Taunton Deane (UK Parliament constituency)

Taunton Deane was a constituency[n 1] in Somerset represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament.[n 2]

Taunton Deane
Former County constituency
for the House of Commons
Outline map
Boundary of Taunton Deane in Somerset
Outline map
Location of Somerset within England
CountySomerset
Electorate82,882 (December 2010)[1]
Major settlementsTaunton, Wellington
20102024
SeatsOne
Created fromTaunton
Replaced byTaunton and Wellington & Tiverton and Minehead

Further to the completion of the 2023 Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies, the seat was abolished. Subject to moderate boundary changes, it was reformed as Taunton and Wellington, which was first contested at the 2024 general election.[2]

History

Parliament accepted the Boundary Commission's Fifth Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies which created this constituency for the General Election 2010 as a reduced form of the Taunton seat. The western wards, transferred to the new seat of Bridgwater and West Somerset for 2010, were all close to or in Exmoor, which were five in number:

  • Aville Vale, Brompton Ralph and Haddon, Dulverton and Brushford, Exmoor and, Qualme.[3]
Political history

The predecessor seat, while approximately 7% larger in electorate (and thus due to population and settlements' growth, oversized), had been held by a Liberal Democrat, Jeremy Browne, since 2005, who won Taunton Deane as its main successor with a relatively marginal majority. In the two previous elections, the seat had seen alternation between Conservative and a Liberal Democrat control. The Taunton Deane seat was won by the Conservatives in the 2015 general election with a large majority.

The last general election in which either party polled less than 38% of the vote, thus allowing a larger majority, was in 1987, taking into account only one of their notionally equivalent predecessors, the Social Democratic Party – their candidate participated in the SDP–Liberal Alliance.

Prominent members

Between 2010 and 2015, the seat was represented by Jeremy Browne, who served in the Coalition government as a Minister of State in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and the Home Office.[4]

Boundaries

Map of boundaries 2010-2024

The seat has electoral wards:

This constituency centred on the town of Taunton while extending to include Wellington within an approximate rhombus-shaped swathe of land forming the south-western portion of Somerset. The constituency covered a large part of the DevonSomerset border.

History

In the 2005 general election, the victorious Liberal Democrats' candidate in Taunton required the smallest percentage swing from the Conservative MP for them to take the seat. In the 2010 general election, the seat was identified as a target for the Conservative Party, ranking 29th on their target list.[6] The incumbent, Jeremy Browne had a notional 3.3% lead from the 2005 election. Browne held the seat in 2010, increasing his majority to 6.9%, a 1.8% swing from the Conservatives to the Liberal Democrats.[7]

Constituency profile

The seat was a mixture of partially agricultural commuter villages and a spacious urban town, which has business parks in a similar way to Wells, connected by road and rail to the major conurbations, north and south, Bristol and Exeter. The majority of the eastern half of the ridge-like Blackdown Hills is in the Blackdown electoral ward. Workless claimants, registered jobseekers, were in November 2012 lower than the national average of 3.8%, at 2.6% of the population based on a statistical compilation by The Guardian.[8]

Members of Parliament

2010–2024

ElectionMember[9]PartyNotes
2010Jeremy BrowneLiberal DemocratsPreviously MP for Taunton from 2005. Stood down in 2015.
2015Rebecca PowConservativeParliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Arts, Heritage and Tourism (2019)
Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Nature Recovery and the Domestic Environment (2019–2022)
2024constituency abolished: see Taunton and Wellington and Tiverton and Minehead

Elections

Elections in the 2010s

General election 2019: Taunton Deane[10][11]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeRebecca Pow 34,164 53.6 +0.7
Liberal DemocratsGideon Amos22,46435.2+7.5
LabourLiam Canham4,7157.4-8.0
IndependentJohn Hunt2,3903.8New
Majority11,70018.4-6.8
Turnout63,73371.9-1.9
Conservative holdSwing-3.5
General election 2017: Taunton Deane[12][13]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeRebecca Pow 33,334 52.9 +4.8
Liberal DemocratsGideon Amos17,44627.7+6.4
LabourMartin Jevon9,68915.4+6.2
UKIPAlan Dimmick1,4342.3-9.7
GreenClive Martin1,1511.8-2.7
Majority15,88725.2-1.6
Turnout63,05373.8+3.1
Conservative holdSwing-0.7
General election 2015: Taunton Deane[14][15]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
ConservativeRebecca Pow 27,849 48.1 +5.9
Liberal DemocratsRachel Gilmour12,35821.3-27.8
UKIPLaura Bailhache6,92112.0+8.4
LabourNeil Guild5,3479.2+4.1
GreenClive Martin2,6304.5New
IndependentMike Rigby2,5684.4New
TUSCStephen German1180.2New
IndependentBruce Gauld960.2New
Majority15,49126.8NA
Turnout57,88770.7+0.2
Conservative gain from Liberal DemocratsSwing+16.8
General election 2010: Taunton Deane[16]
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Liberal DemocratsJeremy Browne 28,531 49.1 +4.7
ConservativeMark Formosa24,53842.2+0.8
LabourMartin Jevon2,9675.1-6.8
UKIPTony McIntyre2,1143.6+1.2
Majority3,9936.9+3.9
Turnout58,15070.5+1.2
Liberal Democrats holdSwing+1.8

See also

Notes

References

Sources

51°00′00″N 3°10′12″W / 51.0000°N 3.1700°W / 51.0000; -3.1700