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  • 21 Aug, 2019

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Perth And North Perthshire (UK Parliament Constituency)

Perth and North Perthshire was a county constituency of the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It elected one Member of Parliament (MP) by the first past the post system of election. The constituency was created in 2005.

Campaigns in the seat had resulted in a minimum of 30% of votes at each election consistently for the same two parties' choice for candidate, and the next lower-placed party's having fluctuated between 8.1% and 18.7% of the vote since its relatively recent creation. The seat attracted a record seven candidates in 2015 and had seen as few as four, in 2017.

Further to the completion of the 2023 Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies, the seat was abolished. Subject to boundary changes – entailing the transfer of "North Perthshire" to the new constituency of Angus and Perthshire Glens, offset by the addition of Strathearn, Almond and Earn and Kinross-shire from the abolished constituency of Ochil and South Perthshire – it was be reformed as Perth and Kinross-shire, first contested at the 2024 general election.

Boundaries

As a result of the Fifth Periodical Review of the Boundary Commission for Scotland, the constituency (seat) was created to cover northern parts of the Perth and Kinross council area, and first used in the 2005 general election. Ochil and South Perthshire was created, at the same time, to cover the rest of that council area and the Clackmannanshire council area.

Before the 2005 election, these combined council areas had been covered by Angus, Ochil, Perth and North Tayside seats. The Perth seat lay within the Perth and Kinross council area, North Tayside covered a northern portion of that council area and a northern portion of the Angus council area, Angus covered a small southeastern portion of the Perth and Kinross council area, a southern portion of its associated council area, and northern portions of the Dundee City council area, and Ochil covered another southeastern portion of the Perth and Kinross council area, the whole of the Clackmannanshire council area and a southeastern portion of the Stirling council area.

Constituency profile

The seat's voters stretched across the north of the Perth and Kinross local council area in Scotland. It was an affluent, predominantly rural seat with notable livestock, salmon, fishing, hospitality, tourism and fruit-growing sectors. In its south, around the River Tay is Perth and its adjacent villages. Perth includes a mix of affluent middle-class suburbs to the south-west and more deprived areas around its north.

Notwithstanding the possibility of breakthrough national and local campaigns and developments, campaigns to date had produced a close-run two-candidate contest as to the lion's share of the votes between the Conservative and the Scottish National Parties' candidates. During the main forerunner seat's existence (Perth and East Perthshire, created in 1950), it returned MPs loyal to the Unionist Party and the Conservative and Unionist Party after the parties amalgamated in 1965.

The seat was one of eleven in Scotland to elect an SNP MP to Parliament at the 1974 October general election. With a rearrangement (redistribution) of seats in 1979 the successor seat of North Tayside went on to return Conservative candidate Bill Walker to Parliament until he was defeated by John Swinney of the SNP at the 1997 UK general election - from that point onwards the seat elected successive SNP members as its MP. The Conservatives narrowly missed out on gaining the seat at the 2005 UK general election: Douglas Taylor coming behind Pete Wishart by 1,521 votes. Wishart increased his majority such as with 9,641 votes clearance in 2015. The Conservative missed out on gaining the seat by 21 votes at the 2017 general election, the third-closest result in the nation after North East Fife and Kensington, but ahead of Kensington if ranked by percentage of the votes locally cast.

Members of Parliament

Election Member Party
2005 Pete Wishart SNP

Elections

General election results of Perth and North Perthshire from 2005 to 2019

Elections in the 2010s

General election 2019: Perth and North Perthshire
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
SNP Pete Wishart 27,362 50.6 +8.3
Conservative Angus Forbes 19,812 36.6 −5.7
Liberal Democrats Peter Barrett 3,780 7.0 +2.0
Labour Angela Bretherton 2,471 4.6 −5.8
Brexit Party Stuart Powell 651 1.2 New
Majority 7,550 14.0 +14.0
Turnout 54,076 74.4 +2.6
SNP hold Swing +7.0

Perth and North Perthshire was the third most marginal result in the United Kingdom and second most marginal result in Scotland at the 2017 general election, with incumbent SNP MP Pete Wishart seeing his majority cut from 9,641 votes (17.8%) to just 21 votes (0.0%) ahead of the Conservatives, although he did receive the highest number of votes for any SNP candidate.

General election 2017: Perth and North Perthshire
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
SNP Pete Wishart 21,804 42.32 −8.2
Conservative Ian Duncan 21,783 42.28 +9.4
Labour David Roemmele 5,349 10.4 +2.3
Liberal Democrats Peter Barrett 2,589 5.0 +1.2
Majority 21 0.04 −17.76
Turnout 51,525 71.8 −3.0
SNP hold Swing -8.9
General election 2015: Perth and North Perthshire
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
SNP Pete Wishart 27,379 50.5 +10.9
Conservative Alexander Stewart 17,738 32.7 +2.2
Labour Scott Nicholson 4,413 8.1 −8.3
Liberal Democrats Peter Barrett 2,059 3.8 −8.5
Scottish Green Louise Ramsay 1,146 2.1 New
UKIP John Myles 1,110 2.0 New
Independent Xander McDade 355 0.7 New
Majority 9,641 17.8 +8.7
Turnout 54,200 74.8 +7.9
SNP hold Swing +4.3
General election 2010: Perth and North Perthshire
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
SNP Pete Wishart 19,118 39.6 +5.9
Conservative Peter Lyburn 14,739 30.5 +0.1
Labour Jamie Glackin 7,923 16.4 −2.3
Liberal Democrats Peter Barrett 5,954 12.3 −3.8
Trust Douglas Taylor 534 1.1 New
Majority 4,379 9.1 +5.8
Turnout 48,268 66.9 +2.1
SNP hold Swing +2.9

Elections in the 2000s

General election 2005: Perth and North Perthshire
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
SNP Pete Wishart 15,469 33.7 −2.3
Conservative Douglas Taylor 13,948 30.4 +5.4
Labour Doug Maughan 8,601 18.7 −5.7
Liberal Democrats Gordon Campbell 7,403 16.1 +4.0
Scottish Socialist Philip Stott 509 1.1 −1.2
Majority 1,521 3.3 −7.7
Turnout 45,930 64.8
SNP win (new seat)

References

  1. ^ Boundary Commission Scotland 2023 Review Report
  2. ^ "Fifth Periodical Review of UK Parliament constituencies Final Recommendations". Boundary Commission forScotland. Retrieved 12 March 2017.
  3. ^ Gallagher, Paul (9 June 2017). "General election 2017: The smallest majorities of the night". The Independent. Retrieved 19 June 2017.
  4. ^ Library, House of Commons (23 June 2017). "GE2017: Marginal seats and turnout".
  5. ^ "Pete Wishart MP". parliament.uk. Retrieved 12 March 2017.
  6. ^ "Statement of Persons Nominated and Notice of Polll" (PDF). Perth and Kinross Council. Retrieved 14 November 2019.
  7. ^ "Perth & North Perthshire parliamentary constituency - Election 2019". Retrieved 15 December 2019.
  8. ^ "Commons Briefing Paper 8749. General Election 2019: results and analysis" (PDF). London: House of Commons Library. 28 January 2020. Archived (PDF) from the original on 18 November 2021. Retrieved 19 January 2022.
  9. ^ "General Election: SNP reselects 54 MPs". The Scotsman. 9 May 2017.
  10. ^ "Commons Briefing Paper 7979. General Election 2017: results and analysis" (PDF) (Second ed.). House of Commons Library. 29 January 2019 [7 April 2018]. Archived (PDF) from the original on 12 November 2019.
  11. ^ "Election Data 2015". Electoral Calculus. Archived from the original on 17 October 2015. Retrieved 17 October 2015.
  12. ^ "UK Parliamentary General Election results". Perth & Kinross Council. Retrieved 12 March 2017.
  13. ^ Bonn, Melanie (16 December 2014). "Perth Conservative councillor announces he's running to be a Westminster MP". Daily Record. Retrieved 12 March 2017.
  14. ^ "Election Data 2010". Electoral Calculus. Archived from the original on 26 July 2013. Retrieved 17 October 2015.
  15. ^ "Election 2010 - Perth & Perthshire North". BBC News. Retrieved 12 March 2017.
  16. ^ "Election Data 2005". Electoral Calculus. Archived from the original on 15 October 2011. Retrieved 18 October 2015.

56°23′42″N 3°26′06″W / 56.395°N 3.435°W / 56.395; -3.435