Vauxhall (UK Parliament constituency) explained

Vauxhall
Parliament:uk
Map1:Vauxhall2007
Map Size:200px
Year:1950
Abolished:2024
Type:Borough
Elects Howmany:One
Electorate:88,659 (December 2019)[1]
Region:England
European:London
Towns:North Lambeth, Vauxhall, Stockwell, Kennington, Clapham, Brixton (part)

Vauxhall was a constituency in London. It was represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament by members of the Labour Party for the whole of its creation from 1950 until its abolition for the 2024 general election.

Under the 2023 Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies, the majority of the constituency was incorporated into the new seat of Vauxhall and Camberwell Green, with the wards of Clapham Town, Ferndale and Larkhall being included in the new constituency of Clapham and Brixton Hill.[2]

Boundaries

1950–1974: The Metropolitan Borough of Lambeth wards of Bishop's, Marsh, Oval, Prince's, and Vauxhall.

1974–1983: The London Borough of Lambeth wards of Bishop's, Oval, Prince's, Stockwell, and Vassall.

1983–1997: The London Borough of Lambeth wards of Bishop's, Clapham Town, Ferndale, Larkhall, Oval, Prince's, Stockwell, and Vassall.

1997–2010: The London Borough of Lambeth wards of Angell, Bishop's, Clapham Town, Ferndale, Larkhall, Oval, Prince's, Stockwell, and Vassall.

2010–2024: The London Borough of Lambeth wards of Bishop's, Clapham Town, Ferndale, Larkhall, Oval, Prince's, Stockwell, and Vassall.

Vauxhall was wholly within the London Borough of Lambeth. The core of the constituency, unchanged from the former Lambeth North, was delimited by the River Thames to the west and north and the boundary with Southwark to the east.

Constituency profile

The seat included all of Vauxhall, North Lambeth, Stockwell, Kennington and some of Brixton and north Clapham. Its landmarks included the London Eye, The Oval cricket ground, Royal Vauxhall Tavern, SIS building and the National Theatre. Among Britain's most ethnically diverse constituencies, Vauxhall had sizable Jamaican, Portuguese, Ghanaian and Ecuadorian communities.

At just over 6% of the population, Vauxhall (which was located in the London Borough of Lambeth) had the largest proportion of LGBT+ people in the country as of 2016.[3]

Political history

The area has consistently voted in parliamentary elections for Labour Members of Parliament since 1929, except in 1931. This includes the results of the former seat of Lambeth North, which had near-identical boundaries.

Since a 1989 by-election, the seat had been represented by Kate Hoey. Continuing a history as a safe seat for Labour, since her 1989 election, Hoey consistently achieved majorities of 9,100 to 20,200 votes. The 2015 result made the seat the 105th safest of Labour's 232 seats by percentage of majority.[4]

Despite Hoey being a prominent campaigner for leaving the European Union, Vauxhall voted to remain in the EU by 77.6% in the national referendum on 23 June 2016.[5] This made it the strongest pro-EU constituency to be represented by a pro-Brexit MP. In the 2017 general election, this led to her seat being targeted by pro-Remain organisations and high-profile individuals seeking to oust her in favour of the pro-EU Liberal Democrat candidate.[6] There had been a change.org petition calling for Hoey's deselection as the Labour candidate for the seat; however, due to party rules this was unsuccessful.[7] [8] In the 2017 election, Hoey significantly increased her majority to the largest the seat had ever seen; the Liberal Democrat vote total more than trebled, and they moved back into second place having fallen to fourth behind the Conservatives and the Greens in 2015. In May 2018, Hoey's local party passed a vote of no confidence in her, vowing to deselect the MP as well.[9] On 8 July 2019 Hoey announced that she would retire from the House of Commons, and would not seek re-election as a Labour candidate at the next general election.[10]

Prominent frontbenchers

George Strauss was appointed Minister of Supply from 1947 to 1951 during the Attlee Ministry. Kate Hoey was Minister for Sport (1999–2001) during the Blair Ministry.[11]

Local government results

The constituency shared boundaries with the Vauxhall electoral division for election of councillors to the Greater London Council at elections in 1973, 1977 and 1981.

The local government wards in the constituency are currently entirely represented by Labour on Lambeth London Borough Council.

A single Conservative councillor represented the Clapham Town ward from 2002 until losing their seat by sixty votes in the 2006 Council Elections.

Three Liberal Democrat councillors represented the Bishop's ward from 1990 to 2014; they subsequently lost the three ward seats to Labour, as did the sole Liberal Democrat councilors in the Oval and Vassall wards. They failed to gain them back in 2018.

At the 2018 council elections, Labour won all of the ward seats in the constituency. The Liberal Democrats finished second in the wards of Bishop's, Oval, Stockwell and Prince's. The Conservatives finished the runner up in Clapham Town and the Green Party in Vassall, Ferndale and Larkhall.

Members of Parliament

ElectionMemberParty
1950George Strauss
1979Stuart Holland
1989 by-electionKate Hoey
2019Florence Eshalomi

Elections

Elections in the 2010s

13.6% was the largest vote share increase in a Labour held seat for the Liberal Democrats at the 2017 general election.[12] UKIP stood down their candidate in order to ensure Hoey was re-elected.[13]

Elections in the 1950s

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Lambeth Democracy . LBLDemocracy . 1205342769331486722 . All 3 constituencies in #Lambeth have now been confirmed and announced. Dulwich & West Norwood, Vauxhall and Streatham have all been won by Labour candidates. #GE2019.
  2. Web site: The 2023 Review of Parliamentary Constituency Boundaries in England – Volume one: Report – London Boundary Commission for England . 2023-07-28 . boundarycommissionforengland.independent.gov.uk.
  3. Web site: State of the Borough 2016 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20221124184712/https://www.lambeth.gov.uk/sites/default/files/State%20of%20Borough%202016%20-%20v3.pdf . 24 November 2022 . 12 March 2023 . Lambeth Council.
  4. Web site: Labour Members of Parliament 2015 . UK Political.info . 2018-09-29 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180929214847/http://www.ukpolitical.info/labour-mps-elected-2015.htm . live.
  5. Web site: EU REF. Results for Lambeth.xlsx . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20220129173031/https://moderngov.lambeth.gov.uk/documents/s82579/EUREFResultsforLambeth.pdf?platform=hootsuite . 29 January 2022 . 12 March 2023 . Lambeth Council.
  6. Web site: Pro-EU campaigners draw up 'attack list' of Brexiteer MPs they want to unseat in the general election. https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220811/https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/brexit-open-britain-mps-unseated-campaign-kate-hoey-iain-duncan-smith-a7700426.html . 11 August 2022 . subscription . live. 25 April 2017. The Independent.
  7. News: Kexit's a way off for Vauxhall remoaners. 19 February 2017. The Sunday Times. subscription . White. Roland. 25 April 2017.
  8. News: Farron shrugs off gay sex row to target veteran's seat. 25 April 2017. The Times. subscription . Zeffman. Henry. 25 April 2017.
  9. News: Kate Hoey vows to fight deselection. 27 May 2018. BBC News. 21 May 2019.
  10. News: Kate Hoey to stand down as MP for Vauxhall at next election. 8 July 2019. ITV News. 14 December 2019.
  11. Web site: Under-Secretary of State (Hansard).
  12. Web site: 28 January 2020 . General Election 2019: results and analysis . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20230226192430/https://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/CBP-8749/CBP-8749.pdf . 26 February 2023 . 12 March 2023 . UK Parliament . 2nd.
  13. Web site: Cobb . Jason . 2017-04-29 . UKip steps aside in Vauxhall so as not to clash with Brexiteer Hoey in general election . live . http://web.archive.org/web/20190702020140/http://www.brixtonbuzz.com/2017/04/ukip-steps-aside-in-vauxhall-so-as-not-to-clash-with-brexiteer-hoey-in-general-election/ . 2019-07-02 . 2024-05-04 . Brixton Buzz.