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Lewis Baston: What do the parliamentary boundary review proposals mean for London?

Screenshot 2021 06 09 at 20.41.38

Screenshot 2021 06 09 at 20.41.38

The Boundary Commission for England (BCE) has published its proposals for new parliamentary constituencies. If adopted, the new seats will come into existence at the next general election, provided it takes place after autumn 2023. This is the third attempt to produce new boundaries since 2010 but, unlike the previous two, it will go ahead – political opposition has been diluted by the abandonment of the plan to reduce the number of MPs to 600, and the new method now does not require a parliamentary approval vote.

The new constituencies are drawn with a view to reflecting the movement of population since the base date for the current seats which in England is February 2000. The English Commission is also, this time, unable to recommend constituencies (other than on the Isle of Wight) that differ from the average electorate by more than five per cent either way, a tighter threshold than before. London’s population growth entitles the capital to two extra seats, meaning there will 75 London MPs rather than the 73 we have at present. It would be even more if electoral registration in London were more complete. I wrote a preview of this back in January, but now we have the first official draft.

The two wholly new seats will, as I anticipated, both be safely Labour – Stratford & Bow, which accommodates the population growth in inner east London, and a seat which straddles the boundary between Lambeth and Croydon and puts a boundary around Norwood, one of London’s more diffuse neighbourhoods. Brixton & Clapham is another new concept (unless one’s memory goes back to the 1974-83 Lambeth Central seat) and it is a logical creation. There are some pretty odd-looking seats in north central London, but we’ll come back to them.

Every current London seat, with the exception of Dulwich & West Norwood, has a successor that looks rather like it, even if the name has changed and it is a different – usually more jagged and irregular – shape and sometimes a different political flavour. The most radical alterations are made to two seats in north London – Labour Westminster North and Conservative Finchley & Golders Green, so it’s a matter of debate as to whether these seats are “abolished” or just transformed. There are no obvious conflict areas where MPs of the same party face off against each other for the same seat – musical chairs is a much easier game when you add seats rather than taking them away.

Looking purely at the new creations, Labour is up two on what went before, but it is not quite that simple. There are a number of seats where the successor seat is different enough from the predecessor to flip them from one side to the other. The “notional” results for what would have happened in the 2019 election had these boundaries been in place are educated guesswork and there is no single way of calculating them – using demographic variables and local election results both have their advantages and disadvantages. So one should be careful of being too definitive about gains and losses for the parties when looking at altered seats. It may be wiser to think in terms of places being shifted towards or away from a party by the changes.

There are two constituencies where the changes are sufficiently clear-cut to be able to say the seat is flipped from one side to the other in the changes.

There are some others where a shift looks likely or possible but it will require a bit more analysis to make sure.

So, the net change resulting from the new boundaries in London, assuming voting patterns are the same as 2019, is probably Lab +1, Con or Lib Dem +1 – but with a fuzzy margin of error on either side of that.

There are some changes that will affect the parties’ target lists for the next election but would not have changed the seat’s allegiance in 2019. A few get safer for their sitting tenants:

Some seats, correspondingly, become more marginal:

The Commission has done a good job in some parts of London – their decision to leave Wandsworth minimally altered at the cost of splitting one ward is brave, in a good way. But by the nature of the rules they work under, there are some very messy bits. My own borough of Camden is sliced up so that it has three seats, but they are all shared with parts of neighbouring boroughs – Islington, Westminster and Brent. The articulate and vocal community of Hampstead will be firing up the email objections as I write. Barnet has one seat of its own, ringed by four that straddle boundaries with Enfield, Haringey, Brent and Harrow, a brutal piece of boundary butchery.

There is a period of eight weeks, which started on 8 June, to make representations to support or object to the proposals. It is not uncommon for the Commission to come back with revised proposals when persuasive evidence is brought to its attention, so it is worth sending in a note – whether it is just a single line to say that the proposal for your constituency is OK with you, or a detailed counter-proposal for the whole of London like the ones the main parties will offer. The consultation site is here.

This article was updated on 10 June 2021 following some reassessment of the putative Finchley & Muswell Hill.

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