Scarborough and Whitby | |
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County constituency for the House of Commons |
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![]() Boundary of Scarborough and Whitby in North Yorkshire.
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![]() Location of North Yorkshire within England.
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County | North Yorkshire |
Electorate | 76,078 (December 2010) |
Major settlements | Scarborough and Whitby |
Current constituency | |
Created | 1997 |
Member of parliament | Robert Goodwill (Conservative) |
Number of members | One |
Created from | Scarborough |
1918–1974 | |
Number of members | One |
Type of constituency | County constituency |
Replaced by | Scarborough |
Created from | Scarborough and Whitby |
Overlaps | |
European Parliament constituency | Yorkshire and the Humber |
Scarborough and Whitby is a constituency represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2005 by Robert Goodwill, a Conservative and since 2013 a Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Transport.
The constituency name has had two separate periods of existence.
A Scarborough and Whitby division of the North Riding of Yorkshire was created by the Representation of the People Act 1918 after the Boundary Commission of 1917 and first elected a Member of Parliament in the 1918 general election. This division took the entirety of the abolished Parliamentary borough of Scarborough together with the majority of the previous Whitby division and a very small part of Cleveland division. It had a population, in the middle of 1914, of 72,979. The Boundary Commission had initially recommended that the division simply be called 'Scarborough' but an amendment moved by the Government during enactment of their recommendations enacted it from the outset as Scarborough and Whitby. Throughout its 56-year first creation which allowed a full franchise for all resident men it was represented by a Conservative, including during the Attlee Ministry and First Wilson Ministry.