Basildon (UK Parliament constituency)

Basildon was a parliamentary constituency represented in the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It elected one Member of Parliament (MP) by the first past the post system of election.

Basildon
Former Borough constituency
for the House of Commons
Outline map
Boundary of Basildon in Essex from 1997-2010.
Outline map
Location of Essex within England.
CountyEssex
February 1974–2010
SeatsOne
Created fromBillericay
Replaced byBasildon and Billericay, South Basildon and East Thurrock

History

The seat was created for the February 1974 general election from the majority of the abolished constituency of Billericay. Its electorate was reduced for the 1983 general election when Billericay was re-established. It underwent a major redistributions for the 1997 election and again for the 2010 election, when it was renamed as South Basildon and East Thurrock.

Basildon was one of the best known bellwether constituencies in Britain, having voted for the winning party in each election for the duration of its existence. The failure of the Labour Party to win it in the 1992 election — Basildon would be the first to declare of all the marginal seats — foreshadowed Labour's fourth straight defeat at the hands of the Conservative Party.

It was a (famously) Conservative seat between 1979 and 1997 as the quintessential "Essex man" constituency based on the new town of Basildon. Much of its population has its origins in the East End of London, who as a group traditionally voted for the Labour Party.

However, throughout the 1980s and until the Labour landslide victory of 1997, many voters in the area transferred their loyalties to the Conservative Party. The MP throughout that period was David Amess, who himself originated from east London (Plaistow), and later held the safer seat of Southend West. New Labour sought to take seats exactly like this one, which were crucial in ensuring they won the 1997 general election by a landslide. Labour took the seat in 1997 and 2001 with a large majority, and in 2005 with a reduced majority.

Both the successor seats that replaced Basildon in 2010 were considered to be much less favourable to Labour than the old Basildon seat, ending Basildon's bellwether status.[1]

Boundaries and boundary changes

Basildon in Essex 1974-83
Basildon in Essex 1983-97

1974–1983

  • The Urban District of Basildon.[2]

Formed from the majority of the abolished constituency of Billericay, comprising the former Urban District thereof, which had been reconstituted as the Urban District of Basildon.

1983–1997

  • The District of Basildon wards of Fryerns Central, Fryerns East, Langdon Hills, Lee Chapel North, Nethermayne, Pitsea East, Pitsea West, and Vange.[3]

Northern parts, including Billericay and Wickford transferred to the re-established constituency of Billericay.

1997–2010

  • The District of Basildon wards of Fryerns Central, Fryerns East, Langdon Hills, Lee Chapel North, Nethermayne, and Vange; and
  • The Borough of Thurrock wards of Corringham and Fobbing, Orsett, Stanford-le-Hope, and The Homesteads.[4]

Major realignment of boundaries with Billericay; Pitsea was transferred to Billericay in exchange for the northern part of the Borough of Thurrock.

Following their review of parliamentary representation in Essex, the Boundary Commission for England made radical changes to all parliamentary constituencies in the county for the 2010 general election, and the Basildon constituency was divided. The majority of the seat formed the basis of the new South Basildon and East Thurrock constituency, while the wards around central Basildon were merged with the majority of the former Billericay constituency to form a new seat called Basildon and Billericay.

Members of Parliament

ElectionMember[5]Party
February 1974Eric MoonmanLabour
1979Harvey ProctorConservative
1983David AmessConservative
1997Angela SmithLabour Co-op
2010constituency abolished: see South Basildon and East Thurrock and Basildon and Billericay

Elections

Elections in the 1970s

General election February 1974: Basildon
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourEric Moonman 33,499 45.2
ConservativeRonald Denney22,83230.8
LiberalEdward Fortune17,79424.0
Majority10,66714.4
Turnout74,12582.0
Labour win (new seat)
General election October 1974: Basildon
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourEric Moonman 32,298 47.9 +2.7
ConservativeDavid Atkinson21,74732.2+1.4
LiberalEdward Fortune12,81619.0―5.0
Ind. Labour PartyRobert Chaplin5990.9New
Majority10,55115.6+1.2
Turnout67,46073.8―8.2
Labour holdSwing+0.6
General election 1979: Basildon
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeHarvey Proctor 37,919 46.9 +14.7
LabourEric Moonman32,73940.5―7.4
LiberalRaymond Auvray9,28011.5―7.5
Majority5,1806.4N/A
Turnout79,93878.0+5.2
Conservative gain from LabourSwing+11.05

Elections in the 1980s

Note: This constituency underwent boundary changes after the 1979 election, so was notionally a Labour seat.

General election 1983: Basildon[6]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeDavid Amess 17,516 38.7 +3.6
Labour Co-opJulian Fulbrook16,13735.6―17.0
SDPSue Slipman11,63425.7+14.4
Majority1,3793.0N/A
Turnout45,28769.0―9.0
Conservative gain from LabourSwing+10.3
General election 1987: Basildon[7]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeDavid Amess 21,858 43.5 +4.8
Labour Co-opJulian Fulbrook19,20938.3+2.7
LiberalRaymond Auvray9,13918.2―7.5
Majority2,6495.3+2.3
Turnout50,20673.8+4.8
Conservative holdSwing+1.1

Elections in the 1990s

General election 1992: Basildon[8][9]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeDavid Amess 24,159 44.9 +1.4
Labour Co-opJohn Potter22,67942.2+3.9
Liberal DemocratsGeoffrey Williams6,96712.9―5.3
Majority1,4802.7―2.6
Turnout53,80579.8+6.0
Conservative holdSwing―1.3

Basildon was an early sign that the Conservatives were heading for a better result than the opinion polls had predicted.

Due to constituency boundary changes between 1992 and 1997, the changes in percentage of vote share in 1997 are given relative to the notional 1992 results, which reflect what the results would have been in 1992 had the election been fought with the 1997 boundaries.

General election 1997: Basildon[10]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Labour Co-opAngela Smith 29,646 55.8 +15.1
ConservativeJohn Baron16,36630.8―14.2
Liberal DemocratsLindsay Granshaw4,6088.7―6.5
ReferendumCraig Robinson2,4624.6New
Majority13,28025.0N/A
Turnout53,08272.0―7.6
Labour Co-op gain from ConservativeSwing+14.7

Elections in the 2000s

General election 2001: Basildon[11]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Labour Co-opAngela Smith 21,551 52.7 ―3.1
ConservativeDominic Schofield13,81333.8+3.0
Liberal DemocratsJane Smithard3,6919.0+0.3
UKIPFrank Mallon1,3973.4New
Socialist AllianceDick Duane4231.0New
Majority7,73818.9―6.1
Turnout40,87555.1―16.9
Labour Co-op holdSwing―3.0
General election 2005: Basildon[12]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Labour Co-opAngela Smith 18,720 43.4 ―9.3
ConservativeAaron Powell15,57836.1+2.3
Liberal DemocratsMartin Thompson4,47310.4+1.4
BNPEmma Colgate2,0554.8New
UKIPAlix Blythe1,1432.6―0.8
GreenVikki Copping6621.5New
English DemocratKim Gandy5101.2New
Majority3,1427.3―11.6
Turnout43,14158.4+3.3
Labour Co-op holdSwing―5.8

See also

Notes and references

51°31′N 0°24′E / 51.52°N 0.40°E / 51.52; 0.40