Election 97

Tewkesbury


Result 97 Con gain
from Conservative
Current MP 97 NEW SEAT
Majority 0 ( 0.0%)
Conservative 97 23,859 (45.8%)
Labour 97 13,665 (26.2%)
LibDem 97 14,625 (28.0%)
Nationalist 97 0 ( 0.0%)
Other 97 0 ( 0.0%)
Elected party 97 Con
Electorate 97 68,208
Turnout 97 52,149 (76.5%)



1992 MP NEW SEAT
Old constituency name NEW SEAT
Majority 92 9,797 (18.6%)
Conservative 92 28,300 (53.8%)
Labour 92 5,297 (10.1%)
LibDem 92 18,503 (35.2%)
Nationalist 92 0 ( 0.0%)
Other 92 488 ( 0.9%)
Elected party 92 Conservative
Electorate 92 64,159
Turnout 92 52,588 (82.0%)
Tewkesbury



Tory change -8.1%
Labour change +16.1%
Lib Dem change -7.1%
Nationalist change +0.0%
Other change -0.9%
Electorate change +6.3%
Turnout Change -5.5%
Robert Waller wrote

The Tewkesbury seat is a compact entity, consisting of about 35,000 voters from the old Cirencester and Tewkesbury seat (which had to be split after the 1992 General Election when its electorate reached 88,000), plus 17,000 from the former West Gloucestershire and just over 10,000 from Cheltenham.

Much of the territory consists of suburbs of both Gloucester and Cheltenham with some rural villages. The largest single community in the division is Churchdown, basically a suburb of Gloucester which, like Brockworth and Innsworth, has come in from West Gloucestershire. Bishop�s Cleeve is the centre of major modern developments immediately to the north of Cheltenham and within the Gloucester-Cheltenham �conurbation� which has caused the electoral growth and gives the territory its political character.

Whether at the urban or rural end of the spectrum, all parts of the Tewkesbury constituency are Conservative in general elections, though the Liberal Democrats are very active locally and may be expected to poll quite heavily here.


Super Profiles

4,581 12.21 9.03 135
4,773 12.72 11.17 114
5,359 14.28 11.25 127
7,450 19.86 14.70 135
2,112 5.63 10.45 54
1,534 4.09 2.81 145
4,218 11.24 8.01 140
4,713 12.56 15.25 82
2,441 6.51 7.13 91
182 0.49 10.17 5