Politics of the Isle of Wight explained

As a geographical entity distinct from the mainland, the Isle of Wight has always fought to have this identity recognised. The Isle of Wight is currently a ceremonial and Non-metropolitan county and local government is controlled by unitary authority. Prior to the 2024 United Kingdom General election, the island was the highest populated Westminster constituency in the country.

Political history

Historically, the island was part of the historic county of Hampshire, previously called Southamptonshire.

Historic boroughs of the Island

The island's most ancient borough was Newtown on the large natural harbour on the island's north-western coast. A French raid in 1377, that destroyed much of the town as well as other Island settlements, sealed its permanent decline. By the middle of the sixteenth century, it was a small settlement long eclipsed by the more easily defended town of Newport. Elizabeth I breathed some life into the town by awarding two parliamentary seats but this ultimately made it one of the most notorious of the Rotten Boroughs. By the time of the Great Reform Act that abolished the seats, it had just fourteen houses and twenty-three voters. The Act also disenfranchised the borough of Yarmouth and replaced the four lost seats with the first MP for the whole Isle of Wight. Newport retained its two seats until the Second Reform Act 1867 which reduced its representation to one MP.[1] Newport lost its separate representation entirely as a result of the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885.[2]

Local governance

Often thought of as part of Hampshire, the Isle of Wight was briefly included in that county when the first county councils were created in 1888. However, a "Home Rule" campaign led to a separate Isle of Wight County Council being established in 1890, and the island has remained independent of mainland local government ever since. The island was, however, part of the "Assize county" of Hampshire.[3] Like inhabitants of many islands, Islanders are fiercely jealous of their real (or perceived) independence, and confusion over the Island's separate status is a perennial source of friction.

It was planned to merge the county back into Hampshire as a district in the 1974 local government reform, but a last minute change led to it retaining its county council. However, since there was no provision made in the Local Government Act 1972 for unitary authorities, the Island had to retain a two-tier structure, with a county council and two boroughs, Medina and South Wight.

The borough councils were merged with the county council on 1 April 1995 to form a single unitary authority, the Isle of Wight Council, as recommended by the Local Government Commission for England. The only significant present-day administrative link with Hampshire is the police service, which is joint between Hampshire and the Isle of Wight.

House of Commons representation

See main article: Isle of Wight (UK Parliament constituency).

See also: Parliamentary representation from the Isle of Wight.

The Isle of Wight forms a single constituency of the House of Commons, with an electorate of 113,021 (as of 2019). This is by far the largest electorate in the country. The 2018 proposals from the Boundary Commission for England will split the constituency into two.[4]

The constituency was traditionally a battleground between the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats. Between 1974 and 1987, the seat was a Liberal seat, then becoming Conservative until 1997 when the Liberal Democrats won on a reduced Conservative vote. The seat reverted to the Conservatives in 2001, and has remained Conservative since, with the Liberal Democrats falling to fifth place in 2015, when UKIP came second. The Labour Party came second in 2017, with the Liberal Democrats and UKIP both losing their deposits.

2019 general election

The Isle of Wight reelected Conservative incumbent Bob Seely as MP in the 2019 General Election.[5]

2017 general election

The sitting MP Andrew Turner stepped down at the 2017 United Kingdom general election held on 8 June after a controversy regarding remarks he made about homosexuality.[6] He was replaced as the Conservative candidate by Bob Seely, an Isle of Wight councillor and former soldier[7] who went on to be elected as the MP.

2015 general election

Six candidates stood for the Isle of Wight constituency in the 2015 United Kingdom general election which was held on 7 May 2015.[8]

2010 general election

Eleven candidates stood for the Isle of Wight constituency in the 2010 United Kingdom general election which was held on 6 May 2010.[9]

2005 general election

Five candidates contested the Isle of Wight constituency in the 2005 United Kingdom general election held on 5 May 2005.[10]

The election was expected to be a close race between the Liberal Democrats and Conservatives, but the high Conservative vote even surprised the successful candidate. The simultaneous local elections resulted in a Conservative landslide, and the high turnout and popular Conservative vote in the parliamentary election was likely to be a local sign of dissatisfaction with the incumbent, largely Liberal Democrat Council, as well as reflecting on the national issues. The Labour Party continued to buck the national trend and increased the Labour vote to the highest for over 30 years, whilst the UKIP, did not manage to make the breakthrough expected by some, and only slightly increased their vote share.

Local government

After the 2017 local council elections, the Conservatives gained a majority of seats on the Isle of Wight Council. The Island Independents were the ruling group on the council between 2013 and January 2017, when the resignation of the council leader Jonathan Bacon led to a Conservative minority administration led by Dave Stewart.[11] The council had previously been Conservative controlled between 2005 and 2013.

2017 local council elections

See main article: Isle of Wight Council election, 2017. The local council elections were held on 4 May 2017.

PartyCllrsGain/Loss
Conservative Party25+10
 Independents11-9
Liberal Democrats2+1
Green1+1
Labour Party1-1
UK Independence Party0-2
Total40-

2013 local council elections

See main article: Isle of Wight Council election, 2013. The local council elections were held on 2 May 2013.

PartyCllrsGain/Loss
 Independents20+11
Conservative Party15-9
Labour Party2+1
UK Independence Party2+2
Liberal Democrats1-3
 Others [12] 0-2
Total40-

2009 local council elections

See main article: Isle of Wight Council election, 2009. The local council elections were held on 4 June 2009, the same date as the European Parliament elections. Following a review by the Boundary Commission for England the number of councillors was reduced from 48 to 40, consisting of 38 single member constituencies and 1 double member constituency.[13]

Party2005 Cllrs2005 Cllrs, restated [14] Gain/Loss2009 Cllrs
Conservative Party3529-524
 Independents54+37
Liberal Democrats54+15
Labour Party22-11
 Others 11+23
Total4840-40

2005 local council elections

See main article: Isle of Wight Council election, 2005. The local council elections were held on 5 May 2005, the same date as the general election of that year.[15]

PartyCllrsGain/Loss
Conservatives35+23
Liberal Democrats5-14
 Independents5-6
Labour2-3
 Others10
Total48-

A local referendum on the issue of a directly elected mayor of the Isle of Wight was held at the same time as the local elections - this failed to pass, with 37,097 against to 28,786 for.[16]

Historical results

Prior to 1995, these results are for Isle of Wight County Council.

Election YearIncumbent Party/Parties
1973Independent
1977Conservatives
1981Liberals
1985Liberal/Social Democrats
1989Liberal Democrats
1993Liberal Democrats
1995Liberal Democrats
1998No Overall Control (Liberal Democrats largest grouping)
2001No Overall Control; Island First (Liberal Democrats and Independents) controlling group.
2005Conservative Party
2009Conservative Party
2013Island Independents
2017Conservative Party

EU referendum

The Isle of Wight voted 62% to leave the European Union in the 2016 EU referendum, compared with 52% nationally.


United Kingdom European Union membership referendum, 2016
Isle of Wight
ChoiceVotes%
Leave the European Union49,173 61.91%
Remain a member of the European Union 30,207 38.03%
Valid votes79,38099.94%
Invalid or blank votes500.06%
Total votes79,430 100.00%
Registered voters and turnout109,844 72.31%
Source: https://onthewight.com/eu-referendum-isle-of-wight-results-announced/

European parliamentary representation

The Isle of Wight was a part of the South East England region for the purposes of European Parliamentary elections.

2019 European parliamentary elections

The following results are exclusively for the Isle of Wight; results are collated regionally prior to MEPs being assigned under the closed list proportional representation system.[17]

PartyVotesPercentage ShareSE England ShareSE England MEPs
Brexit Party19,39246.6736.074
Green Party6,85516.4913.521
Liberal Democrats6,55715.5525.753
Conservatives3,5778.6010.251
Labour2,4815.977.271
UK Independence1,2923.102.220
Change UK1,1072.664.170
UK EU1270.300.30
Jason McMahon520.120.140
David Round500.120.10
Socialist (GB)390.90.140
Michael Tuberville220.050.60

2014 European parliamentary elections

The results of the 2014 European Parliament election on the Isle of Wight were as follows.[18]

PartyVotesPercentage ShareSE England ShareSE England MEPs
UK Independence14,53340.9332.144
Conservatives9,33526.2930.953
Green Party3,85410.859.051
Labour3,70810.4414.661
Liberal Democrats1,9695.558.041
 An Independence from Europe8412.371.93
 English Democrats3410.960.76
BNP2940.830.72
 Christian Peoples2370.670.64
 Peace1390.390.43
 Socialist (GB)770.220.23
 Roman Party520.150.13
 YOURVoice490.140.12
 Liberty GB420.120.11
 Harmony Party350.100.08
 Rejected Ballots94

Turnout on the Isle of Wight was 35,600 out of an electorate of 111,879 (31.82%)

2009 European parliamentary elections

The results of the 2009 European election on the Isle of Wight were as follows.[19]

The following results are exclusively for the Isle of Wight; results are collated regionally prior to MEPs being assigned under the closed list proportional representation system.

PartyVotesPercentage ShareSE England ShareSE England MEPs
Conservatives14,12232.334.84
UK Independence9,56321.918.82
Green5,38012.311.61
Liberal Democrats5,11211.714.12
Labour2,6076.08.21
British National Party2,2235.14.4
 English Democrats1,1482.62.2
 Christian Party736 1.71.5
 No2EU4611.10.9
 United Kingdom First3800.90.7
 Socialist Labour Party3430.80.7
 Jury Team2740.60.6
 Libertas2470.60.7
 The Peace Party2010.50.4
 The Roman Party1010.20.2
 Rejected Ballots8111.9

Turnout on the Isle of Wight was 43,709 on an electorate of 109,796 (39.81%)

2004 European parliamentary elections

The results of the 2004 European election on the Isle of Wight were as follows.[20]

The following results are exclusively for the Isle of Wight; results are collated regionally prior to MEPs being assigned under the closed list proportional representation system.

PartyVotesPercentage ShareSE England ShareSE England MEPs
Conservatives11,34132.4%35.2%4
UK Independence9,91328.4%19.5%2
Liberal Democrats4,23412.1%15.3%2
Labour3,4799.9%13.7%1
Green2,7457.8%7.9%1
 Senior Citizens1,2373.5%1.9%
British National Party9182.6%2.9%
 English Democrats523 1.5%1.3%
 Peace151 0.4%0.6%
 Christian Alliance140 0.4%0.5%
 ProLife Alliance103 0.3%0.3%
Respect100 0.3%0.6%
 Independent - Rhodes810.2%0.3%

Regionally, turnout was 36.5% on an electorate of 6,087,103.

Local political issues

Fixed link

For many years, there has been debate over whether or not a bridge or tunnel should connect the island with mainland Britain. This became more of an issue towards the end of the twentieth century, when it became more economically and technically feasible to build such a link, with the bridge to the Isle of Skye as a model. Continuing debate centres on whether a fixed link is desirable.

Around the start of the 21st century, the Isle of Wight Party campaigned from a positive position, although extensive public debate on the subject revealed a strong body of opinion against such a proposal. In 2002, the Isle of Wight Council debated the issue and made a policy statement against the proposal, whilst MP Andrew Turner remains opposed to the construction of a link.

Arguments in favour of a fixed link tend to concentrate upon the increased ease of access to and from the Island and a possible economic benefit from improved communications with the mainland. People of all ages often express dissatisfaction with the cost of cross-Solent travel, and although this is not quite the same issue as the link debate, the two are often combined by the assumption that a fixed link would be cheaper.[21]

Arguments against a fixed link include the inevitable rise in property prices stemming from making it easier to commute to cities like London (thus increasing strain on lower wage families); the risk of losing local services and facilities to the much larger and economically more active south Hampshire conurbation; the expected rise in rural crime (which increased sharply in Hampshire in 2014);[22] and a risk to the unique island culture and environment. An expected increase in street crime is also an issue. Overall crime rates on the island are however already at levels comparable to similar areas on the mainland and in many cases higher than other nearby areas in south Hampshire.[23]

Although those in favour of a fixed link tend to envisage a tolled road link in the same vein as the bridge to Skye, plans have also been proposed for passenger-only rail and tram links under the Solent, linking Ryde with Portsmouth and Gosport. These kind of plans have tended to win more support with island residents in the past.[24] However a survey commissioned and run by the Pro Link campaign suggested in 2017 that public opinion on the island was beginning to change in favour of a road link.[25]

Autonomy and political recognition

A number of discussions about the status of the island have taken place over many years, with standpoints from the extreme of wanting full sovereignty for the Isle of Wight, to what could be described as the opposite extreme of merging the county back into Hampshire. The pro-independence lobby had a formal voice in the early 1970s with the Vectis National Party. Their main claim was that the sale of the island to the crown in 1293 was unconstitutional (see History of the Isle of Wight). However, this movement now has little serious support.

Since the 1990s the debate has largely taken the form of a campaign to have the Isle of Wight recognized as a distinct region by organizations such as the EU, due to its relative poverty within southern England. One argument in favour of special treatment is that this poverty is not acknowledged by such organizations as it is distorted statistically by retired and wealthy (but less economically active) immigrants from the mainland.

In 2022, as part of the Levelling Up White Paper, an "Island Forum" was proposed, which would allow local policymakers and residents on the Isle of Wight to work alongside their counterparts in Orkney, Shetland, the Western Isles and Anglesey on common issues, such as broadband connectivity, and provide a platform for them to communicate directly with the government on the challenges island communities face in terms of levelling up.[26] [27] [28]

Wind turbines

Wind turbines has been an issue the island has remained divided over since proposals were first put forward, with many residents in the West Wight, where they are likely to be built claiming they would be unsightly and create a lot of noise. In protest against wind turbines the pressure group ThWART was formed (The Wight Against Rural Turbines) with the aim of working with the council to adopt a realistic renewable energy policy with solutions other than wind turbines, claiming that any on the island would be inappropriately sited.

Initially plans were put forward for seven turbines to be built on land close to Wellow with many people around the area criticising the plan with the view that better alternatives could be found. Petitions were set up by local residents before the planning application was put forward to the council,[29] and the plans were later rejected.[30] Following this several other applications have been submitted to the council for turbines at various locations including small wind turbines at Ventnor Golf Club. Plans for small turbines at Cheverton Down have already been given the go ahead but plans for larger ones at 125 metres tall were rejected by Isle of Wight Council planners on 3 December 2009.[31] It is still unclear whether developers will appeal against this decision.[32]

General views from residents on the island have been mixed to proposals, and it is therefore unclear when and where wind turbines will eventually be constructed. The Isle of Wight Council stated that in a survey carried out at the beginning of 2009 on local residents attitudes towards wind turbines were two to one against, with 612 in favour and 1,328 against Cheverton Down proposals.[33]

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Representation of the People Act 1867. 8 July 2023.
  2. Redistribution of Seats Act 1885. Schedule 1, Part 1. Boroughs to cease as such.
  3. [Edward Mogg|Mogg, Edward]
  4. Web site: Boundary recommendations for the Isle of Wight. Boundary Commission for England.
  5. Web site: General Election 2019: Conservative Bob Seely re-elected as Isle of Wight MP. 2021-01-14. Isle of Wight County Press. en.
  6. Web site: Andrew Turner steps down as Isle of Wight MP after outcry over alleged homosexuality comments. 28 April 2017. Isle of Wight County Press. 8 July 2023.
  7. Web site: Bob Seely chosen by Isle of Wight Conservatives as general election candidate. 5 May 2017. Isle of Wight County Press. 8 July 2023.
  8. Web site: Statement of Persons Nominated . 30 March 2018., Isle of Wight Council
  9. http://www.iwight.com/council/election2010/parliamentary_docs/StatementofPersonsNominatedNoticeOfPoll.pdf Statement of Persons Nominated
  10. Web site: Isle of Wight Parliamentary eledction results 2005 . . 2009-12-02 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20050414200840/http://www.iwight.com/elections/general/general.asp . 14 April 2005 .
  11. Web site: Isle of Wight Council selects Conservative leader. BBC News.
  12. Those individuals who chose not to state a political affiliation, or be named as 'independents' on the ballot.
  13. Web site: Isle of Wight Council election results. Isle of Wight County Press. 2009-11-29.
  14. The number of councillors received in 2005 multiplied by 0.833 to reflect the reduced number of councillors. No attempt has been made to account for altered boundaries and geographic distribution of support.
  15. Web site: Isle of Wight Coouncil election 2005. Isle of Wight County Press. 2009-11-29. https://web.archive.org/web/20110917050214/http://www.iwcp.co.uk/news/isle-of-wight-council-election-2005-9098.aspx. 17 September 2011. dead.
  16. Web site: Island says 'No Mayor'. Isle of Wight County Press. 2009-11-29.
  17. Web site: 2019-05-26. EU election Isle of Wight results 2019. Update: MEPs selected. 2021-01-14. Isle of Wight News from OnTheWight. en-GB.
  18. http://www.iwight.com/azservices/documents/1174-EU-Results-IoWC-May-2014.pdf EU Results
  19. Web site: 2009 European Parliamentary Election results for the Isle of Wight . . 2009-12-01 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110612061636/http://www.iwight.com/council/election2009/Declaration_of_results_EU.pdf . 12 June 2011 .
  20. Web site: European Parliament Election Results 2004 . . 2009-12-02 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20091222010438/http://www.parliament.uk/commons/lib/research/rp2004/rp04-050.pdf . 22 December 2009 .
  21. Web site: Letters - Give us a link, but make it for cars. Isle of Wight County Press. 23 May 2008. 2009-12-01.
  22. Web site: Rural crime on the rise in Hampshire. Basingstoke Gazette. 5 February 2016. 28 July 2015.
  23. https://www.police.uk/hampshire/6LW02/performance/compare-your-area/ Compare your area
  24. Web site: Tram link idea wins poll approval. Isle of Wight County Press. 11 April 2008. 5 February 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20171023011733/http://www.iwcp.co.uk/news/tram-link-idea-wins-poll-approval-20024.aspx. 23 October 2017. dead.
  25. Web site: Fixed link campaign reveals Isle of Wight survey results. 7 April 2017. Isle of Wight County Press. 8 July 2023.
  26. News: New islands forum should not be 'box ticking exercise'. Cope. Chris. 3 February 2021. The Shetland News. 17 February 2022.
  27. News: Gove announces Levelling-up forum for islands. Paveley. Rebecca. 11 February 2021. Church Times. 17 February 2022.
  28. News: Isle of Wight to be invited into Island Forum to help level up the community. Toogood. Darren. 2 February 2021. Island Echo. 17 February 2022.
  29. Web site: Fight against monsters on the wellow horizon. Isle of Wight County Press. 2009-11-28.
  30. Web site: Windfarm plan appeal ditched. Isle of Wight County Press. 2009-11-28.
  31. Web site: New wind turbines double size. Isle of Wight County Press. 2009-11-28.
  32. Web site: Turbine plan rejected . . 2009-12-06 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20091206042153/http://iwcp.co.uk/news/news/turbine-plan-rejected-30072.aspx . 6 December 2009 .
  33. Web site: Windfarms: Voting two to one against. Isle of Wight County Press. 2009-11-28.