Election 97

Birmingham Edgbaston

Current MP Dame Jill Knight (Retiring)
Conservative 97 18,712
Labour 97 23,554
LibDem 97 4,691
Nationalist 97 0
Other 97 443
Elected party
Birmingham Edgbaston

Robert Waller wrote
Old constituency Birmingham Edgbaston
Conservative 92 25,059
Labour 92 20,003
LibDem 92 5,158
Nationalist 92 0
Other 92 643
Elected party Conservative

The Conservatives lost three seats in the city of Birmingham in 1992, reducing them just to two middle-class enclaves, Edgbaston and Hall Green (providing one does not count the affluent and safe Tory suburb of Sutton Coldfield, which was long a separate community but which now elects representatives on Birmingham City Council). Both these two seats must now themselves be regarded as vulnerable, although Edgbaston slightly less so than Hall Green.

Neither have ever been held by Labour. Edgbaston itself is probably Birmingham's best known middle-class residential area, famed for its remaining large houses near the Test cricket ground and the university, and the seat also includes more modern private housing in Quinton and Bartley Green wards. Nevertheless, a 5 per cent swing from 1992 would see Edgbaston fall to Labour for the first time. This may be hard to achieve. There is some evidence that the Conservative vote here is unusually hard to crack; the party certainly did unusually well in the wards that make up the Edgbaston seat in the local elections of May 1996.

The veteran Tory MP for Edgbaston, Dame Jill Knight, stands down at the forthcoming general election. Her replacement as Conservative candidate is Andrew Marshall.


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