Surrey Heath (UK Parliament constituency)

Last updated

Surrey Heath
County constituency
for the House of Commons
Surrey Heath (UK Parliament constituency)
Boundaries since 2024
South East England - Surrey Heath constituency.svg
Boundary of Surrey Heath in South East England
County Surrey
Electorate 70,825 (2023) [1]
Borough Surrey Heath
Major settlements
Current constituency
Created 1997
Member of Parliament Al Pinkerton (Liberal Democrats)
Created from

Surrey Heath is a constituency [n 1] represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2024 by Al Pinkerton, a Liberal Democrat. The Home counties suburban constituency is in the London commuter belt, on the outskirts of Greater London. Surrey Heath is in the north west of Surrey and borders the counties of Berkshire and Hampshire.

Contents

History

The seat was created under the Fourth Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies in 1997 from the majority of North West Surrey, a seat that was abolished, and smaller parts of Woking and Guildford, seats that remained.

On its creation, Nick Hawkins was elected to parliament as Surrey Heath's MP, after the North West Surrey MP, Michael Grylls, who had in 1992 achieved a majority of 28,392, retired. [2] One of Hawkins' opponents for selection was future Speaker John Bercow, selected for Buckingham the same day. [3]

In 1999 then-party chairman Michael Ancram intervened to prevent a move to deselect Hawkins following local party disquiet about him leaving his wife of 20 years for a local councillor. [4] [5] In 2004, the Conservative constituency association, then the richest in the country, deselected Hawkins for the next election, following accusations of racism, in the hope of obtaining an MP of cabinet calibre. [6] [7]

Michael Gove was duly selected and became the MP at the 2005 general election. He went on to serve in various Cabinet positions under David Cameron, Theresa May, Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak. Apart from periods as a backbencher from July 2016 to June 2017 and July to October 2022, he served continuously in the Cabinet from 2010 to 2024.

Until the 2019 general election, the constituency was generally considered to be one of the Conservative Party's safest seats. But the 2019 election saw an unexpected 11.1% swing to the Liberal Democrats' candidate Al Pinkerton, who secured the second-highest second place since the constituency's creation, with Labour recording their lowest share of the vote since the seat's creation.

After the 2024 general election was called, Gove announced he would not stand for re-election. [8] The seat consequently fell to Al Pinkerton, standing again for the Liberal Democrats, on a further swing of 20.9%; it was one of six (out of the twelve) Surrey seats to switch from the Conservatives to the Lib Dems in that election

Boundaries

Surrey Heath (UK Parliament constituency)
Map of 1997–2024 boundaries

1997–2024

Surrey Heath occupies much of the northwest corner of the county. From its inception in 1997 until 2024, it covered the Borough of Surrey Heath and the Guildford wards knows as 'The Ashes': [9]

Current

Further to the 2023 Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies which came into effect for the 2024 United Kingdom general election, the constituency is now composed of the following (as they existed on 1 December 2020):

The electorate was reduced to bring it within the permitted range by transferring the three substantial Guildford Borough wards which constitute Ash to a new seat, Godalming and Ash. To partly compensate, the two villages (and one-member Guildford Council wards) of Normandy and Pirbright were transferred into the Surrey Heath seat from the Woking constituency.

Constituency profile

70% of homes were detached or semi-detached at the 2011 census. The detached percentage (45.2%) was at that time the second highest in the South East, behind the New Forest. [11] The area is well connected to London Heathrow Airport, IT, telecommunications and logistics centres of the M3 and M4 corridors, and to the military towns of Aldershot and Sandhurst. Farnborough, with its civil, private aviation base with certain military uses, is also nearby, as is Blackbushe Airport.

Workless claimants, registered jobseekers, were in November 2012 significantly lower than the national average of 3.8%, at 1.7% of the population based on a statistical compilation by The Guardian . [12]

According to the British Election Study, it was the most right-wing seat in the UK as at 2014. [13]

Constituents voted to leave the European Union in 2016.

YouGov polling by Focaldata suggested that support for Remain rose from its 48% level in the 2016 Referendum to 50.2% in August 2018 (during the Brexit ‘impasse’ in Parliament). [14]

Prior to the 2024 General Election, Surrey Heath was numerically the Liberal Democrats' 58th target seat (before boundary changes), [15] and in the 2023 local elections the Lib Dems had ended 49 years of continuous Conservative administration by taking overall control of Surrey Heath Council [16] and had also helped push the Conservatives to two consecutive poor results on Guildford Borough Council in the local election years of 2019 and 2023. [17]

Members of Parliament

North West Surrey, Guildford and Woking prior to 1997

ElectionMember [18] Party
1997 Nick Hawkins Conservative
2005 Michael Gove Conservative
2024 Al Pinkerton Liberal Democrats

Elections

Elections in the 2020s

2024 general election: Surrey Heath
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Liberal Democrats Al Pinkerton [19] 21,387 44.8 +16.8
Conservative Ed McGuinness [20] 15,74733.0−24.9
Reform UK Samantha Goggin [21] 6,25213.1N/A
Labour Jess Hammersley-Rich [22] 3,1486.6−2.8
Green Jon Campbell [23] 1,1622.4−1.1
Heritage Elizabeth Wallitt [24] 920.2N/A
Majority5,64011.8N/A
Turnout 47,92866.6−7.0
Registered electors 71,934
Liberal Democrats gain from Conservative Swing +20.9

Elections in the 2010s

2019 notional result [25]
PartyVote %
Conservative 30,16157.9
Liberal Democrats 14,60928.0
Labour 4,8889.4
Green 1,8453.5
Others6281.2
Turnout52,13173.6
Electorate70,825
2019 general election: Surrey Heath [26]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Conservative Michael Gove 34,358 58.6 −5.6
Liberal Democrats Al Pinkerton 16,00927.3+16.5
Labour Brahma Mohanty5,4079.2−11.9
Green Sharon Galliford2,2523.8−0.1
UKIP David Roe6281.1N/A
Majority18,34931.3−11.8
Turnout 58,65472.1+0.5
Conservative hold Swing −11.1
2017 general election: Surrey Heath [27]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Conservative Michael Gove 37,118 64.2 +4.3
Labour Laween Atroshi12,17521.1+9.9
Liberal Democrats Ann-Marie Barker6,27110.8+1.7
Green Sharon Galliford2,2583.9−0.5
Majority24,94343.1−2.5
Turnout 57,82271.6+3.1
Conservative hold Swing −2.8
2015 general election: Surrey Heath [28]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Conservative Michael Gove 32,582 59.9 +2.3
UKIP Paul Chapman [29] 7,77814.3+8.0
Labour Laween Atroshi6,10011.2+1.0
Liberal Democrats Ann-Marie Barker4,9379.1−16.8
Green Kimberley Lawson [30] 2,4004.4N/A
Christian Juliana Brimicombe3610.7N/A
Independent Bob and Roberta Smith [31] 2730.5N/A
Majority24,80445.6+13.8
Turnout 54,43168.5−1.5
Conservative hold Swing
2010 general election: Surrey Heath [32]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Conservative Michael Gove 31,326 57.6 +6.1
Liberal Democrats Alan Hilliar14,03725.8−3.0
Labour Matt Willey5,55210.2−6.5
UKIP Mark Stroud3,4326.3+3.3
Majority17,28931.8+9.1
Turnout 54,34770.0+7.1
Conservative hold Swing +4.5

Elections in the 2000s

2005 general election: Surrey Heath [33]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Conservative Michael Gove 24,642 51.5 +1.8
Liberal Democrats Rosalyn Harper13,79728.8+3.1
Labour Chris Lowe7,98916.7−4.7
UKIP Steve Smith1,4303.0−0.3
Majority10,84522.7−1.3
Turnout 47,85862.9+3.4
Conservative hold Swing −0.7
2001 general election: Surrey Heath [34]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Conservative Nick Hawkins 22,401 49.7 −1.9
Liberal Democrats Mark Lelliott11,58225.7+3.9
Labour James Norman9,64021.4+0.4
UKIP Nigel Hunt1,4793.3+2.1
Majority10,81924.0−5.8
Turnout 45,10259.5−14.6
Conservative hold Swing

Elections in the 1990s

1997 general election: Surrey Heath [35]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Conservative Nick Hawkins 28,231 51.6
Liberal Democrats David Newman11,94421.8
Labour Susan Jones 11,51121.0
Referendum John Gale2,3854.4
UKIP Richard Squire6531.2
Majority16,28729.8
Turnout 54,72474.1
Conservative win (new seat)

See also

Notes

  1. A county constituency (for the purposes of election expenses and type of returning officer)

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