Shipley (UK Parliament constituency) explained

Shipley
Parliament:uk
Year:1885
Elects Howmany:One
Type:County
Electorate:74,522 (December 2019)[1]
Party:Labour Party (UK)

Shipley is a constituency represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2024 by Anna Dixon, representing Labour.

Boundaries

1885–1918: The Municipal Borough of Bradford, and the civil parishes of Clayton, Eccleshill, Idle, North Bierley, and Shipley.

1918–1950: The Urban Districts of Baildon, Bingley, Guiseley, Shipley, and Yeadon, and in the Rural District of Wharfedale the civil parishes of Esholt, Hawksworth, and Menston.

1950–1983: The Urban Districts of Baildon, Bingley, and Shipley.

1983–2010: The District of Bradford wards of Baildon, Bingley, Bingley Rural, Rombalds, Shipley East, and Shipley West.

2010–present: The District of Bradford wards of Baildon, Bingley, Bingley Rural, Shipley, Wharfedale, and Windhill and Wrose.

History

1885–1970

This seat was created in the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885. Until 1923 the seat was almost exclusively represented by elected Liberals and Arthur Creech Jones was Secretary of State for the Colonies (1946–1950) during most of the Attlee Ministry.

MPs since 1970

Shipley was for a long time the seat of ex-Chairman of the Conservative 1922 Committee, Sir Marcus Fox. He held the seat for almost 30 years between the 1970 and 1997 general elections.

At the 1997 general election, the Labour candidate Chris Leslie gained the seat from Fox, becoming the youngest MP of that parliament. He held the seat at the 2001 election and became a junior minister. A number of traditional Labour supporters considered Leslie to be an ardent Blairite, though he was in fact equally close to Gordon Brown, one of whose staff he married, and whose campaign for election as Labour leader he helped run (after he had lost this seat).[2]

Leslie narrowly lost the seat in the 2005 election, when the Conservative Party candidate Philip Davies narrowly regained the seat with a majority of 422 votes, which then increased to nearly ten thousand votes at the May 2010 general election.

Members of Parliament

ElectionMemberParty
1885Joseph CravenLiberal
1892William BylesLib-Lab
1895James Fortescue FlanneryLiberal Unionist
1906Percy IllingworthLiberal
1915Oswald PartingtonLiberal
1918Norman RaeLiberal
1923William MackinderLabour
1930James LockwoodConservative
1935Arthur Creech JonesLabour
1950Geoffrey HirstConservative
1970Marcus FoxConservative
1997Chris LeslieLabour
2005Philip DaviesConservative
2024Anna DixonLabour

Elections

Elections in the 1880s

See also

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Constituency data: electorates – House of Commons Library. 15 June 2020. Parliament UK. 22 July 2020.
  2. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7120088.stm Chris Leslie: Statement in full