Hornchurch and Upminster | |
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Borough constituency for the House of Commons |
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Boundary of Hornchurch and Upminster in Greater London.
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County | Greater London |
Electorate | 79,568 (December 2010) |
Current constituency | |
Created | 2010 |
Member of parliament | Angela Watkinson (Conservative) |
Number of members | One |
Created from | Hornchurch, Upminster, Romford |
Overlaps | |
European Parliament constituency | London |
Hornchurch and Upminster is a constituency represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since its 2010 creation by Angela Watkinson, a Conservative.
The easternmost seat in Greater London, this seat was created by merging two of the three old constituencies comprising the London borough of Havering, specifically Hornchurch and Upminster. These two seats were lost by the Conservatives in Labour's landslide 1997 victory, but Upminster was one of the few Conservative gains in 2001 and Hornchurch was lost by Labour in 2005; this area is now very safe territory for the Tories since it gained their strongest areas from Hornchurch in the boundary changes. The 2015 result made the seat the 146th safest of the Conservative Party's 331 seats by percentage of majority.
The constituency includes affluent areas such as Hornchurch town centre, Cranham and Upminster. Limited pockets of deprivation exist in the north of the constituency and most output areas have high levels of retired constituents by Greater London standards, and the borough as a whole is similar to the London Borough of Bromley in that it has high levels of home ownership, on statistics compiled in the 2011 census. The seat, like the London borough, is the only one in London that extends beyond the M25 motorway.
The seat was the proposal of the Boundary Commission's Fifth Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies in 2008-9 and was after consultation accepted by Parliament. Hornchurch and Upminster is essentially an expansion of the old Upminster seat to include a chunk of the old Hornchurch seat - specifically Hornchurch itself. Most of the western wards of Hornchurch went to the new Dagenham and Rainham seat.