Election 97

Staffordshire Moorlands


Result 97 gain
from Labour
Current MP 97 Sir David Knox (Retiring)
Majority 0 ( 0.0%)
Conservative 97 16,637 (32.5%)
Labour 97 26,686 (52.2%)
LibDem 97 6,191 (12.1%)
Nationalist 97 0 ( 0.0%)
Other 97 1,603 ( 3.1%)
Elected party 97
Electorate 97 66,095
Turnout 97 51,117 (77.3%)



1992 MP Sir David Knox (Retiring)
Old constituency name Staffordshire Moorlands
Majority 92 1,185 ( 2.2%)
Conservative 92 20,787 (38.7%)
Labour 92 21,972 (40.9%)
LibDem 92 9,381 (17.4%)
Nationalist 92 0 ( 0.0%)
Other 92 1,629 ( 3.0%)
Elected party 92 Labour
Electorate 92 67,045
Turnout 92 53,769 (80.2%)
Staffordshire Moorlands



Tory change -6.1%
Labour change +11.3%
Lib Dem change -5.3%
Nationalist change +0.0%
Other change +0.1%
Electorate change -1.4%
Turnout Change -2.9%
Robert Waller wrote

The redrawing of the parliamentary boundaries at the northern end of Staffordshire has proved a tragedy for the Conservatives.

Previously a safe Tory seat, won by Sir David Knox in 1992 with a majority of over 7,000 over Labour, the entire character of Staffordshire Moorlands has been altered by a series of boundary changes. The Boundary Commission has transferred 27,000 mainly Tory voters to other seats. These include the rural areas around Alton Towers, the well known theme park, and the small town of Cheadle, and also the affluent Stoke suburbs of Endon and Brown Edge. In return come 19,000 electors from the strongly Labour Potteries town of Kidsgrove, previously in Stoke North. All this effectively recreates the seat known as Leek that Labour held from 1945 to 1970, and they will have every confidence of holding Staffordshire Moorlands - for holding it will be, as they would have been ahead if it had existed in 1992.


Super Profiles

1,643 4.74 9.03 53
3,475 10.03 11.17 90
7,665 22.13 11.25 197
5,882 16.98 14.70 116
0 0.00 10.45 0
1,896 5.47 2.81 195
1,915 5.53 8.01 69
6,501 18.77 15.25 123
4,908 14.17 7.13 199
664 1.92 10.17 19