Ron Ball
Force area: Warwickshire
Party: Independent
Turnout: 64,289 (15.2 per cent)
Salary: £65,000
Ron Ball left his job as an aircraft pilot to stand for the first PCC elections. He's also served as a magistrate. He says he's had experience in working with people during difficult times and young people when he was a school governor.
Anthony Stansfeld
Force area: Thames Valley
Party: Conservative
Turnout: 219,071 (12.9 per cent)
Salary: £85,000
Executive member of Berkshire Council, Anthony Stansfeld also sits on the Thames Valley Policy Authority. He said he wants to focus on reducing burglary rates and rural crime.
Katy Bourne
Force area: Sussex
Party: Conservative
Turnout: 189,236 (15.3 per cent)
Salary: £85,000
Katy Bourne is a businesswoman from Mid Sussex and is the national chairwoman of the Conservative Women's Organisation. She pledges to free up needless bureaucracy and to improve neighbourhood policing by putting more special constables on the beat.
Tim Passmore
Force area: Suffolk
Party: Conservative
Turnout: 85,168 (15.4 per cent)
Salary: £70,000
Tim Passmore is the former leader of Mid Suffolk Council and wants to "customise" the police force to what is needed in Suffolk. "I want to keep driving crime down. Suffolk Police is a good force and we are not in a high crime area, but we have to do better."
Paddy Tipping
Force area: Nottinghamshire
Party: Labour
Turnout: 132,973 (16.4 per cent)
Salary: £75,000
Paddy Tipping is a former MP for Sherwood and has previously worked as a social worker in Nottinghamshire. He aims to become "the people's commissioner, not a police commissioner". He says he will listen to people's concerns and take action effectively.ensure "public concerns" are listened to and acted on.
Adam Simmonds
Force area: Northamptonshiree
Party: Conservative
Turnout: 101,167 (20 per cent)
Salary: £70,000
Adam Simmonds is a former senior officer at Northamptonshire County Council. He says he will be "progressive, considered and a modern thinking commissioner". He wants to ensure "public concerns" are listened to and acted on.
Clive Grunshaw
Force area: Lancashire
Party: Labour
Turnout: 168,069 (15 per cent)
Salary: £85,000
Clive Grunshaw was Labour's candidate for Fleetwood in the 2010 General Election. He pledges to ensure that the Lancashire force is "fit for purpose" and able to deliver "the protection, security and service that the people of Lancashire want and deserve".
Ann Barnes
Force area: Kent
Party: Independent
Turnout: 204,917 (16 per cent)
Salary: £85,000
Ann Barnes has chaired the Kent Police Authority for the past six years. She has advised the Home Secretary on the appointment of senior officers and intends to resist funding cuts while ensuring victims of crime are better supported..
David Lloyd
Force area: Hertfordshire
Party: Conservative
Turnout: 119,158 (14.1 per cent)
Salary: £75,000
David Lloyd, previously the chairman of the Hertfordshire Police Authority, has pledged to "cut crime and catch more criminals" and says he will put the victim first "not the criminal".
Simon Hayes
Force area: Hampshire
Party: Independent
Turnout: 211,886 (14.5 per cent)
Salary: £70,000
Simon Hayes is a former Conservative district councillor but stood as an Independent candidate for the PCC elections. He wants to ensure the police have sufficient numbers of officers so that they can tackle crime effectively. He also wants to focus on reducing anti-social behaviour, violence, burglary and theft.
Ian Johnston
Force area: Gwent
Party: Independent
Turnout: 59,336 (14 per cent)
Salary: £85,000
Ian Jonhston has served as a police officer with Gwent Police for 33 years. Most recently he was president of the Police Superintendents' Association. He wants to focus on anti-social behaviour and pledges to find solutions to local policing problems.
Alan Charles
Force area: Derbyshire
Party: Labour
Turnout: 112,908 (14.4 per cent)
Salary: £75,000
Alan Charles is a Derbyshire councillor and vice chair of Derbyshire Police Authority. He pledges to fight cuts to policing impacting on the force and is opposed to privatisation of the police force.
Tony Lloyd
Force area: Greater Manchester
Party: Labour
Turnout: 272,153 (13.6 per cent)
Salary: £100,000
Tony Lloyd has been the MP for Manchester Central since 1997. He has been the Minister of State at the Foreign Office and leader of the UK delegation to the Council of Europe. Safety for families is his main concern.
Martin Surl
Force area: Gloucestershire
Party: Independent
Turnout: 78,502 (16 per cent)
Salary: £65,000
Martin Surl is a former superintendent with Gloucestershire Police. He specialised in counter terrorism at the Association of Chief Police Officers and has 30 years experience in the police. He wants to start by supporting the police to reduce crime criminal behaviour in the county and now gets to choose the new chief constable.
Nicholas Alston
Force area: Essex
Party: Conservative
Turnout: 168,234 (12.8 per cent)
Salary:£85000
Former Royal Naval officer, Nicholas Alston, wants to support measures that cut crime and improve communication between the police and the public. He believes he has the skills to ensure victims have a greater say in policing.
Martyn Underhill
Force area: Dorset
Party: Independent
Turnout: 96,149 (16.3 per cent)
Salary:£70,000
Former police chief, Martyn Underhill, was second in command of the Sarah Payne murder investigation. As an Independent candidate he believed in "solutions for Dorset people" without any party politics that a candidate with no political attachment has. Wants to tackle anti-social behaviour as well as reducing marine and rural crime putting the victim first.
Barry Coppinger
Force area: Cleveland
Party: Conservative
Turnout: 62,249 (15.6 per cent)
Salary: £65,000
Richard Rhodes has 30 years experience as a magistrate and 22 years as a headteacher. As the chairman of the Cumbria Probation Trust he has vowed to bring in "hot spot policing" and restore hope in justice as well as boosting victim support.
Barry Coppinger
Force area: Cleveland
Party: Labour
Turnout: 61,783 (14.7 per cent)
Salary: £70,000
Barry Coppinger is a former member of Cleveland Police Authority and has previously been responsible for community safety. He stresses that he will "listen to the experts" before making decisions that will impact on young people.
Olly Martins
Force area: Bedfordshire
Party: Labour
Turnout: 18.9 per cent
Salary: £65,000
Olly Martins is a former member of the Territorial Army and he aims to develop partnerships across the criminal justice system. He wants to "ensure the committed public servants who work for Bedfordshire Police and the wider justice system are valued for what they do."
Winston Roddick
Force area: North Wales
Party: Independent
Turnout: 77,753 (14.8 per cent)
Salary: £85,000
Winston Roddick is one of Wales' leading barristers and was their first Counsel General. He has pledged to work across the region to ensure that the police service nurtures relations inside and outside of the criminal justice system. He also believes his independence will make him a better commissioner because of no political interference.
Shaun Wright
Force area: South Yorkshire
Party: Labour
Turnout:145,294 (14.5 per cent)
Salary: £85,000
Shaun Wright has been a Labour councillor for 12 years and recently served as a magistrate. Mr Wright said he wanted resources concentrated at the "sharp end" rather than "costly and often unnecessary red tape" with a focus on local neighbourhood policing.
Bob Jones
Force area: West Midlands
Party: Labour
Turnout: 238,384 (12 per cent)
Salary: £100,000
Former Wolverhampton city councillor, Bob Jones, has served his community of Blakenhall Ward since the 1980s. In 2010 he was awarded a CBE for his services to policing. He has pledged to introduce "community led policing boards" and has said he would use his role to highlight the "appalling financial settlement" the police force has received from the Government.
Clive Loader
Force area: Leicestershire
Party: Conservative
Turnout: 16.36 per cent
Salary: £75000
Sir Clive Loader is a retired RAF serviceman who spent 30 years with the force. He has pledged to bring the same "effectiveness, efficiency and professionalism" to the county's force as he said could be found in the RAF during his three decades of service."
Julia Mulligan
Force area: North Yorkshire
Party: Conservative
Turnout: 82,213 (13.3 per cent)
Salary: £70,000
Before North Yorkshire PCC elections, Julia Mulligan, said she would use her business background, skills and experience to make the area safer. "Improve lives by tackling anti-social behaviour in urban and rural areas. Increase police visibility in villages and rural areas with new parish constables."
Vera Baird
Force area: Northumbria
Party: Labour
Turnout: 178,807 (16.4 per cent)
Salary: £85,000
Former MP Vera Baird says she will "stand up for communities against the Tories' 20 per cent cuts to policing. Keep police and PCSOs on the beat with neighbourhood policing and not hand it over to private companies."
Jane Kennedy
Force area: Merseyside
Party: Labour
Turnout:126,171 (12.4 per cent)
Salary: £85,000
Former Liverpool MP, Jane Kennedy, said before the elections that she would build public support for the police and its work. "I will work hard to win the support of the people of Merseyside. I will fight privatisation and make a strong case for more resources in Merseyside."
Christopher Salmon
Force area: Dyfed-Powys
Party: Conservative
Turnout: 64,660 (16.4 per cent)
Salary: £65,000
Mr Salmon joined the Army in 2003 and served in Northern Ireland, Kosovo and Iraq. His main priorities are to cut crime, make people feel safe and wants full coverage from the Force's helicopter.
Angus MacPherson
Force area: Wiltshire
Party: Conservative
Turnout: 78,794 (15.3 per cent)
Salary: £70,000
Mr MacPherson is an accountant who has previously served as a member of the police authority and a borough councillor in Swindon. He wants to help reduce crime, reoffending and improve efficiency.
More winners to come, as announced
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