in standing as a candidate in the 2021 Police and Crime Commissioner elections". Jonathon Seed, the Conservative Party candidate for
Wiltshire Police and Crime Commissioner in the
2021 election, did not take up his post after it was revealed that he had a conviction for an imprisonable offence.
ITV News had asked Seed, his campaign team and the Conservative Party before polling day if Seed had any convictions. In footage posted online, Seed refused to answer questions put to him by news reporters prior to the election. Wiltshire Police asked Thames Valley Police to investigate and he was charged with making a false declaration. He was due to stand trial in July 2022, but in June the
Crown Prosecution Service dropped the charges after a pre-trial review on the grounds of insufficient evidence. The
re-run of the election was held in August 2021 and was expected to cost £1million. ==Electoral system==