London Central (European Parliament constituency)

Prior to its uniform adoption of proportional representation in 1999, the United Kingdom used first-past-the-post for the European elections in England, Scotland and Wales. The European Parliament constituencies used under that system were smaller than the later regional constituencies and only had one Member of the European Parliament each.

London Central
European Parliament constituency
Member stateUnited Kingdom
Created1979
Dissolved1999
MEPs1
Sources
[1]

The constituency of London Central was one of them.

When it was created in England in 1979, it consisted of the Westminster Parliament constituencies of Chelsea, City of London and Westminster South, Fulham, Hammersmith North, Hampstead, Holborn and St Pancras South, Kensington, Paddington, St Marylebone and St Pancras North.[1]

United Kingdom Parliamentary constituencies were redrawn in 1983 and the European constituencies were altered in 1984 to reflect this. The revised seat comprised the following Westminster constituencies: Chelsea, City of London and Westminster South, Fulham, Hampstead and Highgate, Holborn and St Pancras, Islington North, Islington South and Finsbury, Kensington and Westminster North.[2] The same boundaries were used in 1989 and 1994.[3][4]

Members of the European Parliament

ElectedMemberParty[5]
1979David NicolsonConservative
1984Stan NewensLabour
1989
1994
1999Constituency abolished: see London

Results

European Parliament election, 1979: London Central[5]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeDavid Nicolson 84,915 54.4
LabourPeter J. Gresham45,72129.3
LiberalRobert Woodthorpe Browne19,01012.2
EcologyJonathon Porritt6,4484.1
Majority39,19425.1
Turnout156,09430.5
Conservative win (new seat)
European Parliament election, 1984: London Central[5]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourStan Newens 77,842 43.2 +13.9
ConservativeAdam D. Fergusson64,54535.8-18.6
SDPErnest Wistrich30,26916.8+4.6
EcologyJonathon Porritt5,9453.3-0.8
Campaign for British JusticeR. J. Maynard1,5690.9New
Majority13,2977.4N/A
Turnout180,17033.1
Labour gain from ConservativeSwing
European Parliament election, 1989: London Central[5]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourStan Newens 78,561 42.2 -1.0
ConservativeMiss Harriet S. Crawley67,01935.80.0
GreenMiss Niki Kortvelyessy28,08715.1+11.8[a]
SLDMiss S. A. Ludford7,8644.2-12.6
SDPW. D. E. (Bill) Mallinson2,9571.6New
Monster Raving LoonyScreaming Lord Sutch8410.5New
Corrective PartyLindi St Clair7070.4New
HumanistJ.S. Swinden3040.2New
Majority11,5426.2-1.2
Turnout186,34038.0+4.9
Labour holdSwing
European Parliament election, 1994: London Central[5]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourStan Newens 75,711 47.0 +4.8
ConservativeAndrew J. Elliott50,65231.4-4.4
Liberal DemocratsSarah Ludford20,17612.5+8.3
GreenNiki Kortvelyessy7,0434.4-10.7[a]
UKIPHugh F. Le Fanu4,1572.6New
Socialist (GB)Clifford M. Slapper1,5931.0New
Natural LawSusan J. Hamza1,2150.8New
Rainbow Dream TicketRainbow George Weiss5470.3New
Majority25,05915.6+9.4
Turnout159,87932.6-5.4
Labour holdSwing

References

External links


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