Axbridge is a town in Somerset, England, in the Sedgemoor area on the River Axe, near the southerly side of the Mendip Hills. The town's population according to the 2011 census was 2,057. The town council (which is a parish council) has obligation for regional concerns. The town council assesses neighborhood preparation applications and works with the regional police, area council police officers, and neighbourhood watch teams on matters of crime, safety and also web traffic. The town council also starts jobs for the maintenance and repair of church facilities, and seeks advice from the district council on the maintenance, fixing and enhancement of highways, drainage, paths, public transport and road cleaning. Conservation issues (consisting of trees as well as listed structures) and ecological problems are likewise the obligation of the council. Annually participants of the community council elect a mayor for the town. The community falls within the non-metropolitan area of Sedgemoor, which was based on 1 April 1974, under the City Government Act 1972. It had actually become part of Axbridge Rural Area from 1894 to 1974, which was in charge of neighborhood planning and also building control, regional roadways, council housing, ecological health, markets as well as fairs, decline collection and recycling, cemeteries and crematoria, recreation solutions, parks and also tourist. Somerset County Council is in charge of running the largest and also most costly local services such as education, social services, collections, highways, public transport, policing as well as fire services, trading requirements, garbage disposal and also strategic preparation. The town is in Axevale electoral ward. Axbridge is the most populous area but the ward stretches south to Chapel Allerton. The overall ward population as taken at the 2011 census is 4,261. It is additionally part of the Wells county constituency represented in your house of Commons. It chooses one MP by the first-past-the-post system of election. It is likewise part of the South West England constituency of the European Parliament, which chooses six MEPs utilizing the d'Hondt approach of party-list proportional representation.