Senedd constituencies and electoral regions explained

Senedd constituencies and electoral regions
Alt Name:Senedd Cymru / Welsh Parliament constituencies and electoral regions
Caption:Map of the 40 constituencies (left side) and the 5 electoral regions (right side) of the Senedd in Wales
Category:Electoral district
Territory:Wales
Current Number:40 constituencies
5 regions
Number Date:2021
Population Range:Constituency:
43,125 (Arfon) -
81,366 (Cardiff South and Penarth)

Region:
413,569 (South Wales West) -
523,096 (South Wales Central)
Government:Senedd
Legislation Begin:Government of Wales Act 1998
Government1:Welsh Government

The Senedd constituencies and electoral regions are the electoral districts used to elect members of the Senedd (MS; Welsh: Aelodau'r Senedd or AS) to the Senedd (Welsh Parliament;), and have been used in some form since the first election of the then National Assembly for Wales in 1999. New boundaries were introduced for the 2007 elections and currently consist of forty constituencies and five regions. The five electoral regions are: Mid and West Wales, North Wales, South Wales Central, South Wales East, and South Wales West, with the forty constituencies listed below.[1] Voting last took place in all districts in the 2021 Senedd election, and is not used for local government.

The constituencies were created through the Government of Wales Act 1998, with the boundaries of the Welsh constituencies of the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom (Westminster), as they were in 1999. The new boundaries were also used for the 2010 United Kingdom general election. Therefore, between the 2007 Assembly election and the 2010 United Kingdom general election, the two sets of constituencies, Assembly and Westminster, had differing boundaries. The Parliamentary Voting System and Constituencies Act 2011, unlinked the two sets of constituencies, meaning any changes to one set, no longer affect the other. This has allowed for differing proposals for constituencies in Wales, with separate proposals for an increase in Senedd seats and a decrease in UK Parliament constituencies in Wales.[2]

Senedd constituencies are grouped into electoral regions consisting of between seven and nine constituencies. An additional member system is used to elect four additional Members of the Senedd from each region, in addition to the MSs elected by the constituencies. The Electoral Regions boundaries were based upon the pre-1999 European Parliament constituencies. At each general election of the Senedd, each elector has two votes, one constituency vote and one regional party-list vote. Each constituency elects one Member by the first past the post (single-member district plurality, SMDP) system, and the additional Senedd seats are filled from regional closed party lists, under the D'Hondt method, with constituency results being taken into account, to produce a degree of proportional representation for each region. Altogether, the sixty Members of the Senedd are elected from the forty constituencies and five electoral regions, creating a Senedd of forty constituency MSs and twenty additional MSs. Every constituent is represented by one constituency member and four regional members.

History

Establishment

Following the 1997 Welsh devolution referendum, where a narrow majority voted in support of the creation of a devolved Welsh Assembly, constituencies of the devolved legislature were established.

Section 2 of the Government of Wales Act 1998 stipulates that the constituencies for the National Assembly for Wales be the same as the constituencies used for elections to the United Kingdom Parliament.[3] The same act sets out the creation of five regions which would use the same borders as the five European Parliamentary constituencies in Wales which themselves were set out in the European Parliamentary Constituencies (Wales) Order 1994,[4] used for elections to the European Parliament between 1994 and 1999. The electoral regions set out are still used, despite the abolishment of the five European Parliamentary constituencies for an all-Wales constituency, and the withdrawal of the UK from the European Union. Although minor border adjustments to the regions have taken place.

Change in boundaries

In 2006, the Government of Wales Act 2006 was enacted. When enacted the act reinforced the link between Assembly and UK Parliamentary constituencies, and that the number of electoral regions is five.

The Parliamentary Constituencies and Assembly Electoral Regions (Wales) Order 2006 defined the new borders for the constituencies and electoral regions.

The order detailed the abolition of three constituencies (Caernarfon, Conwy, and Meironnydd Nant Conwy), with three new constituencies to replace them (Aberconwy, Arfon, and Dwyfor Meirionnydd). Nine constituencies were subject to "substantial" border adjustments involving the transfer of more than 3,000 inhabitants between constituencies. A further eight constituencies were subject to boundary changes resulting in the redistribution of fewer than 3,000 inhabitants between each constituency, and a further four constituencies were subject to minor boundary adjustments that led to minimal transfers of inhabitants between constituencies. The remaining sixteen constituencies were not subject to any boundary or name modifications.

The three new constituencies straddled the border of the electoral regions of Mid and West Wales and North Wales, leading to adjustments in the boundaries of both electoral regions, in addition to minor adjustments to the constituency of Montgomeryshire also leading to minor regional boundary adjustments. In south Wales, the boundaries of the electoral regions, South Wales West, and South Wales Central were altered to accommodate changes to the boundaries of Bridgend, and Vale of Glamorgan constituencies.

The changes in the boundaries for constituencies and electoral regions of the Senedd came into force for the 2007 National Assembly for Wales election.

Delinking from UK parliament constituencies

Section 13(1) of the Parliamentary Voting System and Constituencies Act 2011 states that:[5] This details that any further changes to the UK Parliament constituencies in Wales specified in the act (notably the proposed reduction in constituencies to 30) will not be applied to Assembly (Senedd) constituencies.

In a session of the House of Commons where the then secretary of state for Wales, Cheryl Gillian was questioned on the Labour party's opposition to the decoupling of the two constituencies, she replied:[6]

Re-naming

On 6 May 2020, the Senedd and Elections (Wales) Act 2020 came into force, renaming the Assembly constituencies and Assembly electoral regions of the National Assembly for Wales, to the Senedd constituencies and Senedd electoral regions of "Senedd Cymru" or "the Welsh Parliament", known in both Welsh and English as the Senedd.

Constituencies

Wales is made up of 40 constituencies for elections to the Senedd, the constituencies are currently the same but are not linked to those used for elections to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, with each constituency containing a population of around 60,000.

The borders of each constituency are drawn using Local government boundaries, defined in Parliamentary Voting System and Constituencies Act 2011 as "the boundaries of counties, county boroughs, electoral divisions, communities and community wards".[7]

Boundary responsibility

The Boundary Commission for Wales, a non-departmental public body, is responsible for proposing alterations to the boundaries of UK parliamentary constituencies in Wales, and reports proposals to the UK Government. Boundaries of Senedd constituencies and electoral regions are currently not overseen by any statutory review body,[8] following the delinking of Senedd and UK Parliament constituencies in 2011, although the current configurations of both constituencies share the same boundaries (only the Senedd has electoral regions). Organisations such as the Electoral Reform Society Cymru have indicated a preference for coterminosity (meaning the mirroring of Senedd seat boundaries in Wales along the lines of the 2016 proposed reforms to the Welsh seats in the UK Parliament),[9] however, such coterminosity is merely desired and is not enforced by law, meaning any changes to UK parliamentary constituencies in Wales do not necessarily need to be mirrored with the same changes for Senedd constituencies. If the differing proposals to constituencies in Wales, the proposed reduction of UK parliamentary constituencies and a proposed increase in Senedd constituencies in Wales are followed through, full coterminosity would be impossible. On 8 September 2021, a draft proposal of new UK parliamentary constituencies, reducing to 32, was published, with no plans to pass these changes to Senedd Constituencies, meaning the 2024 United Kingdom general election may use different constituencies to the next Senedd election, once more.[10]

Constituencies, prior to the Boundary Changes

Constituency(Welsh name)Electoral population (March 2020)Principal areasElectoral region
Aberavon51,450Neath Port TalbotSouth Wales West
Aberconwy45,426ConwyNorth Wales
Alyn and Deeside65,183Flintshire
Wrexham
North Wales
Arfon43,125GwyneddNorth Wales
Blaenau Gwent51,495Blaenau GwentSouth Wales East
Brecon and Radnorshire55,124PowysMid and West Wales
Bridgend64,245BridgendSouth Wales West
Caerphilly64,926Caerphilly
Newport
South Wales East
Cardiff Central63,017Cardiff
Cardiff North69,143CardiffSouth Wales Central
Cardiff South and Penarth81,366Cardiff
Cardiff West69,511Cardiff
Carmarthen East and Dinefwr58,048CarmarthenshireMid and West Wales
Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire59,924Carmarthenshire
Pembrokeshire
Mid and West Wales
Ceredigion56,634CeredigionMid and West Wales
Clwyd South54,747Denbighshire
Wrexham
North Wales
Clwyd West58,024Conwy
Denbighshire
North Wales
Cynon Valley51,461Rhondda Cynon Taf
Delyn55,604Conwy
Flintshire
North Wales
Dwyfor Meirionnydd44,882GwyneddMid and West Wales
Gower62,763SwanseaSouth Wales West
Islwyn56,841CaerphillySouth Wales East
Llanelli62,196Carmarthenshire
Swansea
Mid and West Wales
Merthyr Tydfil and Rhymney57,883Caerphilly
Merthyr Tydfil
South Wales East
Monmouth67,252MonmouthshireSouth Wales East
Montgomeryshire49,691PowysMid and West Wales
Neath57,032Neath Port TalbotSouth Wales West
Newport East60,936NewportSouth Wales East
Newport West68,748NewportSouth Wales East
Ogmore57,934Rhondda Cynon Taf
Bridgend
South Wales West
Pontypridd60,923Rhondda Cynon Taf
Preseli Pembrokeshire60,025PembrokeshireMid and West Wales
Rhondda50,471Rhondda Cynon Taf
Swansea East60,726SwanseaSouth Wales West
Swansea West59,419SwanseaSouth Wales West
Torfaen63,061TorfaenSouth Wales East
Vale of Clwyd56,307DenbighshireNorth Wales
Vale of Glamorgan77,204Vale of Glamorgan
Wrexham52,713WrexhamNorth Wales
Ynys Môn52,610Isle of AngleseyNorth Wales

Former constituencies

Between the first election in 1999 for the then National Assembly for Wales, to the 2007 election, there were three former constituencies. These constituencies were replaced at the 2007 election, with new boundaries and names.

Three constituency names, Conwy, Caernarfon, and Meirionydd Nant Conwy, have become historic, and the new boundaries define three constituencies with new names: Arfon, Dwyfor Meirionnydd, and Aberconwy. Generally, the new boundaries define each constituency taking into account local government ward boundaries, and define constituencies close to equal in terms of the sizes of their electorates.

Former constituencyPreserved countyRegion of former constituencyReplacement constituencies and regions
CaernarfonGwyneddNorth WalesArfon, North Wales electoral region
Dwyfor Meirionnydd, Mid and West Wales electoral region
ConwyClwydNorth WalesArfon, North Wales electoral region
GwyneddAberconwy, North Wales electoral region
Meirionnydd Nant ConwyClwydMid and West WalesAberconwy, North Wales electoral region
GwyneddDwyfor Meirionnydd, Mid and West Wales electoral region

Electoral regions

Wales is organised into five electoral regions for elections to the Senedd. Each region contains between 7 and 9 constituencies within them. Each region elects four additional members of the Senedd and roughly contains 500,000 people.

Electoral region(Welsh name)Number of constituenciesConstituencies(ordered alphabetically)Electoral population (March 2020)Image(numbered alphabetically)
Mid and West Wales8Brecon and Radnorshire, Carmarthen East and Dinefwr, Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire, Ceredigion, Dwyfor Meirionnydd, Llanelli, Montgomeryshire, Preseli Pembrokeshire446,524
North Wales9Aberconwy, Alyn and Deeside, Arfon, Clwyd South, Clwyd West, Delyn, Vale of Clwyd, Wrexham, Ynys Môn483,739
South Wales Central8Cardiff Central, Cardiff North, Cardiff South and Penarth, Cardiff West, Cynon Valley, Pontypridd, Rhondda, Vale of Glamorgan523,096
South Wales East8Blaenau Gwent, Caerphilly, Islwyn, Merthyr Tydfil and Rhymney, Monmouth, Newport East, Newport West, Torfaen491,142
South Wales West7Aberavon, Bridgend, Gower, Neath, Ogmore, Swansea East, Swansea West413,569

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Parliamentary Constituencies and Assembly Electoral Regions (Wales) Order 2006.
  2. Web site: Parliamentary Voting System and Constituencies Act 2011. legislation.gov.uk. UK Parliament.
  3. Web site: Government of Wales Act 1998. legislation.gov.uk. UK Parliament.
  4. Web site: 24 February 1994. The European Parliamentary Constituencies (Wales) Order 1994. 11 July 2021. legislation.gov.uk. UK Parliament.
  5. Book: The review of parliamentary constituencies in Wales. National Assembly for Wales Research Service. 2011. Senedd.wales.
  6. Web site: 11 May 2011. Parliamentary Debates - Wednesday 11 May 2011. 11 July 2021. publications.parliament.uk. House of Commons, UK Parliament.
  7. Web site: 11 April 2006. Parliamentary Constituencies and Assembly Electoral Regions (Wales) Order 2006. 11 July 2021. legislation.gov.uk. UK Parliament.
  8. Web site: Roberts. Owain. September 2011. The review of parliamentary constituencies in Wales. National Assembly for Wales.
  9. Web site: Reshaping the Senedd. 2019-12-23. www.electoral-reform.org.uk. en-US.
  10. News: 2021-09-08. Major changes to cut number of Welsh MPs published. en-GB. BBC News. 2021-09-08.