North Tyneside (UK Parliament constituency)

North Tyneside was a constituency[n 1] represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since its creation by the Labour Party.[n 2]

North Tyneside
Former Borough constituency
for the House of Commons
Outline map
2010–2024 boundary of Blaydon in Tyne and Wear
Outline map
Location of Tyne and Wear within England
CountyTyne and Wear
Electorate78,617 (December 2010)[1]
19972024
SeatsOne
Created fromTynemouth and Wallsend
Replaced by

The seat was abolished for the 2024 general election and replaced by parts of four other constituencies.[2]

History

This seat was represented from its creation in 1997 by Stephen Byers of the Labour Party, who before that election represented the abolished seat of Wallsend from 1992. Byers stood down at the 2010 general election and his party selected local councillor Mary Glindon as their new candidate for the general election, which she won with a majority of 12,884.

Abolition

Further to the completion of the 2023 Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies, the seat was abolished for the 2024 general election, with its contents distributed between Tynemouth, Newcastle upon Tyne North, re-established Newcastle upon Tyne East and Wallsend, and newly created Cramlington and Killingworth as following:[2]

PartsNew constituencyPart of North Tyneside, %
Battle Hill, Howdon, Northumberland and Wallsend wardsNewcastle upon Tyne East and Wallsend42.4
Camperdown, Killingworth and Weetslade wardsCramlington and Killingworth29.0
Benton, Longbenton wardsNewcastle upon Tyne North19.6
Majority of Riverside wardTynemouth9.0

Constituency profile

This constituency formed north-east suburbs to the largest city in the region, Newcastle-upon-Tyne. At the end of 2010, unemployment still reflected a slightly less strong economy than in the city's shipbuilding heyday and stood in this seat alone at 5.7% by claimant count, compared to a regional average of 5.5%, significantly lower than South Shields' 7.7%. As to the male only claimant total, this amounted to 7.8%, just part of a significant region-wide disparity but significantly lower than Middlesbrough's 12.8%, however both sets of figures were a little higher than the national average — Greater London saw an average of 4.1% and for men a proportion of 4.9%.[3]

Boundaries

Map of 2010–2024 boundaries

1997–2010: The Borough of North Tyneside wards of Battle Hill, Benton, Camperdown, Holystone, Howdon, Longbenton, Riverside, Valley, and Weetslade.[4]

Apart from Riverside ward, which was transferred from Tynemouth, the constituency was formed from the majority of the abolished Wallsend constituency.

2010–2024: The Borough of North Tyneside wards of Battle Hill, Benton, Camperdown, Howdon, Killingworth, Longbenton, Northumberland, Riverside, Wallsend, and Weetslade.[5]

The Wallsend and Northumberland wards moved from Newcastle upon Tyne East and Wallsend which was abolished and replaced by the re-established constituency of Newcastle upon Tyne East. Valley ward was transferred to Tynemouth.

Members of Parliament

ElectionMember[6]Party
1997Stephen ByersLabour
2010Mary GlindonLabour
2024Constituency abolished

Election results 1997-2024

Elections in the 1990s

1997: Michael McIntyre was Councillor for Whitley Bay Ward 1992-2012.

General election 1997: North Tyneside[7]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourStephen Byers 32,810 72.7
ConservativeMichael McIntyre6,16713.7
Liberal DemocratsTommy Mulvenna4,76210.6
ReferendumMichael Rollings1,3823.1
Majority26,64359.0
Turnout45,12167.9
Labour win (new seat)

Elections in the 2000s

General election 2001: North Tyneside[8]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourStephen Byers 26,027 69.5 −3.2
ConservativeMark Ruffell5,45914.6+0.9
Liberal DemocratsSimon Reed4,64912.4+1.8
UKIPAlan Taylor7702.1New
Socialist AlliancePete Burnett3240.9New
Socialist LabourKenneth Capstick2400.6New
Majority20,56854.9-4.1
Turnout37,46957.7−10.2
Labour holdSwing

2005: Duncan McLellan was Councillor for Weetslade Ward 2005-2012.

General election 2005: North Tyneside[9]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourStephen Byers 22,882 61.9 −7.6
ConservativeDuncan McLellan7,84521.2+6.6
Liberal DemocratsGillian Ferguson6,21216.8+4.4
Majority15,03740.7-14.2
Turnout36,93957.2−0.5
Labour holdSwing−7.1

Elections in the 2010s

2010: At this election Mary Glindon was Councillor for Battle Hill Ward, David Ord was Councillor for Northumberland Ward and Gagan Mohindra was District Councillor in Epping Forest, Essex.

General election 2010: North Tyneside[10][11]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourMary Glindon 23,505 50.7 −8.7
Liberal DemocratsDavid Ord10,62122.9+0.9
ConservativeGagan Mohindra8,51418.3−0.3
BNPJohn Burrows1,8604.0New
UKIPClaudia Blake1,3062.8New
National FrontBob Batten5991.3New
Majority12,88427.8−9.6
Turnout46,40559.7+4.3
Labour holdSwing−4.8
General election 2015: North Tyneside[12]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourMary Glindon 26,191 55.9 +5.2
ConservativeMartin McGann8,99719.2+0.9
UKIPScott Hartley[13]7,61816.3+13.5
Liberal DemocratsJohn Appleby2,0754.4−18.5
GreenMartin Collins1,4423.1New
TUSCTim Wall3040.6New
National FrontBob Batten1910.4−0.9
Majority17,19436.7+8.9
Turnout46,81859.0−0.7
Labour holdSwing+2.2
General election 2017: North Tyneside[14]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourMary Glindon 33,456 64.5 +8.6
ConservativeHenry Newman14,17227.3+8.1
UKIPGary Legg2,1014.0−12.3
Liberal DemocratsGreg Stone1,4942.9−1.5
GreenMartin Collins6691.3−1.8
Majority19,28437.2+0.5
Turnout51,89265.7+6.7
Labour holdSwing+0.2
General election 2019: North Tyneside[15]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
LabourMary Glindon 25,051 49.7 −14.8
ConservativeDean Carroll15,49030.7+3.4
Brexit PartyAndrew Husband5,25410.4New
Liberal DemocratsChris Boyle3,2416.4+3.5
GreenJohn Buttery1,3932.8+1.5
Majority9,56119.0−18.2
Turnout50,42963.9−1.8
Labour holdSwing−9.1

See also

Notes

References