Election 97

Bristol North West


Result 97 gain
from Labour
Current MP 97 Michael Stern
Majority 0 ( 0.0%)
Conservative 97 16,193 (29.3%)
Labour 97 27,575 (49.9%)
LibDem 97 7,263 (13.1%)
Nationalist 97 0 ( 0.0%)
Other 97 4,214 ( 7.6%)
Elected party 97
Electorate 97 75,009
Turnout 97 55,245 (73.7%)



1992 MP Michael Stern
Old constituency name Bristol North West
Majority 92 3,871 ( 6.5%)
Conservative 92 23,148 (38.8%)
Labour 92 27,019 (45.2%)
LibDem 92 8,849 (14.8%)
Nationalist 92 0 ( 0.0%)
Other 92 703 ( 1.2%)
Elected party 92 Labour
Electorate 92 73,542
Turnout 92 59,719 (81.2%)
Bristol North West



Tory change -9.5%
Labour change +4.7%
Lib Dem change -1.7%
Nationalist change +0.0%
Other change +6.5%
Electorate change +2.0%
Turnout Change -7.6%
Robert Waller wrote

At the 1992 election the Conservative MP Michael Stern held onto the marginal north-western division of Bristol by just 45 votes, the second closest margin in the whole of the United Kingdom. However things have changed since, and in a way which makes it almost impossible for Stern to hold the seat for his party.

Only one ward is shifted, but it is a critical one. North West loses its Conservative stronghold, Westbury on Trym, which goes to boost William Waldegrave's chances in the neighbouring Bristol West. There have been seven different MPs in Bristol NW since the war. It is classic marginal territory, with Labour wards like Avonmouth almost balanced by more middle-class areas like Horfield, and it stretches beyond the city limits to Filton and Patchway. The chances are very strong that North West will register an eighth postwar MP in the shape of Bristol councillor Doug Naysmith, who was so narrowly denied five years ago.


Super Profiles

671 1.56 9.03 17
2,513 5.85 11.17 52
4,973 11.58 11.25 103
10,873 25.32 14.70 172
1,921 4.47 10.45 43
0 0.00 2.81 0
1,551 3.61 8.01 45
13,510 31.46 15.25 206
2,017 4.70 7.13 66
4,796 11.17 10.17 110