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Anglesey by-election: Voters go to the polls Polls close for Anglesey by-election
(about 17 hours later)
Voters are going to the polls on Anglesey to elect a new member of the Welsh assembly for the island. The polls have closed in the Anglesey by-election and counting is under way.
Six candidates are standing in the Ynys Mon by-election, the first to be held for the assembly in seven years. Votes have been cast since 07:00 BST, in the first by-election to be held for a Welsh assembly seat in seven years.
The poll was prompted by a decision by the sitting AM - former Plaid Cymru leader Ieuan Wyn Jones - to stand down to lead the new Menai Science Park. It was prompted when former Plaid Cymru leader Ieuan Wyn Jones stood down.
Polling stations are open from 07:00 to 22:00 BST, with the result expected in the early hours of Friday morning. Results for the six candidates - Rhun ap Iorwerth (Plaid Cymru), Tal Michael (Labour), Conservative Neil Fairlamb, UKIP's Nathan Gill, Kathrine Jones (Socialist Labour) and Steve Churchman (Lib Dems) are expected overnight.
A Labour victory would give First Minister Carwyn Jones an outright majority in the Senedd, while a poor performance would raise concerns about the party's prospects of retaining the parliamentary seat at the next general election.
The candidates spent much of their time laying out where they stand on proposals to build a replacement nuclear power station at Wylfa.
Tal Michael - who contested the election for a north Wales police commissioner last year - also emphasised jobs during his campaign, saying he wanted to make Anglesey an "opportunity island".
Former BBC Wales presenter Rhun ap Iorwerth stressed the economy as his "number one priority", saying: "Too many young people leave Anglesey to find work and never return."
The Rector of Beaumaris, Rev Neil Fairlamb, wants "to prioritise education to develop skills relevant to our young people so they can get good jobs locally".
Nathan Gill called for a "job tax" of employers' national insurance to be removed or reduced to help small businesses develop, and said UKIP would "cut the waste in Cardiff Bay".
Liberal Democrat Steve Churchman wants a partnership between the Welsh government and county councils "to find the investment to build new properties".
Socialist Labour Party candidate, Kathrine Jones, said she would "oppose public subsidies going to private companies who take the money and then relocate".