Election 97

Amber Valley


Result 97 gain
from Conservative
Current MP 97 Philip Oppenheim
Majority 0 ( 0.0%)
Conservative 97 18,330 (33.5%)
Labour 97 29,943 (54.7%)
LibDem 97 4,219 ( 7.7%)
Nationalist 97 0 ( 0.0%)
Other 97 2,283 ( 4.2%)
Elected party 97
Electorate 97 72,005
Turnout 97 54,775 (76.1%)



1992 MP Philip Oppenheim
Old constituency name Amber Valley
Majority 92 1,283 ( 2.1%)
Conservative 92 28,360 (46.5%)
Labour 92 27,077 (44.4%)
LibDem 92 5,582 ( 9.1%)
Nationalist 92 0 ( 0.0%)
Other 92 0 ( 0.0%)
Elected party 92 Conservative
Electorate 92 72,931
Turnout 92 61,019 (83.7%)
Amber Valley



Tory change -13.0%
Labour change +10.3%
Lib Dem change -1.4%
Nationalist change +0.0%
Other change +4.2%
Electorate change -1.3%
Turnout Change -7.6%
Robert Waller wrote

Amber Valley is an industrial area in mid-Derbyshire, centred on three towns of some 20,000 souls each, Alfreton, Heanor and Ripley, together with surrounding villages like Ambergate, where the Amber flows into Derbyshire's main river, the Derwent. In minor boundary changes the village of Crich is transferred into the seat from West Derbyshire: only a couple of thousand voters are added, but the Conservative MP Philip Oppenheim will be grateful for them, because Amber Valley is now a super-vulnerable Tory marginal, with a majority of just 712 in 1992.

This is in fact a gritty East Midlands seat, nowhere near as beautiful as the name. Its economy was originally based on coal, but all the pits are long since closed; light industrial estates are more the order of the day now. Amber Valley, created in pretty much its present form in 1983, has never yet been held by Labour; but if they actually win a general election, as seems likely in 1997, it will almost certainly fall to them for the first time.


Super Profiles

1,195 3.03 9.03 34
2,900 7.37 11.17 66
2,540 6.45 11.25 57
8,368 21.25 14.70 145
0 0.00 10.45 0
75 0.19 2.81 7
1,326 3.37 8.01 42
16,373 41.58 15.25 273
6,390 16.23 7.13 228
208 0.53 10.17 5