*** Welcome to piglix ***

North West Leicestershire (UK Parliament constituency)

North West Leicestershire
County constituency
for the House of Commons
Outline map
Boundary of North West Leicestershire in Leicestershire.
Outline map
Location of Leicestershire within England.
County Leicestershire
Electorate 72,022 (December 2010)
Major settlements Coalville and Ashby-de-la-Zouch
Current constituency
Created 1983
Member of parliament Andrew Bridgen (Conservative)
Number of members One
Created from Bosworth and Loughborough
Overlaps
European Parliament constituency East Midlands

North West Leicestershire is a constituency represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2010 by Andrew Bridgen, a Conservative.

The constituency was won in 1983 by the Conservative David Ashby. He stood down in 1997 and the seat was won by Labour's David Taylor, who held the seat until he died of a heart attack in December 2009. Taylor had already announced that he would stand down at the 2010 general election. With the next election being due on 6 May 2010, it was considered uneconomic and (based on precedent) unnecessary to arrange a by-election. In the 2010 election, Andrew Bridgen took the seat for the Conservatives with a swing of 12% from Labour to the Conservatives and with a smaller Lab-LD swing. Bridgen's majority was 7,511 or 14.5% of the total votes cast.

At the 2010 election the BNP unusually succeeded in holding their deposit by winning more than 5% of the vote, and for the first time in the constituency they achieved fourth place.

A marginal seat and bellwether since 1983, North West Leicestershire's main settlements are Coalville and Ashby-de-la-Zouch. The population is divided between Labour-inclined former mining areas with high rates of employment and low social housing dependency, and Conservative-inclined rural villages, with most people focused close to the two towns named.

In 2011 Coalfield Resources plc were given permission to develop an opencast coal mining pit on the site of the former Minorca colliery on the outskirts of Measham in the seat which will be 1 mi (1.6 km) across and extract 1,250,000 tonnes (1,230,000 tons) of coal over five years, and 250,000 tonnes (about 245,000 tons) of clay. This will be one of three large mines all operated by the main UK coal-extracting company.


...
Wikipedia

...