Alison Hernandez

British politician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alison Selina Hernandez[1] is an Independent British politician, and the current Police and Crime Commissioner for Devon and Cornwall. She was elected representing the Conservative Party to the post on 5 May 2016, succeeding Tony Hogg.[2] She was re-elected, again as a Conservative, in 2021 and 2024. In 2026 she left the Conservative Party.[3]

Preceded byTony Hogg
PartyIndependent (4 Jan 2026 - present)
Conservative (May 2016 - 4 Jan 2026)
Quick facts Devon and Cornwall Police and Crime Commissioner, Preceded by ...
Alison Hernandez
Devon and Cornwall Police and Crime Commissioner
Assumed office
12 May 2016
Preceded byTony Hogg
Personal details
PartyIndependent (4 Jan 2026 - present)
Conservative (May 2016 - 4 Jan 2026)
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Election expenses

Within days of her election, it was reported that Hernandez was being investigated by police over allegations she failed to properly declare election expenses that were submitted in her role as an election agent for Kevin Foster, Conservative candidate in the Torbay constituency during the 2015 general election. Hernandez was under investigation by the Independent Police Complaints Commission which is managing the probe by West Mercia Police in connection with the United Kingdom general election, 2015 party spending investigation.[4] She faced calls from opposition politicians, including Plymouth City Council leader Tudor Evans, to step aside from the role of Police and Crime Commissioner while the investigation was ongoing.[5][6] Hernandez addressed these concerns during her swearing in ceremony on 10 May: "I've had over 91,000 people elect me to office. I'm here for the people of Devon and Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly. I'm here to do a job – the police need support."[6]

The Independent Police Complaints Commission referred the matter to the Crown Prosecution Service in April 2017. They ruled on 10 May 2017 that there were no grounds for a criminal charge and the case was dropped.[7]

Other controversies

Hernandez courted controversy in June 2017 when she suggested gun owners could engage with terrorists.[8] This idea was swiftly dismissed by Deputy Chief Constable Paul Netherton due to the complexities of responding to such an incident and the confusion that may occur in identifying the attackers.[8]

In February 2019 she revealed that she had been caught speeding, and had received a parking ticket.[9]

Electoral record

More information Devon and Cornwall Police and Crime Commissioner election, 2016, Party ...
Devon and Cornwall Police and Crime Commissioner election, 2016
Party Candidate 1st round 2nd round 1st round votesTransfer votes, 2nd round
Total Of round Transfers Total Of round
Conservative Alison Hernandez 69,354 24.4% 21,682 91,036 51.1%
Labour Gareth Derrick 66,519 23.4% 20,723 87,242 48.9%
UKIP Jonathan Smith 49,659 17.5%
Independent Bob Spencer 41,382 14.6%
Liberal Democrats Richard Younger-Ross 35,154 12.4%
Independent William Morris 22,395 7.9%
Turnout 284,463 22.1%
Rejected ballots 9,657 3.3%
Total votes 294,120
Registered electors
Conservative hold
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More information Devon and Cornwall Police and Crime Commissioner election, 2021, Party ...
Devon and Cornwall Police and Crime Commissioner election, 2021
Party Candidate 1st round 2nd round 1st round votesTransfer votes, 2nd round
Total Of round Transfers Total Of round
Conservative Alison Hernandez* 247,173 49.97% 28,044 275,217 65.19%
Labour Gareth Derrick 99,894 20.20% 47,085 146,979 34.81%
Liberal Democrats Brian Blake 88,318 17.86%
Green Stuart Paul Jackson 59,242 11.98%
Turnout 494,627
Conservative hold
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More information Party, Candidate ...
Devon and Cornwall Police and Crime Commissioner election, 2024 [10]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Conservative Alison Hernandez* 131,764 43.3 −6.7
Labour Co-op Daniel Steel 107,897 35.4 +15.2
Liberal Democrats Steve Lodge 64,790 21.3 +3.4
Turnout 304,451 22.5 −13.6
Conservative hold Swing -21.9
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References

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