List of MPs for constituencies in Wales (2017–2019) explained
Country: | Wales |
Previous Election: | List of MPs for constituencies in Wales (2015–2017) |
Previous Year: | 2015–17 |
Next Election: | List of MPs for constituencies in Wales (2019–2024) |
Next Year: | 2019–24 |
This is a list of members of Parliament (MPs) elected to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom by Welsh constituencies for the fifty-seventh Parliament of the United Kingdom (2017 to 2019).
It includes both MPs elected at the 2017 general election, held on 8 June 2017, and those subsequently elected in by-elections. At the 2017 general election, Welsh Labour was the largest party with 28 MPs. Conservatives were 2nd with 8 MPs and Plaid Cymru had 4.
The list is sorted by the name of the MP, and MPs who did not serve throughout the Parliament are italicised. New MPs elected since the general election are noted at the bottom of the page.
Composition
MPs
MP | Constituency | Party | In constituency since | Majority |
---|
| | Gower | Labour | 2017 | 3,269 |
| | Aberconwy | Independent (suspended from Conservatives) | 2010 | 635 |
| | Cardiff West | Labour | 2001 | 12,551 |
| | Rhondda | Labour | 2001 | 13,746 |
| | Vale of Glamorgan | Conservative | 2010 | 2,190 |
| | Cynon Valley | Labour | 1984 by-election | 13,238 |
| | Preseli Pembrokeshire | Conservative | 2005 | 314 |
| | Caerphilly | Labour | 2001 | 12,078 |
| | Monmouth | Conservative | 2005 | 8,206 |
| | Swansea West | Labour/Co-operative | 2010 | 10,598 |
| | Montgomeryshire | Conservative | 2010 | 9,285 |
| | Brecon and Radnorshire | Liberal Democrats | 2019 by-election | 1,425 |
| | Cardiff South and Penarth | Labour/Co-operative | 2012 by-election | 14,864 |
| | Carmarthen East and Dinefwr | Plaid Cymru | 2010 | 3,908 |
| | Ogmore | Labour | 2016 by-election | 13,871 |
| | Islwyn | Labour/Co-operative | 2010 | 11,412 |
| | Llanelli | Labour | 2005 | 12,024 |
| | Delyn | Labour | 1992 | 4,240 |
| | Swansea East | Labour | 2015 | 13,168 |
| | Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire | Conservative | 2010 | 3,110 |
| | Clwyd West | Conservative | 2005 | 3,437 |
| | Merthyr Tydfil and Rhymney | Labour | 2015 | 16,334 |
| | Newport West | Labour | 2019 by-election | 1,951 |
| | Clwyd South | Labour | 2010 | 4,356 |
| | Aberavon | Labour | 2015 | 16,761 |
| | Ceredigion | Plaid Cymru | 2017 | 104 |
| | Wrexham | Labour | 2001 | 1,832 |
| | Cardiff North | Labour | 2017 | 4,174 |
| | Bridgend | Labour | 2005 | 4,700 |
| | Newport East | Labour | 2005 | 8,003 |
| | Ynys Môn | Labour | 2001 | 5,259 |
| | Neath | Labour | 2015 | 12,631 |
| | Vale of Clwyd | Labour | 2017[2] | 2,379 |
| | Dwyfor Meirionnydd | Plaid Cymru | 2015 | 4,850 |
| | Blaenau Gwent | Labour | 2010 | 11,907 |
| | Pontypridd | Labour | 2010 | 11,448 |
| | Cardiff Central | Labour | 2015 | 17,196 |
| | Alyn and Deeside | Labour | 2001 | 5,235 |
| | Torfaen | Labour | 2015 | 10,240 |
| | Arfon | Plaid Cymru | 2001 | 92 | |
By-elections
See also
Notes and References
- Web site: Results of the 2017 General Election. BBC News.
- Ruane previously held the seat from 1997 until his defeat in the 2015 election, and re-entered the House in the 2017 election