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South East England (European Parliament constituency)

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South East England
European Parliament constituency
Map of the 2014 European Parliament constituencies with South East England highlighted in red
Location among the 2014 constituencies
Shown within England
Member stateUnited Kingdom
Created1999
Dissolved31 January 2020
MEPs
  • 11 (1999–2004)
  • 10 (2004–2020)
Sources
[1][2]

South East England was a constituency of the European Parliament. It elected 10 Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) using the D'Hondt method of party-list proportional representation until the UK exit from the European Union on 31 January 2020.

Boundaries

[edit]

The constituency corresponded to South East England, in the south east of the United Kingdom, comprising the ceremonial counties of Berkshire, Buckinghamshire, East Sussex, Hampshire, the Isle of Wight, Kent, Oxfordshire, Surrey and West Sussex.

History

[edit]

It was formed as a result of the European Parliamentary Elections Act 1999, replacing a number of single-member constituencies. These were Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire East, East Sussex and Kent South, Hampshire North and Oxford, Itchen, Test and Avon, Kent East, Kent West, South Downs West, Surrey, Sussex South and Crawley, Thames Valley, Wight and Hampshire South, and parts of Bedfordshire and Milton Keynes, Cotswolds, and London South and Surrey East.

MEPs for former South East England constituencies, 1979–1999
Election 1979–1984 1984–1989 1989–1994 1994–1999
Sussex East (1979–1994)
East Sussex and Kent South (1994–1999)
Jack Stewart-Clark
Conservative
Hampshire West (1979–1984)
Hampshire Central (1984–1994)
Itchen, Test and Avon (1994–1999)
Basil de Ferranti
Conservative[1]
Edward Kellett-Bowman
Conservative[2]
Kent East Christopher Jackson
Conservative
Mark Watts
Labour
Kent West Ben Patterson
Conservative
Peter Skinner
Labour
Surrey (1979–1984, 1994–1999)
Surrey West (1984–1994)
Charles Wellesley
Conservative
Tom Spencer
Conservative
Sussex West (1979–1994)
Sussex South and Crawley (1994–1999)
Madron Seligman
Conservative
Brendan Donnelly
Conservative (1994–1999)[3]
Pro-Euro Conservative (1999)
Thames Valley Diana Elles
Conservative
John Stevens
Conservative (1989–1999)[3]
Pro-Euro Conservative (1999)
Wight and Hampshire East (1979–1994)
Wight and Hampshire South (1994–1999)
Stanley Johnson
Conservative
Richard Simmonds
Conservative
Roy Perry
Conservative
Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire (1984–1994)
Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire East (1994–1999)
Seat not established James Elles
Conservative
Hampshire North and Oxford Seat not established Graham Mather
Conservative
South Downs West Seat not established James Provan
Conservative

Returned members

[edit]
MEPs for South East England, 1999 onwards
Election 1999 (5th parliament) 2004 (6th parliament) 2009 (7th parliament) 2014 (8th parliament) 2019 (9th parliament)
MEP
Party
Nigel Farage
UKIP (1999–2018)
Independent (2018–2019)
Brexit Party (2019–2020)
MEP
Party
Roy Perry
Conservative
Ashley Mote
UKIP (2004)
Independent (2004–2009)
Marta Andreasen
UKIP (2009–2013)
Conservative (2013–2014)
Ray Finch
UKIP (2014–2019)
Brexit Party
(2019)
Robert Rowland
Brexit Party
MEP
Party
James Elles
Conservative
Diane James
UKIP (2014–2016)
Independent (2016–2019)[4]
Brexit Party (2019)
Alexandra Phillips
Brexit Party
MEP
Party
Nirj Deva
Conservative
Belinda De Camborne Lucy
Brexit Party
MEP
Party
Daniel Hannan
Conservative
MEP
Party
James Provan
Conservative
Richard Ashworth
Conservative (2004–2017)
Independent (2017–2019)
Change UK (2019)
Judith Bunting
Liberal Democrats
MEP
Party
Chris Huhne[5]
Liberal Democrats
Sharon Bowles[5]
Liberal Democrats
Janice Atkinson
UKIP (2014–2015)
Independent (2015–2019)
Antony Hook
Liberal Democrats
MEP
Party
Emma Nicholson, Baroness Nicholson of Winterbourne
Liberal Democrats
Catherine Bearder
Liberal Democrats
MEP
Party
Caroline Lucas[6]
Green
Keith Taylor[6]
Green
Alexandra Phillips
Green
MEP
Party
Peter Skinner
Labour
Anneliese Dodds (2014–2017)[7]
Labour
John Howarth (2017–2020)
Labour
MEP
Party
Mark Watts
Labour
Seat abolished
Party Faction in European Parliament
Brexit Party 29 Non-Inscrits 57
DUP 1
Liberal Democrats 16 17   Renew Europe 108
Alliance 1
Green 7 11 Greens–European Free Alliance 75
SNP 3
Plaid Cymru 1
Labour 10   Socialists and Democrats 154
Conservative 4 European Conservatives and Reformists Group 62
Sinn Féin 1   European United Left–Nordic Green Left 41
Total 73 Total 750

Election results

[edit]

Elected candidates are shown in bold. Brackets indicate the order candidates were elected and the number of votes per seat won in their respective columns.

2019

[edit]
2019 results
2019: South East England[9]
List Candidates Votes Of total (%) ± from prev.
Brexit Party Nigel Farage (1)
Alexandra Lesley Phillips (3)
Robert Andrew Rowland (6)
Belinda Claire De Camborne Lucy (8)
James Gilbert Bartholomew, Christopher Graham Ellis, John Kennedy, Matthew Peter Taylor, George Thomas Stahel Farmer, Peter David Wiltshire
915,686
(228,921.5)
36.07 New
Liberal Democrats Catherine Bearder (2)
Antony Hook (5)
Judith Bunting (9)
Martin Paul Niebuhr Tod, Elizabeth Pendrill Raphael Leffman, Christopher Alan Bowers, Giles Damian Goodall, Ruvi Ziegler, Nicholas David Stanford Perry, John William Vincent
653,743
(217,914.33)
25.75 +17.71
Green Alexandra Phillips (4)
Elise Danielle Benjamin, Vix Lowthion, Leslie Christine Groves Williams, Phelim Mac Cafferty, Jan Hendrik Jamison Doerfel, Larry Sanders, Isabella Lina Marie Moir, Oliver Sykes, Jonathan Christopher St.Aubyn Essex
343,249 13.52 +4.46
Conservative Daniel Hannan (7)
Nirj Deva, Richard McDonald Robinson, Mike Whiting, Juliette Katherine Christie Ash, Anna Firth, Adrian Pepper, Clarence Mitchell, Neva Sadikoglu-Novaky, Caroline Anne Newton
260,277 10.25 −20.70
Labour John Howarth (10)
Cathy Shutt, Arran Richard Neathey, Emma Christina Turnbull, Rohit K. Dasgupta, Amy Lauren Fowler, Duncan Shaw Thomas Enright, Lubna Aiysha Arshad, Simon Guy Burgess, Rachael Eowyn Ward
184,678 7.27 −7.39
Change UK Richard Ashworth, Victoria Groulef, Warren Morgan, Eleanor Mary Fuller, Robin John Bextor, Nicholas Mazzei, Suzana Carp, Phil Murphy, Heather Marion Allen, Diane Helen Yeo 105,832 4.17 New
UKIP Piers Wauchope, Elizabeth Fletcher Philips, Daryll James Pitcher, Martin Toby Brothers, Tony Gould, Clive Keith Egan, Troy De Leon, Alan Harvey Stone, Judy Moore, Patricia Ann Mountain 56,487 2.22 −29.91
UKEU Pacelli Ndikumana, Clinton Powe 7,645 0.3 New
Independent Jason Guy Spencer McMahon 3,650 0.14 New
Socialist (GB) Mandy Bruce, Raymond Dennis Carr, David Stanley Chesham, Robert Alexander Cox, Michael Foster, Stephen Harper, Neil Kirk, Anton Charles Pruden, Andrew Brian Thomas-Emans, Darren James Williams 3,505 0.14 −0.1
Independent David Victor Round 2,606 0.1 New
Independent Michael Jeffrey Turberville 1,587 0.06 New
Turnout 2,538,945

2014

[edit]
2014 results
2014: South East England[10]
List Candidates Votes Of total (%) ± from prev.
UKIP Nigel Farage, Janice Atkinson, Diane James, Ray Finch
Donna Edmunds, Patricia Culligan, Nigel Jones, Alan Stevens, Simon Strutt, Barry Cooper[11][12]
751,439
(187,860)
32.14 +13.29
Conservative Daniel Hannan, Nirj Deva, Richard Ashworth
Marta Andreasen, Richard Robinson, Graham Knight, Julie Marson, George Jeffrey, Rory Love, Adrian Pepper[12]
723,571
(241,190)
30.95 −3.84
Labour Anneliese Dodds
John Howarth, Emily Westley, James Swindlehurst, Farah Nazeer, James Watkins, Maggie Hughes, Chris Clark, Karen Landles, Tracey Hill[12]
342,775 14.66 +6.41
Green Keith Taylor,
Alexandra Phillips, Derek Wall, Jason Kitcat, Miriam Kennet, Beverley Golden, Jonathan Essex, Jonathan Kent, Stuart Jeffrey, Ray Cunningham[12]
211,706 9.05 −2.57
Liberal Democrats Catherine Bearder
Antony Hook, Dinti Batstone, Giles Goodall, Ian Bearder, Allis Moss, Steve Sollitt, Bruce Tennent, John Vincent, Alan Bullion[12]
187,876 8.04 −6.11
Independence from Europe Laurence Stassen, Joyce Nattress, Paul Godfrey, Alan Sheath, Ken Holton, Mark Henry, Keith Vernon, Michaelina Argy, Seana Connolly, Dorothy Sheath[12] 45,199 1.93 New
English Democrat Steve Uncles, Julia Gasper, Amanda Hopwood, Simone Clark, Steve Clegg, Milly Uncles, Mike Russell, Mike Tibby, Doreen Dye, William James[12] 17,771 0.76 −1.49
BNP John Robinson, Gavin Miller, Eric Elliot, John Moore, Alwyn Deacon, Anthony Banner, Brenda Waterhouse, Mark Jones, Jack Renshaw, Yvonne Deacon[12] 16,909 0.72 −3.64
CPA Norman Burnett, Suzanne Fernandes, Flora Amar, Rev Anthony, Dorothy Mugara, Kayode Shedowo, Bridget Oyekan, Nnenna St Luce, Chukka Roja[12] 14,893 0.64 −0.89
Peace John Morris, Jim Duggan, Julie Roxburgh, Jeff Bolam, Geoff Pay, David Brown, Keith Scott, Imdad Hussain, Minim Chowdhury, Charles Wilkinson[12] 10,130 0.43 +0.02
Socialist (GB) Dave Chesham, Rob Cox, Les Courtney, Sean Deegan, Max Hess, Claudia Hogg-Blake, Danny Lambert, Andy Matthews, Howard Pilott, Mike Young[12] 5,454 0.23 New
Roman Party Jean-Louis Pascual[12] 2,997 0.13 −0.11
YOURvoice Julian James, Rachel Ling, Fulvia James[13][12] 2.932 0.12 New
Liberty GB Paul Weston, Enza Ferreri, Jack Buckby[12] 2,494 0.10 New
Harmony Party Tony Leach, Raymond Crick[12] 1,904 0.08 New
Turnout 2,348,168 36.5 −1.0

2009

[edit]
2009 results
2009: South East England[14][15]
List Candidates Votes Of total (%) ± from prev.
Conservative Daniel Hannan, Richard Ashworth, Nirj Deva, James Elles
Thérèse Coffey, Sarah Richardson, Richard Robinson, Tony Devenish, Niina Kaariniemi, Marc Brunel-Walker
812,288
(203,072)
34.8 −0.4
UKIP Nigel Farage, Marta Andreasen
Steve Harris, Phillip Van der Elst, Harry Aldridge, Victor Webb, Christopher Browne, Andrew Moncreiff, Mark Stroud, Rob Burberry, Mahzar Manzoor, Ray Finch
440,002
(220,001)
18.8 −0.7
Liberal Democrats Sharon Bowles, Catherine Bearder
Ben Abbots, Jim Barnard, Antony Hook, Zoe Patrick, Gary Lawson, David Grace, John Vincent, James Walsh
330,340
(165,170)
14.1 −1.2
Green Caroline Lucas
Keith Taylor, Derek Wall, Miriam Kennet, Jason Kitcat, Hazel Dawe, Jonathan Essex, Matthew Ledbury, Steve Dawe, Beverley Golden
271,506 11.6 +3.7
Labour Peter Skinner
Janet Sully, Bob Fromont, Lisa Homan, Stephen Alambritis, Janet Keene, Munir Malik, Silke Thomson-Pottebohm, Rajinder Sandhu, Sukhi Dhaliwal
192,592 8.2 −5.5
BNP Tim Rait, Donna Bailey, Mark Burke, Andrew Emerson, Lynne Mozar, David Little, Peter Lane, Brian Horne, Adam Champneys, Andy McBride 101,769 4.4 +1.5
English Democrat Steve Uncles, David Knight, Mike Tibby, Sean Varnham, Cllr Clive Maltby, Laurence Williams, Elizabeth Painter, Gerald Lambourne, John Griffiths, George Herbert 52,526 2.2 +0.9
Christian Anthony May, Peter Joyce, Christabel McLean-Bacchus, William Thompson, David Ashton, Alexander Wilson, David Hews, Debra Smith-Gorick, Je'ran Cherub, Kenneth Scrimshaw 35,712 1.5 New
NO2EU Dave Hill, Garry Hassell, Kevin Hayes, Owen Morris, Gawain Little, Robert Wilkinson, Jacqui Berry, Nick Wright, Nick Chaffey, Sarah Wrack 21,455 0.9 New
Libertas Kevin O'Connell, Daniel Hill, Neil Glass, Chloe Woodhead, Guy Lambert, Graheme Leon-Smith, Peter Grace, Nicholas Heather, David Peace 16,767 0.7 New
Socialist Labour Derek Isaacs, Paramjit Singh Bahia, John McLeod, Ian Fyvie, Patricia Ruiz, Richard Mooney, Maureen Stubbings, Derek Stubbings, Mary Byrne, Eleanor Little 15,484 0.7 New
UK First Petrina Holdsworth, John Petley, Martin Haslam, Jennifer Parsons 15,261 0.7 New
Jury Team (UK) Nick Trew, Nonie Bouverat, Lyn Tofari, Geoff Howard, Gerry Brierley, Anant Vyas, Michael Guest, Tony Sansum, John Lenton 14,172 0.6 New
Peace John Morris, Geoffery Pay, Jim Duggan, Julie Roxburgh, Keith Scott, Shafaq Iqbal, Jenny Watson, Marcus Trower, Jeff Bolam, David Brown 9,534 0.4 −0.2
Roman Party Jean-Louis Pascal 5,450 0.2 New
Turnout 2,334,858 37.5 +1.0

2004

[edit]
2004 results
2004: South East England[16][17]
List Candidates Votes Of total (%) ± from prev.
Conservative Daniel Hannan, Nirj Deva, James Elles, Richard Ashworth
Roy Perry, Thérèse Coffey, David Logan, Ferris Cowper, Richard Robinson
776,370
(194,092.5)
35.2 −9.2
UKIP Nigel Farage, Ashley Mote
David Lott, Craig Mackinlay, Timothy Cross, Petrina Holdsworth, David Abbott, Stephen Harris, Michael Wigley, Lisa Hawkins
431,111
(215,555.5)
19.5 +9.8
Liberal Democrats Chris Huhne, Baroness Nicholson of Winterbourne
Sharon Bowles, Catherine Bearder, James Walsh, Ann Lee, John Vincent, John Ford, Charles Fraser-Fleming, James Barnard
338,342
(169,171)
15.3 0.0
Labour Peter Skinner
Mark Watts, Ann Davison, Simon Burgess, Janet Sully, Mark Muller, Josephine Wood, Raj Chandarana, Gillian Roles, David Menon
301,398 13.7 −5.9
Green Caroline Lucas
Mike Woodin, Miriam Kennet, Keith Taylor, Alan Francis, Xanthe Bevis, Hazel Dawe, Derek Wall, Anthony Cooper, Michael Stimson
173,351 7.9 +0.5
BNP Brian Galloway, Julie Russell, Timothy Rait, Peter Lane, Roger Robertson, Julian Crewe, Adam Champneys, Ian Johnson, Dennis Whiting, Vernon Atkinson[18] 64,877 2.9 +2.1
Senior Citizens Grahame Leon-Smith, David Gray, Patrick Eston, Rona Brown, Paresh Kotecha, Larry Kreeger, Michael Devine, Terry Patinson, Ian Murdoch, Alfred Egleton 42,861 1.9 New
English Democrat Steven Uncles, Robert Sulley, Courtney Williams, Richard Sutton, Jacqueline Brookman, David Uncles, Louise Uncles 29,126 1.3 New
Respect Ingrid Dodd, Patrick O'Keeffe, Muriel Hirsch, Ajaz Khan, Sally Watkins, Jonathan Molyneux, Norman Thomas, Ella Noyes, Bunny La Roche, Angelina Rai 13,426 0.9 New
Peace John Morris, Caroline O'Reilly, Geoffrey Pay, Rachel Hancock, James Duggan, Kate Hebden, Cyril Bolam, Carol Morris, Anne Brewer 12,572 0.6 New
CPA David John Bamber, David Campanale, Gladstone Macaulay 11,733 0.5 New
ProLife Alliance Dominica Roberts, Gillian Duval, Josephine Quintavalle, Penelope Orford, Mark Carroll, Rebecca Ng, John Dixon, Francis O'Brien, Yvonne Windsor, Carl St John 6,579 0.3 New
Independent Philip Rhodes 5,671 0.3 New
Turnout 2,207,417 36.5 +11.8

1999

[edit]
1999: South East England[19]
List Candidates Votes Of total (%) ± from prev.
Conservative James Provan, Roy Perry, Daniel Hannan, James Elles, Nirj Deva
Bryony, Baroness Bethell, Edward Kellett-Bowman, Alison Parry, Jeremy Mayhew, Barry Tanswell, Richard Ashworth
661,932
(132,386.4)
44.4
Labour Peter Skinner, Mark Watts
Anita Pollack, Anne Snelgrove, Parmjit Dhanda, Ann Davison, Tamara Flanagan, John Howarth, Liz Clements, Alison Chapman, Sarah McCarthy-Fry
292,146
(146,073)
19.6
Liberal Democrats Baroness Nicholson of Winterbourne, Chris Huhne
Sharon Bowles, David Bellotti, Jo Hawkins, James Walsh, Barbara Hewett-Silk, Gerald Vernon-Jackson, Catherine Bearder, Christopher Berry, Dorothy Webb
228,136
(114,068)
15.3
UKIP Nigel Farage
Christopher Skeate, Tony Stone, Michael Phillips, Bernard Collignon, Ron Walters, Lynda Ross, Harold Green, Kim Rose, Michael Knight, Rob McWhirter
144,514 9.7
Green Caroline Lucas
Mike Woodin, Alan Francis, Pete West, Hazel Dawe, Steve Dawe, Alastair Stark, Johnny Denis, Lorraine E. Serrecchia, Laurence Littman, Julian Salmon
110,571 7.4
Pro-Euro Conservative John Stevens, Richard Basset, Anthony Frost, Anahita Gonzalez-Moreno, Mark Littlewood, Rebecca Pickering, Peter Sutters, Alan Armitage, Jonathan Swift, David Hurford-Jones, Richard Carswell 27,305 1.8
BNP Michael Easter, Dennis Whiting, Robert Andrews, Gordon Callow, Mark Cray, Ian Dell, Matthew Gould, Richard Molesworth, Margaret Stones, Christopher Telford, Kevin Yates 12,161 0.8
Socialist Labour Katrina Howse, Ian Fyvie, Nathan Parkin, Hannah Williams, Ken King, Sarah Hipperson, Monica Anne Parkin, John McCleod, Kenneth Ray, John Hayward, Michael Allen 7,281 0.5
Natural Law Peter Warburton, Nigel Kahn, John Oldbury, Jeremy Bowler, John Douglas-Small, Paul Cragg, Paul Levy, Bernard Bence, William Treend, Robert Stephens, John Hunter Thompson 2,767 0.2
Open Democracy for Stability Brian Bundy 1,857 0.1
Making a Profit in Europe John Goss 1,400 0.1
Turnout 1,490,069 24.7

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Died on 24 September 1988
  2. ^ Won a by election on 15 December 1988
  3. ^ a b Joined the Pro-Euro Conservatives in March 1999
  4. ^ "Former leader Diane James quits UKIP". BBC. 21 November 2016. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  5. ^ a b Chris Huhne stood down when he was elected to the Eastleigh seat in the House of Commons in the 5 May 2005 UK general election. Sharon Bowles, as second on the Liberal Democrat list, took over from that day.
  6. ^ a b Caroline Lucas won the Brighton Pavilion seat in the House of Commons in the 6 May 2010 UK general election so stood down as an MEP. She was succeeded by Keith Taylor, second on the Green's 2009 party list.
  7. ^ Anneliese Dodds stood down when she was elected to the Oxford East seat in the House of Commons in the 8 June 2017 UK general election. John Howarth, as second on the Labour list, took over from 30 June 2017.
  8. ^ "Results by national party: 2019-2024 United Kingdom - Final results". European Parliament. Retrieved 28 May 2019.
  9. ^ "Statement of Parties and Individual Candidates Nominated – Notice of Poll – 23 May 2019" (PDF). Retrieved 27 April 2019.[dead link]
  10. ^ "UK Polling Report". ukpollingreport.co.uk. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  11. ^ "We announce regional MEP candidates for the Euro Elections". Archived from the original on 10 October 2013. Retrieved 13 August 2013.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Heath, Mark (24 April 2014). "Statement of Persons Nominated" (PDF). Southampton City Council. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 May 2014. Retrieved 3 May 2014.
  13. ^ "YOURvoice ...a better democracy". yourvoiceparty.org.uk. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  14. ^ "South East Region – Statement of Parties and Individual Candidates Nominated and Notice of Poll" (PDF). Government of the United Kingdom. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 June 2009. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  15. ^ "European Election 2009 – UK Results – South East". BBC. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  16. ^ "2004 Election candidates". UK Office of the European Parliament. Archived from the original on 4 October 2009. Retrieved 4 June 2009.
  17. ^ "South East". BBC News. Retrieved 31 May 2016.
  18. ^ "secand". 7 April 2004. Archived from the original on 7 April 2004. Retrieved 15 March 2018.
  19. ^ "1999 Election candidates". UK Office of the European Parliament. Archived from the original on 28 August 2009. Retrieved 4 June 2009.