List of Parliamentary constituencies in Herefordshire and Worcestershire

There are 8 Parliamentary constituencies in the ceremonial counties of Herefordshire and Worcestershire. From 1974 to 1998 the two counties were administratively and ceremonially one, called Hereford and Worcester, and the constituencies crossed the traditional county boundaries. This continued to be the case up to and including the 2005 general election, but since the 2010 general election two constituencies fall entirely within Herefordshire and six within Worcestershire. There are 2 Borough constituencies and 6 County constituencies.

Constituencies

  † Conservative   ‡ Labour   UKIP

(part) signifies that only part of a ward is located in the constituency.

Name[nb 1] Electorate[1] Majority[nb 2] Member of Parliament Nearest opposition Electoral wards[2][3] Map
Bromsgrove CC 73,337 16,529   Sajid Javid   Tom Ebbutt
Hereford and South Herefordshire CC 71,485 16,890 Jesse Norman¤ Nigel Ely
North Herefordshire CC 67,926 19,996 Bill Wiggin Jonathan Oakton
Mid Worcestershire CC 73,069 20,532 Nigel Huddleston Richard Keel
Redditch BC 65,531 7,054 Karen Lumley Rebecca Blake
West Worcestershire CC 73,394 22,578 Harriett Baldwin Richard Charmings
Worcester BC 72,461 5,646 Robin Walker Joy Squires
Wyre Forest CC 77,407 12,871 Mark Garnier Matt Lamb

Boundary change for the 2010 election

NamePre-2010 boundariesCurrent boundaries

Wholly or mainly in Herefordshire

  1. Hereford CC
  2. Leominster CC

Wholly in Worcestershire

  1. Bromsgrove CC
  2. Mid Worcestershire CC
  3. Redditch BC
  4. West Worcestershire CC
  5. Worcester BC
  6. Wyre Forest CC

Results

2005 2010 2015

Footnotes

  1. BC denotes borough constituency, CC denotes county constituency.
  2. The majority is the number of votes the winning candidate receives more than their nearest rival.

References

  1. "2015 Electorates".
  2. "The Parliamentary Constituencies (England) Order 2007". Office of Public Sector Information. Crown copyright. 13 June 2007. Retrieved 7 November 2009.
  3. Boundary Commission for England pp. 1004–1007
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/8/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.