Election 97

Hyndburn


Result 97 gain
from Labour
Current MP 97 Greg Pope
Majority 0 ( 0.0%)
Conservative 97 15,383 (31.9%)
Labour 97 26,831 (55.6%)
LibDem 97 4,141 ( 8.6%)
Nationalist 97 0 ( 0.0%)
Other 97 1,917 ( 4.0%)
Elected party 97
Electorate 97 66,806
Turnout 97 48,272 (72.3%)



1992 MP Greg Pope
Old constituency name Hyndburn
Majority 92 2,031 ( 3.7%)
Conservative 92 23,995 (43.2%)
Labour 92 26,026 (46.8%)
LibDem 92 5,314 ( 9.6%)
Nationalist 92 0 ( 0.0%)
Other 92 219 ( 0.4%)
Elected party 92 Labour
Electorate 92 66,766
Turnout 92 55,554 (83.2%)
Hyndburn



Tory change -11.3%
Labour change +8.7%
Lib Dem change -1.0%
Nationalist change +0.0%
Other change +3.6%
Electorate change +0.1%
Turnout Change -11.0%
Robert Waller wrote

The Hyndburn constituency is one of Lancashire's classic Labour - Conservative marginals, and it is one of the four seats in the county that Labour gained from the Tories at the 1992 general election. It has a history of very close and sometimes surprising results.

In its first contest in 1983 (essentially it is very similar to the former Accrington seat) the Conservative Kenneth Hargreaves won by just 21 votes. Against the national swing, he increased his majority to over 2,000 in 1987, relying on the advantages of incumbency, then lost to Labour's Greg Pope by a similar amount in 1992. The impact of the unpopular poll tax will not have helped in the densely packed but neat terraces of small owner occupied houses in the east Lancashire ex-mill communities around Accrington - places like Oswaldtwistle and Church and Rishton. Next time this issue will not be salient, and although Labour should win again, Hyndburn has shown before that its result cannot be taken for granted.


Super Profiles

214 0.54 9.03 6
1,506 3.78 11.17 34
4,004 10.05 11.25 89
6,156 15.45 14.70 105
4,921 12.35 10.45 118
0 0.00 2.81 0
2,936 7.37 8.01 92
6,952 17.45 15.25 114
11,793 29.59 7.13 415
1,177 2.95 10.17 29