- Newcastle-under-Lyme (UK Parliament constituency)
-
Newcastle-under-Lyme Borough constituency for the House of Commons
Boundary of Newcastle-under-Lyme in Staffordshire.
Location of Staffordshire within England.County Staffordshire Electorate 68,692 (December 2010)[1] Current constituency Created 1885 Member of Parliament Paul Farrelly (Labour) Number of members One 13541885 –Number of members Two Type of constituency Borough constituency Overlaps European Parliament constituency West Midlands Newcastle-under-Lyme is a borough constituency represented in the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It elects one Member of Parliament (MP) by the first past the post system of election.
Contents
History
From its creation in 1354, Newcastle-under-Lyme returned two MPs to the House of Commons. Under the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885, the constituency's representation was reduced to one member.
It is one of the most loyal Labour Party seats having not returned a non-Labour MP since 1922 when Josiah Wedgwood joined the Labour Party. However, at the 2010 General Election it came within 3% the smallest margin in a long time with a Conservative increase of +9.4% and a Labour decline of -7.4%.
Boundaries
The constituency includes most of the northerly parts of Newcastle-under-Lyme borough, primarily Newcastle-under-Lyme town plus Keele and Audley.
There are no planned alterations to the seat in boundary changes made in the rest of Staffordshire.
Members of Parliament
MPs 1353–1660
- Before 1354 No records [2]
- 1354 John Lagowe and Richard de Lavendene
- 1355 John de Blorton and Richard de Podmore
- 1358 Richard de Podmore and William de Homersley
- 1360 William Gent and Richard de Colclough
- 1361 William Gent and Richard de Podmore
- 1362 Richard de Podmore and Thomas de Wodhull
- 1363 Richard de Lavendene and John de Lylsull
- 1365 Thomas de Wodhull and Richard de Podmore
- 1366 Richard de Podmore and Thomas de Wodhull
- 1369 Richard de Lavendene, Roger Letys
- 1371 Roger Letys and Richard Lavendene
- 1372 Edmund Toly and Thomas Colclough
- 1373 Thomas de Wodhull and Roger del Castell
- 1377 Richard Buntable and Thomas Thicknesse
- 1377 Thomas de Podmore and Henry de Erdeleye
- 1378 Thomas de Podmore and William de Thykenes
- 1379 No records
- 1380 John Kene and William de Thykenes
- 1381-1382 Thomas Podmore, Thomas Hap
- 1382 Thomas Thykenesse and John Thykenesse
- 1382 William Thykenese and Henry de Kele
- 1383 Thomas de Thykenese and William de Brompton
- 1383 Thomas de Thykenes and Thomas de Podmore
- 1384 William Thiknes and Ralf de la Hogh
- 1384 John Colclough and William Colclough
- 1385 William Colclough and Ralf de la Hogh
- 1386 William Colclough and Ralf Hogh
- 1388 William Thikenes and John Kene
- 1388 William de Thikenes and Thomas de Thikenes
- 1390 John Colclough and William Colclough
- 1391 Thomas Thikenes and Ralf de la Hogh
- 1393 Ralf Hogh, John Cook
- 1394 No records
- 1395 William Colclough and Ralf Hogh
- 1397 William Colclough and Thomas Thicknes
- 1397-1398 No records
- 1399 Thomas Podmore and Thomas Thykenes
- 1402 John Joce and Thomas Joce
- 1406 Richard Fyton and William Lee
- 1407 Hugh Colclough and John Tatenhale
- 1410 ? possibly John Delves was an MP representing the county or a borough
- 1411 Thomas Thikenes and William Bowyer
- 1413 (1) ? possibly Newport, or Robert Bapthorpe was an MP representing the county or a borough
- 1413 (2) William de Lee and Hugh Wyldeblood
- 1416 William Skytteby, Thomas Chamberleyn
- 1419 John Biddulph (Bedulf), John Miners
- 1420 Hugo de Stanford and John Hardhed
- 1421 John Biddulph (Bydulf)and Thomas Baron
- 1421 Hugh Stanford and Thomas Lee
- 1422 John Myners and Hugh Stanford
- 1423-1424 Hugh Stanford and William Sandbache
- 1425 John Wode and William Hextall
- 1426 Robert Wodehous and Henry Lilie
- 1427-1428 John Wode and Thomas Lee
- 1429-1430 William Egerton and William Hextall
- 1431 John atte Wode and Roger Legh
- 1432 James Leveson and John Wood
- 1433 John Wood and Thomas Podmore
- 1435 Richard Bruyn and William Hextall
- 1437 Thomas Preston and Nicholas Repynghale
- 1442 John Nedham and William Cumberford of Cumberford
- 1447 John Nedham and John Cudworth
- 1449 John Nedham and Thomas Everdon
- 1449-1450 Ralf Wolseley and Thomas Mayne
- 1450-1451 Thomas Colclogh and Richard Mosley
- 1453-1434 Thomas Colcloghe and John Spenser
- 1455-1456 John Spenser and Richard Mosley
- 1467-1468 James Norys and Robert Hille
- 1472-1475 William Paston and John Wode
- 1477-1478 William Yonge and Reynold Bray
- 1491-1492 Richard Harpur and Richard Blunt
- 1495-1496 ? Sir Reynold Bray
- 1497 County or a borough - ?Richard Wrottesley, ?Humphrey Peshale, ?Humphrey Swynnerton, ?Thomas Welles
- 1504 No records
- 1529-1536 John Persall and Richard Grey
- 1542-1544 Harry Broke and John Smyth
- 1545-1547 Humphrey Wellys and Harry Broke
- 1547-1552 James Rolston and William Stamford
- 1552 James Rolston and William Layton (died). Alexander Walker in place of Layton
- 1553 Roger Fowke and John Smyth
- 1553 Roger Fowke and James Rolston
- 1554 James Rolleston and Francis Moore
- 1554-1555 Sir Ralph Bagnall and ?
- 1555 Sir Richard (properly Nicholas) Bagnall and Richard Smyth
- 1558 Richard Hussey and Thomas Egerton
- 1559 Sir Nicholas Bagenall and Walter Blount
- 1563-1567 Sir Ralph Bagnall and John Long
- 1571 Sir Ralph Bagnall and Ralph Bowcher
- 1572-1583 Ralph Bouchier and Thomas Grimsdiche
- 1584-1585 Peter Warburton and Walter Chetwynd
- 1586-1587 James Colyer and Walter Chetwynd
- 1588-1589 Thomas Humphrey and Francis Angier
- 1593 John James and Thomas Fitzherbert
- 1597-1598 Sir Walter Leveson and John Bowyer
- 1601 Edward Mainwaring and Thomas Trentham
- 1603 Sir Walter Chetwynd and John Bowyer (replaced in by-election 1605 by Rowland Cotton)
- 1614 Edward Wymarke and Robert Needham
- 1621-1622 Sir John Davies and Edward Kerton
- 1624-1625 Sir Edward Vere and Richard Leveson
- 1625 Edward Mainwaring and John Keeling
- 1626 Sir John Skeffington and John Keeling
- 1628-1629 Sir George Gresley and Sir Rowland Cotton
- 1629-1640 No Parliament summoned
- Apr 1640 Sir John Merrick (Country) and Richard Lloyd (Court)
- 1640-1643 Sir Richard Leveson (Royalist)
- 1640-1648 Sir John Merrick (Parl.)
- 1645-1648 Samuel Terrick (Parl.)
- 1653 Convention
- 1654-1655 Edward Keeling
- 1656-1658 John Bowyer (never sat)
- 1659 Edward Keeling and Tobias Bridge
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MPs 1660–1885
Election 1st Member[3] 1st Party 2nd Member[3] 2nd Party 1660 John Bowyer Samuel Terrick 1661 Sir Caesar Colclough Edward Mainwaring 1675 William Leveson-Gower 1679 Sir Thomas Bellot, Bt 1685 Edward Mainwaring William Sneyd 1689 Sir William Leveson-Gower John Lawton 1690 Sir Thomas Bellot, Bt 1692 Sir John Leveson-Gower, later 1st Lord Gower 1695 John Lawton 1698 Sir Thomas Bellot, Bt 1699 Sir Rowland Cotton 1702 John Crewe Offley 1705 Sir Thomas Bellot, Bt 1706 Crewe Offley John Lawton 1710 William Burslem Rowland Cotton Jan 1715 Henry Vernon 1715 Sir Brian Broughton Crewe Offley 1722 Thomas Leveson-Gower 1724 by-election Sir Walter Wagstaffe Bagot 1727 Baptist Leveson-Gower John Ward 1734 John Lawton II 1740 by-election Randle Wilbraham 1747 Viscount Parker 1754 John Waldegrave 1761 Henry Vernon II 1762 by-election Sir Lawrence Dundas, Bt 1763 by-election Thomas Gilbert Mar 1768 John Wrottesley, later 8th Bt Alexander Forrester May 1768 by-election George Hay 1774 George Waldegrave, Viscount Chewton 1779 by-election George Leveson-Gower, Viscount Trentham 1780 Sir Archibald Macdonald 1784 Richard Vernon 1790 John Leveson-Gower 1792 by-election William Egerton 1793 by-election Sir Francis Ford 1796 Edward Wilbraham Bootle 1802 Sir Robert Lawley 1806 James Macdonald 1812 Earl Gower Sir John Boughey, Bt 1815 by-election Sir John Chetwode 1818 William Shepherd Kinnersley Robert John Wilmot Tory 1823 by-election Evelyn Denison 1826 Richardson Borradaile Tory 1830 William Henry Miller Whig 1831 Edmund Peel Tory Tory 1832 Sir Henry Willoughby Tory 1834 Conservative Conservative 1835 Edmund Peel Conservative 1837 Spencer Horsey de Horsey Conservative 1841 Edmund Buckley Conservative John Quincey Harris Liberal 1842 by-election John Campbell Colquhoun Liberal 1847 Samuel Christy Conservative William Jackson Liberal 1859 William Murray Conservative 1865 William Shepherd Allen Liberal Sir Edmund Buckley, Bt Conservative 1878 by-election Samuel Rathbone Edge Liberal 1880 Charles Donaldson-Hudson Conservative 1885 representation reduced to one member by the Redistribution of Seats Act MPs since 1885
Election Member[3] Party 1885 William Shepherd Allen Liberal 1886 Douglas Harry Coghill Liberal Unionist 1892 William Allen Liberal 1900 Sir Alfred Seale Haslam Liberal Unionist 1906 Josiah Wedgwood Liberal 1918 Independent 1922 Labour 1942 John Mack Labour 1951 Stephen Swingler Labour 1969 John Golding Labour 1986 Llin Golding Labour 2001 Paul Farrelly Labour Elections
Elections in the 2010s
General Election 2010: Newcastle-under-Lyme[4] Party Candidate Votes % ±% Labour Paul Farrelly 16,393 38.0 -7.4 Conservative Robert Jenrick 14,841 34.4 +9.4 Liberal Democrat Nigel Jones 8,466 19.6 +0.7 UKIP David Nixon 3,491 8.1 +4.5 Majority 1,552 3.6 Turnout 43,191 62.2 +4.0 Labour hold Swing -8.4 Elections in the 2000s
General Election 2005: Newcastle-under-Lyme Party Candidate Votes % ±% Labour Paul Farrelly 18,053 45.4 -8.0 Conservative Jeremy Lefroy 9,945 25.0 -2.6 Liberal Democrat Trevor Johnson 7,528 18.9 +3.4 UKIP David Nixon 1,436 3.6 +2.1 BNP John Dawson 1,390 3.5 N/A Green Andrew Dobson 918 2.3 N/A Veritas Marian Harvey-Lover 518 1.3 N/A Majority 8,108 20.4 -5.4 Turnout 39,788 61.6 +2.8 Labour hold Swing -2.7 General Election 2001: Newcastle-under-Lyme Party Candidate Votes % ±% Labour Paul Farrelly 20,650 53.4 -3.1 Conservative Michael Flynn 10,664 27.6 +6.1 Liberal Democrat Jerry Roodhouse 5,993 15.5 +1.5 Independent Robert Fyson 773 2.0 N/A UKIP Paul Godfrey 594 1.5 N/A Majority 9,986 25.8 Turnout 38,674 58.8 -14.8 Labour hold Swing -4.6% Elections in the 1990s
General Election 1992: Newcastle-under-Lyme[5] Party Candidate Votes % ±% Labour Llin Golding 25,652 47.9 +7.4 Conservative AD Brierley 15,813 29.6 +1.7 Liberal Democrat AL Thomas 11,727 21.9 −9.0 Natural Law RJM Lines 314 0.6 N/A Majority 9,839 18.4 +8.8 Turnout 53,506 80.8 +3.7 Labour hold Swing +2.9 Elections in the 1980s
- Resignation of John Golding on 24 June 1986, upon appointment as General Secretary of the National Communications Union.
Newcastle-under-Lyme by-election, 1986 Party Candidate Votes % ±% Labour Llin Golding 16,819 40.8 -1.2 Liberal Alan Thomas 16,020 38.8 +17.2 Conservative James Nock 7,863 19.0 -17.4 Monster Raving Loony David Sutch 277 0.7 N/A Independent John Gaskell 115 0.3 N/A Independent James Parker 83 0.2 N/A Independent David Brewster 70 0.2 N/A Majority 799 2.0 -3.6 Turnout 41,247 62.2 -15.1 Labour hold Swing Registered electors 66,353 See also
Notes and references
- ^ "Electorate Figures - Boundary Commission for England". 2011 Electorate Figures. Boundary Commission for England. 4 March 2011. http://www.boundarycommissionforengland.org.uk/electoral-figures/electoral-figures.htm. Retrieved 13 March 2011.
- ^ "Tamworth Parliamentary Borough 1275-1832". The Staffordshire Encyclopaedia. http://www.the-staffordshire-encyclopaedia.co.uk/view.php?id=207. Retrieved 26 October 2010.
- ^ a b c Leigh Rayment's Historical List of MPs – Constituencies beginning with "N" (part 1)
- ^ ukpollingreport
- ^ "UK General Election results April 1992". Richard Kimber's Political Science Resources. Politics Resources. 9 April 1992. http://www.politicsresources.net/area/uk/ge92/i14.htm. Retrieved 2010-12-06.
Sources
- Britain Votes/Europe Votes By-Election Supplement 1983-, compiled and edited by F.W.S. Craig (Parliamentary Research Services 1985-)
Categories:- Politics of Newcastle-under-Lyme
- Parliamentary constituencies in Staffordshire
- 1354 establishments
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