St Ives (UK Parliament constituency) explained

St Ives
Parliament:uk
Map3:EnglandCornwall
Year:1885
Type:County
Elects Howmany:One
Electorate:69,978 (2024) [1]
Region:England
European:South West England
Year2:1558
Abolished2:1885
Type2:Borough
Elects Howmany2:1558–1832: two
1832–1885: one

St Ives is a parliamentary constituency covering the western end of Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly. The constituency has been represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2024 by Andrew George, a Lib Dem MP; George previously represented the constituency from 1997 to 2015.

Constituency profile

The seat covers the southern end of Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly. Tourism is a significant sector in this former mining area.[2]

History

St Ives has elected MPs to every Parliament since 1558, except for a brief period during the Protectorate. It was originally a mere parliamentary borough that returned two MPs until the Great Reform Act of 1832, when its representation was cut to a single member. In 1885 the borough was abolished, but the St Ives name was transferred to the surrounding county constituency.

St Ives borough

The borough established under Queen Mary consisted of the parish of St Ives in western Cornwall, a seaport and market town in which the main economic interests were fishing and the export of ores mined nearby. In 1831, the population of the borough was 4,776, and contained 1,002 houses.

The franchise was initially restricted to the town corporation, but after a judgment in a disputed election in 1702 the right to vote was given to all inhabitants paying scot and lot; in the early 19th century this amounted to a little over 300 voters. This was a wide franchise for the period, and its reasonable size meant that St Ives was one of the few Cornish boroughs that could claim not to be rotten.

Elections were usually contested. Local wealthiest families were able to exercise considerable influence on the outcome yet none was predominant. The result could rarely be taken for granted and it was necessary to court the voters assiduously. From the 17th century were three such families from the first: the Hobart family, the Praeds (at the time of Treventhoe manor), and the Dukes of Bolton (the Paulet family) – to which added by the mid 18th century the Stephens family. In 1751, however, John Stephens, who had previously allied himself with the Earl of Buckinghamshire (a Hobart) and managed the borough's elections on his behalf, "struck out on his own account" (defected independently) and secured the election of his son. Later in the decade Stephens and the Earl once more began to work together, but were unable to prevent Humphrey Mackworth Praed from establishing sufficient influence to sway one of the two seats.

By 1761 alliances coalesced, the Earl and Praed on one side nominating candidates against Stephens and the Duke of Bolton on the other. The by-election in 1763, when Buckinghamshire's brother-in-law Charles Hotham was re-elected after being appointed to a position in the Royal Household, cost the Earl £1,175 including 7 guineas each to 124 people, resulting in an uncontested election.

There was a further bitterly contested election in 1774: allegations of bribery were investigated by a House of Commons committee, whose proceedings are recounted at length by the contemporary historian of electoral abuses, Thomas Oldfield. Samuel Stephens, defeated by 7 votes, accused William Praed and Adam Drummond (the Duke of Bolton's candidate) of benefiting from several types of corruption. Humphrey Mackworth Praed, William's father, was said to have lent large sums to voters on the understanding that repayment would not be demanded if they voted for Praed and Drummond; but opposing counsel adduced evidence that Stephens had also resorted to bribery. However, it was alleged that many of Stephens' supporters had been prevented from voting, by rating them as not liable for scot and lot and so not eligible to vote; this disenfranchisement was a frequent abuse in such boroughs. His side, as petitioners, failed to bring any evidence of criminal misconduct by the parish overseers so the committee decided they had no jurisdiction to interfere. In the end, the committee upheld Drummond's election and declared that neither Stephens nor Praed had been properly elected, thus a writ was issued for a by-election to fill the second seat.

The cost of electioneering in St Ives seems eventually to have led to Buckinghamshire and Bolton withdrawing, and by 1784 Praed was considered unchallenged as patron. Nevertheless, Stephens' influence was not extinguished, and it was recorded that the patrons at the time of the Reform Act were Samuel Stephens of Tregarron and Sir Christopher Hawkins of Trewithan (who had purchased the manor of Mr Praed).

The Reform Act extended the boundaries, bringing in the neighbouring parishes of Lelant and Towednack and reduced the two St Ives seats to one. A new high of 584 voters qualified at the first reformed election, that of 1832.

On extension of the franchise in 1868 of the "second Reform Act", the electorate never passed 1,500, and had fallen to barely 1,000 by the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885, the cornerstone of the third reform legislation, under which the "borough" for its parliamentary definition was abolished that year, the area becoming contributory to a larger county division.

St Ives county constituency

1885–1918Division of counties into single-member constituencies was effected in 1885: Cornwall having six. The westernmost of these, in which St Ives stood, was formally The Western or St Ives Division of Cornwall but was most often referred to simply as St Ives or as West Cornwall.

This area included Penzance, Paul, Ludgvan and St Just, and stretched not only from Land's End to St Erth but also included the Isles of Scilly. This duchy seat was abnormally low in owner-occupiers, with many "nonconformist" Christians[3] and the Conservatives were consequently very weak. However, local sentiment was strongly against Irish Home Rule or independence, seen as a particular threat to the livelihood of the fishermen and other maritime employees who made up much of the electorate, and St Ives therefore became a Liberal Unionist stronghold from 1886.

1918–1983After the boundary revisions introduced at the general election of 1918, which brought in most of the villages on the Lizard Peninsula (though not Helston), the constituency was simply called Cornwall, St Ives. It underwent further boundary changes in 1950, bringing Helston into the constituency, and in 1983, when it was extended to include all of the Penwith local government district.

The character of the constituency was little changed any of these revisions, but party loyalties may have been disrupted by the 1918 changes. Labour put up a candidate for the first time in 1918, and took more than a third of the vote; at the next election, with Labour withdrawing and the Irish issue no longer able to help Cory, a Conservative was elected for the first time. For the next decade St Ives was a Conservative-Liberal marginal, changing hands four times in the 1920s. However, the formal split of National Liberals from the Liberals offered a popular compromise which suited the voters, so much so as to be a safe seat, and later for Conservatives when the National Liberals finally merged with them in the 1960s, until the formation of the Liberal Democrats re-invigorated the competition in the 1990s. Andrew George captured the seat after the retirement of the sitting Conservative MP in 1997, and took over half the vote in both 2001 and 2005.

Prominent members

1885–dateWalter Runciman held the most senior positions in Education, Agriculture and Trade taking together the period from 1908 until 1916 during the Asquith ministry. He was later re-appointed as the most senior minister in Trade from 1931 to 1937 in the all-party National Coalition Government.

Sir John Nott also held the most senior position in the Trade department before becoming Secretary of State for Defence, including during the Argentine invasion of the Falkland Islands and the ensuing Falklands War. His assertion that he was cutting the defence budget before the war was not capricious and he offered his resignation to Margaret Thatcher, however she kept him for the duration of the conflict and he stood down in 1983.

Usual late count in modern elections

At general elections, the constituency is usually one of the last to declare a result - the delay in bringing the ballot boxes over from the Isles of Scilly means that counting does not begin until the following day.[4] In the 2015 general election it was the last constituency in the United Kingdom to declare, because the ballot boxes were flown in from the Isles of Scilly only on the first scheduled flight the following morning, having been kept in police cells overnight on St Mary's,[5] with the declaration taking place at 15:30 on Friday afternoon.[6] However, in 1987 and 1992 the constituency did count during the night rather than the next day. The seat was declared at about 1:30 am in 1987 and about 3:45 am in 1992. In 2019 it was planned to fly the ballot boxes in overnight, but bad weather prevented this and the seat was the last to declare in the UK.

Boundaries

1885–1918: The Boroughs of St Ives and Penzance, the Sessional Division of West Penwith (including the Isles of Scilly), and the parishes of St Erth and Uny-Lelant.

1918–1950: The Boroughs of St Ives and Penzance, the Urban Districts of Ludgvan, Madron, Paul, and St Just, the Rural District of West Penwith, the Isles of Scilly, and part of the Rural District of Helston.

1950–1983: The Boroughs of St Ives, Penzance, and Helston, the Urban District of St Just, the Isles of Scilly, and parts of the Rural Districts of Kerrier and West Penwith.

1983–2010: The District of Penwith, the District of Kerrier wards of Breage and Germoe, Crowan, Grade-Ruan and Landewednack, Helston North, Helston South, Meneage, Mullion, Porthleven, St Keverne and Wendron, and Sithney, and the Isles of Scilly.

2010–2024: The District of Penwith wards of Goldsithney, Gulval and Heamoor, Lelant and Carbis Bay, Ludgvan and Towednack, Madron and Zennor, Marazion and Perranuthnoe, Morvah, Pendeen and St Just, Penzance Central, Penzance East, Penzance Promenade, Penzance South, St Buryan, St Erth and St Hilary, St Ives North, and St Ives South, the District of Kerrier wards of Breage and Crowan, Grade-Ruan and Landewednack, Helston North, Helston South, Meneage, Mullion, Porthleven and Sithney, and St Keverne, and the Isles of Scilly.

The St Ives constituency covers the southwest of Cornwall, taking in the most southerly and westerly points of England (both its mainland and if islands are included), taking in parts of the former Penwith and Kerrier Districts. The main towns in the constituency are Penzance, St Ives and Helston. It also includes the Isles of Scilly, not shown on the map (having 1,700 electors out of a total of 63,000). The seat includes the Tate St Ives, St Michael's Mount (also an island) and Land's End.

Following the Boundary Commission' Fifth Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies, Parliament increased the number of seats in the county from five to six for the 2010 general election,[7] thus St Ives saw a loss of wards to the new Camborne and Redruth seat, including the St Ives Bay town of Hayle.[8]

2024–present: Further to the 2023 Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies, enacted by the Parliamentary Constituencies Order 2023, from the 2024 United Kingdom general election, the constituency will be composed of the following electoral divisions of Cornwall (as they existed on 4th May 2021):

Minor changes to align with revised electoral division boundaries and bring the electorate within the permitted range.

Members of Parliament

1558–1629

Parliament of 1558Thomas RandolphWilliam Chambers
Parliament of 1559Robert HarringtonWilliam Glasiour
Parliament of 1563–1567John Harrington
Parliament of 1571Thomas ClintonJohn Newman
Parliament of 1572–1581Thomas RandolphEdward Williams
Parliament of 1584–1585John JamesCharles Blount
Parliament of 1586–1587Thomas ColbyJohn Morley
Parliament of 1588–1589Mark StewardHenry Hobart
Parliament of 1593Noel SothertonNicholas Saunders
Parliament of 1597–1598Vincent Skinner
Parliament of 1601Thomas St AubynThomas Barton
Parliament of 1604–1611John TregannonWilliam Brook
Addled Parliament (1614)Sir Joseph KilligrewSir Anthony Maney also elected for Cirencester
Thomas Tindall
Parliament of 1621–1622Lord St JohnRobert Bacon
Happy Parliament (1624–1625)William LakeSir Francis Godolphin
Useless Parliament (1625)Sir William Parkhurst
Parliament of 1625–1626Edward SavageBenjamin Tichborne also elected for Petersfield
William Noy
Parliament of 1628–1629John PayneFrancis Godolphin
No Parliament summoned 1629–1640

1640–1832

YearFirst memberFirst partySecond memberSecond party
April 1640William DellSir Henry Marten
November 1640Lord LisleParliamentarianFrancis GodolphinParliamentarian
1641 (?)Edmund WallerRoyalist
July 1643Waller disabled from sitting – seat vacant
1647John FeilderRecruiter
December 1648Godolphin not recorded as sitting after Pride's Purge
1653St Ives was unrepresented in the Barebones Parliament and the First and Second Parliaments of the Protectorate
January 1659
May 1659John FeilderOne seat vacant
May 1660James PraedJohn St Aubyn<-- party -->
July 1660Edward Nosworthy, senior<-- party -->
March 1661James Praed<-- party -->
December 1661John Basset
1662Daniel O'Neill
1665Edward Nosworthy, senior<-- party -->
1679Edward Nosworthy, junior<-- party -->
1681James Praed
1685Charles DavenantToryJames St. Amand
1689James Praed<-- party -->Walter Vincent
1690William Harris
1695John Michell
1698Sir Charles Wyndham
January 1701Benjamin Overton
December 1701Sir John HawlesWhig
1702Richard Chaundler
1702John Pitt
1705Sir Bartholomew GracedieuJohn Borlase<-- party -->
1708John Praed<-- party -->
1710John Hopkins<-- party -->
1713Sir William Pendarves
1715Lord Harry PowlettWhigSir John Hobart<-- party -->
1722Henry Knollys<-- party -->
1727Major-General Sir Robert Rich<-- party -->
1734William Mackworth Praed
1741John Bristow<-- party -->Lieutenant-Colonel Gregory Beake
July 1747Lord Hobart
December 1747John Plumptre
1751Samuel Stephens
1754Hon. George HobartJames Whitshed
1761Humphrey Mackworth PraedColonel Charles Hotham
1768Thomas DurrantAdam Drummond<-- party -->
1774
1775Thomas Wynn<-- party -->
1778Philip Dehany
1780William Praed<-- party -->Abel Smith
1784Richard Barwell
1790William Mills
1796Sir Richard Glyn
1802Jonathan Raine
1806Samuel Stephens<-- party -->Francis HornerWhig
1807Sir Walter Stirling, 1st Baronet<-- party -->
1812William Pole-Tylney-Long-WellesleyTory
1818Samuel Stephens
1820Lyndon EvelynToryJames GrahamWhig
1821Sir Christopher Hawkins, BtTory
1826James HalseTory
1828Charles ArbuthnotTory
1830William Pole-Tylney-Long-WellesleyUltra ToryJames MorrisonWhig
1831James HalseToryEdward Bulwer-LyttonWhig
1832Representation reduced to one member

1832–1885

ElectionMemberParty
1832James HalseTory
1834Conservative[10]
1838 by-electionWilliam Tyringham PraedConservative
1846 by-electionLord William PowlettConservative
1852Robert LaffanPeelite[11]
1857Henry PaullConservative
1868Charles MagniacLiberal
1874Edward DavenportConservative
1874 by-electionCharles PraedConservative
1875 by-electionCharles PraedConservative
1880Sir Charles ReedLiberal
1881 by-electionCharles Campbell RossConservative
1885Borough abolished; name transferred to county division

Since 1885

ElectionMemberParty
1885Sir John St AubynLiberal
1886Liberal Unionist
1887 by-electionLiberal Unionist
1900Edward HainLiberal Unionist
1904Liberal
1906Liberal
Conservative
Liberal
Conservative
1928 by-electionLiberal
1929Walter RuncimanLiberal
1931National Liberal
National Liberal
National Liberal
1966John NottNational Liberal
1968Conservative
Conservative
Liberal Democrat
Conservative
Liberal Democrat

Elections

Elections in the 2010s

2019 notional result[12]
PartyVote%
26,403 49.0
21,176 39.3
4,893 9.1
981 1.8
Others 446 0.8
Turnout53,89976.9
Electorate70,107

Elections in the 1940s

General election 1939–40:Another general election was required to take place before the end of 1940. The political parties had been making preparations for an election to take place from 1939 and by the end of this year, the following candidates had been selected;

Elections in the 1910s

General election 1914–15:Another general election was required to take place before the end of 1915. The political parties had been making preparations for an election to take place and by July 1914, the following candidates had been selected;

Elections in the 1880s

Elections in the 1870s

Elections in the 1840s

Elections in the 1830s

See also

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Result for St Ives constituency - 4 July 2024 - Cornwall Council . 2024-07-10 . www.cornwall.gov.uk.
  2. UK Polling Report http://ukpollingreport.co.uk/2015guide/stives/
  3. "There are places of worship for the Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion, Primitive Methodists, and Wesleyans, which last have also a meeting-house in the village of Halsetown" Web site: Ives, St. (parish of St Andrew). Samuel Lewis . Institute of Historical Research . 1848 . A Topographical Dictionary of England . 21 March 2013 .
  4. Web site: Order of Declaration in the 2001 Election. demon.co.uk.
  5. https://web.archive.org/web/20150601040957/http://www.scillytoday.com/2015/05/07/scillys-polling-stations-open-but-result-expected-to-be-latest-in-uk/ Scilly’s Polling Stations Open But Result Expected To Be Latest In UK
  6. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/election-2015-32644231 BBC News
  7. Web site: Final recommendations for Parliamentary constituencies in the county of Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly . http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20091102212641/http://www.boundarycommissionforengland.org.uk/review_areas/downloads/FR_NR_Cornwall_the_Isles_of_Scilly.doc . dead . 2009-11-02 . . 2005-01-09 . 2010-05-01 .
  8. http://www.official-documents.gov.uk/document/cm70/7032/7032_iv.asp Fifth periodic report - Non-Metropolitan Counties and the Unitary Authorities
  9. Web site: The Parliamentary Constituencies Order 2023 . Schedule 1 Part 7 South West region.
  10. Book: Stooks Smith , Henry. . . The Parliaments of England . 1844-1850 . 2nd . 1973 . Parliamentary Research Services . Chichester . 0-900178-13-2 . 47–48 .
  11. News: The General Election . 7 July 2018 . Morning Post . 13 July 1852 . 2–3.
  12. Web site: Notional results for a UK general election on 12 December 2019 . 11 July 2024 . Rallings & Thrasher, Professor David Denver (Scotland), Nicholas Whyte (NI) for Sky News, PA, BBC News and ITV News . UK Parliament.
  13. News: The St Ives Election Petition. 19 January 2018. Cornish Telegraph. 24 February 1875. 3. British Newspaper Archive. subscription .