West Ham (UK Parliament constituency)

West Ham
Borough constituency
for the House of Commons

Boundary of West Ham in Greater London.
County Greater London
Electorate 86,400 (December 2010)[1]
Current constituency
Created 1997 (1997)
Member of Parliament Lyn Brown (Labour)
Number of members One
Created from Newham North West, Newham South
Overlaps
European Parliament constituency London

West Ham is a parliamentary constituency in the London Borough of Newham, represented in the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It was formed in 1997 when the constituency of Newham North West was merged with part of Newham South.

Contents

Boundaries

The constituency covers the western half of Newham, including the areas of West Ham, Forest Gate, Plaistow, Stratford, Maryland and Upton Park.

The boundary changes that took effect at the May 2010 election expanded the constituency by adding Canning Town from the Poplar and Canning Town constituency, whilst losing Silvertown to East Ham. The boundary with the East Ham constituency was modified to align with local government ward boundaries.

The constituency now comprises ten wards: Canning Town North, Canning Town South, Custom House, Forest Gate North, Forest Gate South, Green Street West, Plaistow North, Plaistow South, Stratford & New Town and West Ham.

Politics and history of the constituency

The area is generally considered a safe Labour seat; West Ham South had in 1892 sent Keir Hardie to the Commons. Labour's Tony Banks was MP for first Newham North West and then West Ham from 1983 until his retirement in 2005. He held the seat at the 2001 general election with nearly 70% of the vote. The constituency has been one of the fastest growing in recent years and in 2006 was the second largest constituency of all, with only the Isle of Wight having more voters. The neighbouring constituency of East Ham was the third largest constituency.[2]

In the 1991 census just over 43% of residents were non-white.[3] By the time of the 2001 census, whites made up 44.1% of the population, with 35.3% of residents born outside the UK.[4] Over a quarter of the population are Afro-Caribbean. There is also a significant Asian population, many of whom are Muslims. By the time of the 2005 General Election, only seven of the 646 constituencies had more Muslims than West Ham.[5] As a result the RESPECT Coalition targeted it for the 2005 election, hoping to benefit from opposition to the Iraq war; in the end it was not enough to unseat Labour's replacement for Banks, Lyn Brown, but they managed to take nearly 20% of the vote away from Labour.[5]

Members of Parliament

Election Member [6] Party
1997 Tony Banks Labour
2005 Lyn Brown Labour

Election results

General Election 2010: West Ham
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Lyn Brown 29,422 62.7 +10.9
Conservative Virginia Morris 6,888 14.7 +2.6
Liberal Democrat Martin Pierce 5,392 11.5 +1.3
Christian Peoples Stan Gain 1,327 2.8 +1.7
Independent Kamran Malik 1,245 2.7 N/A
National Front Michael Davidson 1,089 2.3 N/A
UKIP Kim Gandy 766 1.6 +0.6
Green Jane Lithgow 645 1.4 -1.6
Independent Grace Agbogun-Toko 177 0.4 N/A
Majority 22,534 48.0
Turnout 46,951 55.0 +10.2
Labour hold Swing +4.2
General Election 2005: West Ham
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Lyn Brown 15,840 51.2 -18.7
Respect Lindsey German 6,039 19.5 N/A
Conservative Chris Whitbread 3,618 11.7 -4.7
Liberal Democrat Alexandra Sugden 3,364 10.9 +3.5
Green Jane Lithgow 894 2.9 -1.2
Christian Peoples Stephen Hammond 437 1.4 N/A
UKIP Henry Mayhew 409 1.3 -0.9
Veritas Generoso Alcantara 365 1.2 N/A
Majority 9,801 31.7
Turnout 30,966 49.8 +0.9
Labour hold Swing N/A
General Election 2001: West Ham
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Tony Banks 20,449 69.9 -3.0
Conservative Syed Kamall 4,804 16.4 +1.4
Liberal Democrat Paul Fox 2,166 7.4 0.0
Green Jackie Chandler-Oatts 1,197 4.1 N/A
UKIP Gerard Batten 657 2.2 N/A
Majority 15,645 53.5 -4.4
Turnout 29,273 48.9 -9.5
Labour hold Swing
General Election 1997: West Ham
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Tony Banks 24,531 72.9 N/A
Conservative Mark McGregor 5,037 15.0 N/A
Liberal Democrat Samantha McDonough 2,479 7.4 N/A
BNP Kenneth Francis 1,198 3.6 N/A
Monster Raving Loony Toby Jug 300 0.9 N/A
Rainbow Dream Ticket Jonathan Rainbow 116 0.3 N/A
Majority 14,494 57.9 N/A
Turnout 33,361 58.5 N/A
Labour hold Swing N/A

References

External links

See also