Liverpool Broadgreen

UK Parliament constituency (1983–1997) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Liverpool Broadgreen was a parliamentary constituency centred on the Broadgreen suburb of Liverpool. It returned one Member of Parliament (MP) to the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom.

The constituency was created for the 1983 general election, and abolished for the 1997 general election. When the seat was first contested, it was estimated by the BBC and ITN that had it been fought at the previous election in 1979 it would have returned a Conservative MP with majority of 565.[2] However, despite the Conservatives winning the 1983 general election with a landslide majority and Labour's support falling from its 1979 level, Labour won Broadgreen with a majority of 3,800.[3] Labour would go on to win the seat at every election when it was contested although it was always a marginal seat.

Boundaries

The City of Liverpool wards of Broadgreen, Childwall, Kensington, Old Swan, and Tuebrook.

Members of Parliament

More information Election, Member ...
ElectionMemberParty
1983 Terry Fields Labour
1991 Independent
1992Jane KennedyLabour
1997 constituency abolished
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Elections

Elections in the 1980s

More information Party, Candidate ...
General election 1983: Liverpool Broadgreen[4]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Terry Fields 18,802 40.9
Conservative Daniel P. Dougherty 15,002 32.6
Liberal Richard Pine 7,021 15.3
SDP Dick Crawshaw 5,169 11.2
Majority 3,800 8.3
Turnout 45,994 72.1
Labour win (new seat)
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  • Both Crawshaw and Pine were official candidates of their respective local parties and both supported the Alliance between the Liberals and the SDP, however Crawshaw was given endorsement by both national parties.
More information Party, Candidate ...
General election 1987: Liverpool Broadgreen[5]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Terry Fields 23,262 48.6 +7.7
Liberal Richard Pine 17,215 35.9 +20.6
Conservative Mark Seddon 7,413 15.5 −17.1
Majority 6,047 12.7 +4.4
Turnout 47,890 75.9 +3.8
Labour hold Swing −8.5
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Elections in the 1990s

More information Party, Candidate ...
General election 1992: Liverpool Broadgreen[6][7]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Jane Kennedy 18,062 43.2 −5.4
Liberal Democrats Rosie Cooper 11,035 26.4 −9.5
Independent Terry Fields 5,952 14.2 New
Conservative Helen Roche 5,405 12.9 −2.6
Liberal Steve Radford 1,211 2.9 New
Natural Law Ann Brennan 149 0.4 New
Majority 7,027 16.8 +4.1
Turnout 41,814 69.6 −6.3
Labour hold Swing +2.2
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References

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