Sixth Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies

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The Sixth Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies, also known as the 2013 Review, 2018 Review,[1] or just boundary changes,[2] is the process by which parliamentary constituencies to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom are being reviewed by the four UK boundary commissions, to comply with the revised rules for the number and size of constituencies introduced by the Coalition government. The process was intended to be completed by 2015 and is now expected to be completed by 2018.

Following a debate in the House of Lords on 14 January 2013, an amendment to alter the relevant legislation to change the date by which the Sixth Review should be completed was passed by the Lords with a majority of 69 votes.[3] This was the expected result given opposition by Labour and latterly, the Liberal Democrat party to the legislation.[4]

A subsequent Commons vote on 29 January 2013 meant a new review will instead begin in 2015 for completion in 2018.[5] The boundary commissions announced the cancellation of the reviews on 31 January 2013.[6][7][8][9] Whilst the Review was required to be completed by October 2013 (by virtue of Section 3 of the Parliamentary Constituencies Act 1986 as amended by the Part 2 of the Parliamentary Voting System and Constituencies Act 2011), the Electoral Registration and Administration Act 2013 amended the Parliamentary Constituencies and Voting System Act, delaying the review until 2018.

Current status

Following the 2015 election it was reported that the majority Conservative government considered the boundary review as a priority.[10][11]

In July 2015, Prime Minister David Cameron reiterated his plan to "cut the cost of politics" by going ahead with reducing the number of Members of Parliament.[12] He said the proposals were "the right approach".[13]

In 2016 each of the four parliamentary boundary commissions of the United Kingdom re-commenced the review process.[14][15][16][17]

Background

The process was launched on 4 March 2011 by the Boundary Commission for England,[18] Boundary Commission for Scotland,[19] Boundary Commission for Northern Ireland[20] and Boundary Commission for Wales.[21] The changes were to be implemented by virtue of the Parliamentary Voting System and Constituencies Act 2011, which amended the Parliamentary Constituencies Act 1986. Part II of the act (henceforth referred to as 'PVSaCA') deals with the amendments to the manner in which House of Commons constituencies are formed by the individual boundary commissions. Each commission was obliged to make a final report to the Secretary of State before 1 October 2013 (by virtue of Section 10, Clause 3, which amends Subsection 2 of Section 3 of the 1986 Act).

The January 2013 vote in the House of Commons effectively killed the process two years after its start by the four national commissions. The process recommenced in 2018.

Changes to review process

The original legislation made several significant changes to the way constituencies were to be reviewed.

Number of constituencies: PVSaCA requires there to be exactly six hundred parliamentary constituencies (Schedule 2, clause 1) – a reduction of 50 from the total fought at the 2010 General Election. This is the first time a precise number has been included in legislation.

More equal constituencies: with a few specified exceptions for island areas (see below), the size (electorate) of all constituencies must be within 5% above or below the target number.

Increased frequency of reviews: the first review was to be completed by 2013 so that a general election held in 2015 would have been contested on the new boundaries. The legislation requires a review every five years after that date, rather than every twelve to fifteen years as previously. To ensure this timetable is achievable, the reviews will take place over the whole country simultaneously, rather than being phased over several years as in the past.

Protected constituencies

Four island constituencies are 'protected' by PVSaCA. They are:

Timetable

2011 review

The four commissions adopted consistent procedures for developing their boundary proposals, starting with simultaneous announcements in March 2011 which began the review process.

In each part of the UK, the relevant commission first published "Provisional Proposals", accessible on the Web and viewable at local council offices. There was a twelve-week period from the moment of publication during which the public could comment on the proposals, whether supporting, opposing or suggesting an alternative. During this period, public hearings held across the country allowed those representations to be made in public: all written comments received were made public after the end of the twelve-week period.

The commissions then considered all representations, and the resulting Revised Recommendations were to be published for further public consultation (8 weeks), though without a second public hearing. The commissions would then decide on their final proposals.

The Scottish commission gave the following expected timetable for the process which was temporarily halted;[22] the timings in the three other countries were expected to be similar. The English commission began its public consultations on 11 October 2011 in Manchester, and concluded on 17/18 November in Darlington, and Exeter.[23]

The four commissions would have been required to present their reports by October 2013. The government had hoped that the reports would then be approved by Parliament and in place for the May 2015 general election. In January 2013, the Government lost a vote on this timetable, which effectively ended the entire process.[24]

2018 review

In July 2016 the Boundary Commission for England published its guide to the 2018 review.[25] In it, the date for publishing provisional recommendations was set at the week beginning 12 September 2016. The Welsh Commission aim to publish their Initial Proposals on 13 September 2016.[26]

Number of seats

The total of 600 constituencies required by the Act were allocated between the four countries of the UK as shown in the table below.[27] The English Boundary Commission then announced that the number of constituencies allocated to England would be sub-divided by region, with the aim of producing "initial proposals in which each constituency is wholly contained within a single region". The seats allocated to each region are also shown below.[28]

Across the United Kingdom

Nation2010/15 seatsElectorateAllocationChangeAverage size
England *53238,332,557499 –3376,819
(Isle of Wight)1110,9242+155,462
Northern Ireland181,190,63517 –170,037
Scotland *573,873,38751–675,949
(Orkney and Shetland)133,755133,755
(Na h-Eileanan an Iar)121,837121,837
Wales402,281,59629–1178,675
Total65045,844,691600−5076,408
* Excluding the protected island areas

Across the regions of England

Source:[29][30]

Region2010 SeatsElectorateAllocation (2018)ChangeAverage size
Eastern58 4,242,266 57 –1 74,426
East Midlands46 3,275,04644–2 74,433
London73 5,118,884 68–5 75,278
North East29 1,874,39625–4 74,976
North West75 5,074,30268–7 74,622
South East *83 6,067,47581–2 74,907
South West55 3,930,770 53 –2 74,165
West Midlands 59 3,989,320 53–6 75,270
Yorkshire and the Humber 54 3,722,035 50 –4 74,441
Total532*37,294,494499–3374,738
* Excluding the protected Isle of Wight

Practical considerations

The four commissions published descriptions of how they would carry out their work, and held meetings with representatives of political parties to explain their approach in the light of the more restrictive rules to which they have to work.

For example, the Boundary Commission for England stated in its 2011 newsletter; "The Commission wishes to make very clear that those with an interest in the review process should understand that the defined number of constituencies and the 5% electoral parity target are statutory requirements that it must apply and that it has absolutely no discretion in respect of either matter."[31]

In February 2016 the BCE released conclusions from a meeting with representatives from political parties, confirming that the 2013 review would not be used as the basis for the 2018 review and they would consider splitting electoral wards where necessary.[32] In July 2016 the English commission explained their policy towards splitting electoral wards as;

...[T]he BCE recognises that in a few cases there may be exceptional and compelling circumstances...that may make it appropriate to divide a ward. Strong evidence and justification will need to be provided in any constituency scheme that proposes to split a ward, and the number of such ward splits should be kept to an absolute minimum. Examples of circumstances in which the BCE might propose splitting a ward could include: a) where all the possible ‘whole ward’ options in an area would significantly cut across local ties; or b) where splitting a single ward may prevent a significant ‘domino effect’ of otherwise unnecessary change to a chain of constituencies[33]

Size of constituencies

In Great Britain, constituencies can have no less an electorate than 72,810 and no more than 80,473.[31][34] The quota in Northern Ireland is slightly different, with a fixed minimum of 70,583 and a fixed maximum of 80,473.[35]

The quota does not apply if the area of a constituency is larger than 12,000 square kilometres (4,630 sq mi) (new Schedule 2, Rule 4(2)). No constituency can be larger than 13,000 square kilometres (5,020 sq mi) (new Schedule 2, Rule 4(1)).

Composition of constituencies

Westminster constituencies are usually created by combining entire electoral wards. For the 2013 Review, the Boundary Commission for England said in its newsletter that whilst it had used entire electoral wards in the past, the new legislation and fixed electorate quota made that harder. Therefore, it aimed to use polling districts in circumstances where using entire wards was not possible, and said "it is prepared to take into account as appropriate any new ward boundaries that have been introduced after 6 May 2010".[36] The English Commission outlined that it was "focused on getting all constituencies within the statutory range, rather than as close as possible to the electoral quota figure itself".

At a meeting held in February 2016, the Boundary Commission for Wales confirmed it would recommend 29 constituencies in September of that year.[37] In the same meeting the Commission said it would "avoid splitting electoral wards and communities where it was possible to do so".

The Scottish Commission expected few, if any, existing constituencies to remain unchanged and new seats "probably not" all to be constructed from complete electoral wards.[38] The Northern Ireland Commission expected "few, if any" constituencies to remain the same.[35]

Provisional recommendations (2011 review)

England

For the aborted 2011 review, the Boundary Commission for England released its "Initial Proposals" to the public on 13 September 2011.[39] Their provisional recommendations did not require division of any electoral ward.

Amongst the proposals, former Prime Minister David Cameron (Witney) and former Leader of the Opposition Ed Miliband (Doncaster North) would have seen their seats remain intact with no changes. Former Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg's seat of Sheffield Hallam would have been altered into the proposed "Sheffield West and Penistone".

The Isle of Wight was to be divided into two almost equal halves. The so-called Devonwall constituency, sharing wards between neighbouring Devon and Cornwall, was suggested as "Bideford and Bude".

Scotland

The Initial Proposal from the Boundary Commission for Scotland was released at midnight on 13 October 2011.[40] Amongst their proposals were six prefixed by the word "Glasgow", a reduction of one across the city. Former Liberal Democrat leader Charles Kennedy's seat of Ross, Skye and Lochaber was to be divided between three other seats covering the Highlands, and Argyll and Bute. Former Prime Minister Gordon Brown's seat, Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath, would also have been redrawn into a newly configured "Kirkcaldy and Glenrothes". Public consultation closed in January 2012.

Northern Ireland

On 13 September 2011, the Northern Ireland Commission proposed to reduce the number of Belfast seats by one, and create a newly formed "Glenshane", named after the Glenshane Pass.[41][42][43] The official response of the Democratic Unionist Party criticised the proposals as having 'the stench of gerrymander' and having 'a disproportionately negative impact upon Unionism'.[44] The Ulster Unionist Party identified 'particular disquiet' in specific towns as a result of the provisional proposals but accepted that there was 'limited room for manoeuvre'.[45]

Wales

The Boundary Commission for Wales released its provisional recommendations on 11 January 2012.[46] Cardiff had its representation cut by one, the Isle of Anglesey was joined with Bangor and Bethesda in a new seat styled 'Menai ac Ynys Môn', and Merthyr Tydfil was brought into a new constituency named 'Heads of the Valley'. Four electoral wards were to be divided between constituencies.

Revised recommendations (2011 review)

There was a statutory eight-week consultation period for responding to revised recommendations, if any are required.

England

Revised recommendations for the English regions were published on 16 October.[47] Unlike in the initial proposals, the Commission split (or divided) some electoral wards between seats,[48] specifically in Tewkesbury and Gloucester.[49][50] Additionally, the Isle of Wight was divided east/west[51] and the so-called 'Devonwall' seat was modified to become 'Bideford, Bude and Launceston'.[52]

Scotland

The Boundary Commission for Scotland released its revised recommendations on 13 September 2012.[53] Of the 50 mainland constituencies initially recommended, 24 went unchanged, thirteen only had new boundaries recommended and five had both boundaries and names changed, whilst eight were just given new names ('Ayr North, Troon and Cumnock', 'Ayrshire Central and Arran', 'Edinburgh South East', 'Galloway, Ayr South and Carrick', 'Glasgow South', 'Inverclyde and Renfrewshire West', 'Renfrewshire South and Ayrshire North', and 'West Dunbartonshire and Bearsden North').

Northern Ireland

On 16 October 2012, the Northern Irish Commission confirmed alterations to their proposed Antrim, Fermanagh and Tyrone seats.[54]

Wales

Revised recommendations for Wales were published on 24 October.[55] Almost all the initial proposals were altered, so as to place Machynlleth in a 'Brecon, Radnor and Montgomery' seat, and to rename proposed constituencies across North Wales as 'Ynys Môn a Bangor', 'Conwy and Colwyn', and 'Flint and North Denbighshire'.[56]

Provisional recommendations (2018 review)

England

The Boundary Commission for England confirmed its provisional recommendations on 13 September 2016. Among significant changes put forward, the seat represented by leader of the opposition Labour Party Jeremy Corbyn is merged with a neighbouring constituency while former Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne's Tatton seat is extended to include Altrincham.[57][58]

Scotland

The Scottish proposals were published in October 2016.[59] The changes include reducing the number of seats in Glasgow by one.[60]

Wales

The Welsh Commission published its recommendations on 13 September 2016, reducing the number of constituencies by over a quarter.[61] Almost all seats are given English names while a handful are recommended to be given Welsh names, namely "Ynys Môn ac Arfon", "Gogledd Clywd a Gwynedd", "De Clwyd a Gogledd Sir Faldwyn", "Llanelli a Lliw", "Caerfyrddin" and "Ceredigion a Gogledd Sir Benfro".[62]

Northern Ireland

Provisional recommendations for Northern Ireland were published on 6 September 2016. While Belfast would lose one of its four seats, six new constituencies would be created, which have been provisionally called "Dalriada", "Glenshane", "North Tyrone", "Upper Bann and Blackwater", "West Antrim" and "West Down".[63]

Political and economic impact and controversy

The review was not without controversy. A spokesperson for the opposition Labour Party told the BBC "political motives" were behind the changes when they were introduced.[64] Labour's former Shadow Scottish Secretary, Ann McKechin, called the process "gerrymandering".[65] whilst her successor Margaret Curran criticised "Nick Clegg's plan to gerrymander Scotland".[66] Former Conservative Minister Sir Malcolm Rifkind labelled the proposals "a muddle".[67] Labour MP for Preston, Mark Hendrick, labelled the proposals "gerrymandering to curry political persuasion".[68]

In June 2011, research company Democratic Audit published its findings about the review of constituency boundaries. The organisation attempted to create a set of boundaries for the UK according to the new rules, and to examine their political consequences. Their studies suggested that the Liberal Democrats could lose "a quarter" of their current seats.[69][70] Provisional notional results published in January 2012 calculated that the Conservatives could have won 299 seats under the new boundaries.[71]

In August 2012 the House of Lords Reform Bill 2012 was dropped by the Government, after disagreements between members of the Conservative and Liberal Democrat parties. In response, Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg confirmed that he would instruct his MPs to vote against the Sixth Periodic Review,[72] although David Cameron vowed to pass the necessary orders regardless.[73][74]

On 30 October, an amendment to the Electoral Registration and Administration Bill was tabled by Labour and Liberal Democrat peers which would postpone the Sixth Periodic Review until 2018.[75] On the following day, Labour peer Lord Hart, crossbench peer Lord Kerr, Liberal Democrat peer Lord Rennard, and former Plaid Cymru leader Lord Wigley tabled an amendment to the same Bill to postpone the Sixth Review until 2018.[76][77] During 14 January debate, Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg received personal criticism of the position Lords found themselves in: former Scottish Secretary Lord Forsyth accused Clegg of "going from 'cross' to 'double cross'"[78]

In October 2012, Lord Wallace told the House of Lords that the boundary commissions had spent £5.8 million as of August 2012 and would spend a further £3.8 million from September 2012 until the end of the Review.[79]

Termination of original review

On 31 January 2013 the four commissions issued statements announcing that they would not be continuing with the review. The English Boundary Commission officially closed their portion of the Sixth Periodic Review.[6] The Boundary Commission for Scotland closed its part of the review confirming they would not be completing it.[7] The Boundary Commission for Northern Ireland also announced they had ended the review and would not be reporting to the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland.[8] The Boundary Commission for Wales stated they were cancelling the review, and would not finalise the development of their recommendations.[9]

See also

References

  1. 2018 Review. Boundary Commission for England http://boundarycommissionforengland.independent.gov.uk/2018-review/. Retrieved 29 April 2016. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. Meeting with political parties April 2011 Boundary Commission for Wales
  3. UK Tory fury at boundary bill defeat Press TV
  4. Peers expected to block plan for fewer MPs The Daily Telegraph
  5. Conservatives lose boundary review vote BBC News
  6. 1 2 Closure of 2013 review Boundary Commission for England
  7. 1 2 Sixth Periodic Review - Index Bcomm-Scotland
  8. 1 2 "The Boundary Commission for Northern Ireland". The Boundary Commission for Northern Ireland. Retrieved 8 February 2013.
  9. 1 2 "Statement Regarding the 2013 Review of Parliamentary Constituencies". Boundary Commission for Wales. 31 January 2013. Retrieved 8 February 2013.
  10. Further observations on the British election Washington Examiner
  11. New Commons boundaries top Conservative government agenda The Daily Telegraph
  12. Prime Minister's Questions 1 July 2015 They Work For You (Hansard Search)
  13. David Cameron to push ahead with cut to MPs numbers Herald Scotland
  14. "Boundary review launched". Boundary Commission for England. Retrieved 29 April 2016.
  15. 2018 Review of Westminster Parliamentary constituencies. Boundary Commission for Scotland http://www.bcomm-scotland.independent.gov.uk/2018_westminster/index.asp. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  16. 2018 Review. Boundary Commission for Wales http://bcomm-wales.gov.uk/2018Review/?lang=en. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  17. . Boundary Commission for Northern Ireland http://www.boundarycommission.org.uk/index/news.htm. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  18. "Redrawing parliamentary constituencies begins". Boundary Commission for England.
  19. "Sixth Review of Westminster Constituencies". Boundary Commission for Scotland.
  20. Current Review Boundary Commission for Northern Ireland
  21. 2013 Review (English language) Boundary Commission for Wales
  22. "Presentation to political parties May 2011" (PDF). Boundary Commission for Scotland. Retrieved 3 July 2011.
  23. Boundary Commission for England: Public hearing dates and locations Boundary Commission for England
  24. MPs vote on boundary changes: Politics live blog The Guardian - Live Blog
  25. "Guide to the 2018 Review of Parliamentary constituencies" (PDF). Boundary Commission for England. Boundary Commission for England. Retrieved 2016-07-13.
  26. 2018 Review: Boundary Commission for Wales
  27. "Sixth Review of Westminster Constituencies: Policies and Procedures" (PDF). Boundary Commission for Scotland. Retrieved 3 July 2011.
  28. "A guide to the 2013 Review" (PDF). Boundary Commission for England. Retrieved 3 July 2011.
  29. 2018 review. Boundary Commission for England http://boundarycommissionforengland.independent.gov.uk/2018-review/. Retrieved 30 April 2016. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  30. "Guide to the 2018 review of Parliamentary constituencies" (PDF). Boundary Commission for England. Boundary Commission for England. Retrieved 13 July 2016.
  31. 1 2 Newsletter 2 Boundary Commission for England
  32. Boundary Commission for England. Boundary Commission for England http://boundarycommissionforengland.independent.gov.uk/data-and-resources/commission-meetings/. Retrieved 30 April 2016. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  33. Boundary Commission for England (PDF). Boundary Commission for England http://boundarycommissionforengland.independent.gov.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/2016-07-11-Guide-to-2018-review-Final-Version.pdf. Retrieved 13 July 2016. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  34. Drawing up of new parliamentary constituencies in England begins SouthamNews
  35. 1 2 FAQs Boundary Commission for Northern Ireland
  36. Newsletter 3 Boundary Commission for England
  37. Minutes of the meeting held at Hastings House, Cardiff, at 2:00pm on Monday 29 February 2016 Boundary Commission for Wales
  38. Questions and Answers Boundary Commission for Scotland
  39. Current Review Boundary Commission for England
  40. Sixth Periodic Review - Maps Boundary Commission for Scotland
  41. "NI proposals mean Belfast would lose Westminster seat". Bbc.co.uk. 13 September 2011. Retrieved 31 December 2011.
  42. Provisional Recommendations Boundary Commission for Northern Ireland
  43. "NI boundary changes threaten big political names". Bbc.co.uk. 13 September 2011. Retrieved 31 December 2011.
  44. DUP Response Boundary Commission for Northern Ireland
  45. Ulster Unionist Party response Boundary Commission for Northern Ireland
  46. The new map of Wales as nation's MPs cut by 10 Wales On Line
  47. Publication date for revised proposals Boundary Commission for England
  48. What's proposed - South West Boundary Commission for England
  49. Proposed map - Tewkesbury Boundary Commission for England
  50. Proposed map - Gloucester Boundary Commission for England
  51. What's Proposed - Isle of Wight Boundary Commission for England
  52. Proposed map- Bideford, Bute and Launceston Boundary Commission for England
  53. Revised Proposals Portal BCS
  54. "Revised boundary proposals unveiled" (PDF). Belfast Telegraph.
  55. Boundary Commission for Wales Revised Proposals Boundary Commission for Wales
  56. Revised Proposals PDF Boundary Commission for Wales
  57. "Jeremy Corbyn's parliamentary seat could be abolished". BBC News.
  58. BBC News. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-37344525 http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-37344525. Retrieved 13 September 2016. Missing or empty |title= (help); External link in |publisher= (help)
  59. 2018 Review Index Boundary Commission for Scotland
  60. https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2016/oct/20/scotland-constituency-changes-branded-outrageous-and-undemocratic Scotland constituency changes branded outrageous and undemocratic The Guardian
  61. "Boundary Commission map cuts Welsh MPs by a quarter". BBC Politics. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  62. "2018 Review of Parliamentary Constituencies" (PDF). Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  63. "2018 Review Boundary Commission for Northern Ireland". Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  64. "House of Commons seat shake-up plan to see fewer MPs". Bbc.co.uk. 4 March 2011. Retrieved 31 December 2011.
  65. "Fury at 'gerrymandering' as seven Scottish seats axed at Westminster". scotsman.com.
  66. Black, Andrew (12 October 2011). "Boundary Commission announces plan to cut Scottish MPs". Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 31 December 2011.
  67. Stacey, Kiran (13 September 2011). "PM faces struggle over boundaries". Ft.com. Retrieved 31 December 2011.
  68. Odd results in MP boundary changes Lancashire Evening Post
  69. "Modelling of Boundary Changes". Democraticaudit.com. Retrieved 31 December 2011.
  70. Polly Curtis and Allegra Stratton (5 June 2011). "Tory plan to redraw seats could see LibDems lose a quarter of theirs". London: Guardian. Retrieved 31 December 2011.
  71. Full Notional Results UKPolling Report
  72. Nick Clegg Lords Reform: Tory fury as Lib Dem leader delivers crushing blow Daily Mail
  73. Boundary changes: David Cameron vows to push on The Guardian
  74. David Cameron to press ahead with boundary changes plans BBC News
  75. Chris Rennard backs move to kill off, not just delay, boundary changes Mark Park
  76. Additions to marshalled list of amendments Parliament.uk
  77. Plan to axe MPs in disarray after House of Lords defeat BBC News
  78. Tory fury as Lib Dem peers join Labour to delay boundary review The Guardian
  79. Lords Hansard Parliament.uk

External links

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