Election 97

Exeter


Result 97 gain
from Conservative
Current MP 97 Sir John Hannam (Retiring)
Majority 0 ( 0.0%)
Conservative 97 17,693 (28.6%)
Labour 97 29,398 (47.5%)
LibDem 97 11,148 (18.0%)
Nationalist 97 0 ( 0.0%)
Other 97 3,625 ( 5.9%)
Elected party 97
Electorate 97 79,154
Turnout 97 61,864 (78.2%)



1992 MP Sir John Hannam (Retiring)
Old constituency name Exeter
Majority 92 3,064 ( 4.9%)
Conservative 92 25,693 (41.1%)
Labour 92 22,629 (36.2%)
LibDem 92 12,129 (19.4%)
Nationalist 92 0 ( 0.0%)
Other 92 1,993 ( 3.2%)
Elected party 92 Conservative
Electorate 92 76,587
Turnout 92 62,444 (81.5%)
Exeter



Tory change -12.5%
Labour change +11.3%
Lib Dem change -1.4%
Nationalist change +0.0%
Other change +2.7%
Electorate change +3.4%
Turnout Change -3.4%
Robert Waller wrote

Exeter is Devon's oldest city as well as its county town. It is almost exactly the ideal size to form a parliamentary seat on its own, and there have been no boundary changes since 1974. Labour have only won the seat once, in 1966, but in 1992 Labour's vote increased by 13.7 per cent as the Centre vote collapsed. Exeter was one of those places in which the Alliance votes had been essentially SDP, and the Liberal Democrats were unable to maintain the support they had gained in 1987, dropping into third place in 1992.

Exeter is likely to see one of the more vibrant general election campaigns. The Conservatives have selected Dr Adrian Rogers, the director of the moralistic Conservative Family Institute. Labour, having lost one candidate because of his alleged involvement in violent activities in South Africa (several decades ago) have now chosen a gay successor. The battle in Exeter could be well worth watching.


Super Profiles

1,063 2.37 9.03 26
6,994 15.58 11.17 139
3,500 7.79 11.25 69
11,289 25.14 14.70 171
2,711 6.04 10.45 58
186 0.41 2.81 15
8,772 19.54 8.01 244
5,653 12.59 15.25 83
1,915 4.26 7.13 60
1,939 4.32 10.17 42