Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Hendon (UK Parliament constituency)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
County
  
Greater London

Created
  
1997

Electorate
  
74,329 (December 2010)

Number of members
  
One

Hendon (UK Parliament constituency)

Member of parliament
  
Matthew Offord (Conservative)

Created from
  
Hendon North and parts of Hendon South

Hendon /ˈhɛndᵿn/ is a constituency created in 1997 represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2010 by Matthew Offord of the Conservative Party. An earlier version of the seat existed between 1918 and 1945.

Contents

First creation

The first incarnation of the constituency was created for the 1918 General Election. By 1941 the estimated electorate was the largest at 217,900. For the 1945 general election the areas of the constituency were thus divided between North and South new entities and contributions to other new seats, including the principal part of Harrow East. The 1918-1945 was a period of near-full adult franchise and saw the most significant adult population increase nationally within the constituency, this coincided with a period of major residential building locally.

Second creation

In the boundary change legislation passed to implement the Fifth Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies for the 1997 General Election the London Borough of Barnet's parliamentary representation was reduced from four seats to three and the Hendon North constituency was combined with a northern part of the Hendon South constituency, creating the present Hendon constituency. A south-eastern swathe of former Hendon South was placed into Finchley and Golders Green. Within 10% of the average electorate, the seat avoided malapportionment that would otherwise exist by way of two undersized constituencies.

Immediate notional history

Including the period of division of the present area (1945—97) the various general elections were won by Conservatives except for the victory of Barbara Ayrton-Gould (Labour), in Hendon North (1945–50).

The last Liberal or Liberal Democrat to serve the area of either Hendon seat was in 1910. Neither independent candidates nor those of any other political party than the three main parties mentioned have won the seat or its predecessors.

Summary of results since 1997

On the restoration of a seat named Hendon, Andrew Dismore seized the seat during a landslide win for the Labour Party. Since its 1997 formation Hendon has been a national bellwether constituency. The 2010 winner's majority was 106 votes. The 2015 result gave the seat the 37th most marginal majority of the Conservative Party's 331 seats by percentage of majority.

Boundaries

1918–45: The Urban Districts of Hendon and Kingsbury, and the Rural District of Hendon.

1997–present: The London Borough of Barnet wards of Burnt Oak, Colindale, Edgware, Hale, Hendon, Mill Hill, and West Hendon.

1918-45

No national reviews took place between the Representation of the People Act 1918 which enfranchised this constituency and the next such Act in 1945. Later national reviews took place by the newly established Boundary Commissions for the four countries of United Kingdom for the elections of 1950, 1974, 1983, 1997 and 2010. As can be seen from the map, during the early period the seat spanned the area made up of the present seat and primarily the two neighbours to east and west, Chipping Barnet and Harrow East.

2010 review

Under the Fifth Review of Westminster Constituencies, looking at the population subset North London, and as a consequence of abolishing ward-sharing, Parliament accepted the Boundary Commission's recommendation that the shared part of Underhill be transferred to the constituency of Chipping Barnet, parts of the wards Golders Green and Finchley Church End be transferred to Finchley and Golders Green and that shared parts of Mill Hill ward be received from the named seats (to the north-east and south-east).

References

Hendon (UK Parliament constituency) Wikipedia