East Midlands
European Parliament constituency
Map of the 2014 European Parliament constituencies with East Midlands highlighted in red
Location among the 2014 constituencies
Shown within England
Member stateUnited Kingdom
Created1999
Dissolved31 January 2020
MEPs6 (1999–2009)
5 (2009–2020)
Sources
[1][2]

East Midlands was a constituency of the European Parliament in the United Kingdom, established in 1999 with six members to replace single-member constituencies. Between 2009 and the United Kingdom's withdrawal from the EU on 31 January 2020 it returned five MEPs, elected using the D'Hondt method of party-list proportional representation.

Boundaries

The constituency corresponded to the East Midlands region of England, comprising the counties of Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire, Leicestershire, Rutland, Northamptonshire and most of Lincolnshire.

History

The constituency was organised as a result of the European Parliamentary Elections Act 1999, replacing a number of single-member constituencies. These were Leicester, Northamptonshire and Blaby, Nottingham and Leicestershire North West, Nottinghamshire North and Chesterfield, and parts of Lincolnshire and Humberside South, Peak District, and Staffordshire East and Derby.

MEPs for former East Midlands constituencies, 1979 – 1999
Election 1979 – 1984 1984 – 1989 1989 – 1994 1994 – 1999
Derbyshire (1979–1994) Tom Spencer
Conservative
Geoff Hoon
Labour
Seat abolished
Leicester Frederick Tuckman
Conservative
Mel Read
Labour
Susan Waddington
Labour
Lincolnshire (1979–1994)
Lincolnshire and Humberside South (1994–1999)
Bill Newton Dunn
Conservative
Veronica Hardstaff
Labour
Northamptonshire (1979–1994)
Northamptonshire and Blaby (1994–1999)
Anthony Simpson
Conservative
Angela Billingham
Labour
Nottingham (1979–1994)
Nottingham and Leicestershire North West (1994–1999)
Michael Gallagher
Labour (1979–1984)
SDP (1984)
Michael Kilby
Conservative
Ken Coates
Labour
Mel Read
Labour
Nottinghamshire North and Chesterfield (1994–1999) Seat not established Ken Coates
Labour
Peak District (1994–1999) Seat not established Arlene McCarthy
Labour
Staffordshire East and Derby (1994–1999) Staffordshire East in West Midlands Phillip Whitehead
Labour

Returned members

MEPs for the East Midlands, 1999 onwards
Election 1999 (5th parliament) 2004 (6th parliament) 2009 (7th parliament) 2014 (8th parliament) 2017 2018 2019 (9th parliament)
MEP
Party
Phillip Whitehead[3]
Labour
Glenis Willmott[4]
Labour
Rory Palmer
Labour
MEP
Party
Mel Read
Labour
Derek Clark
UKIP
Margot Parker
UKIP (2014–19)
Brexit Party (2019)
Annunziata Rees-Mogg
Brexit Party (2019)
Independent (2019–20)
Conservative (2020–21)
MEP
Party
Roger Helmer
Conservative (1999–2012)
UKIP (2012–2017)
Jonathan Bullock
UKIP (2017–2018)
Independent (2018)
Brexit Party (2019–21)
MEP
Party
Chris Heaton-Harris
Conservative
Emma McClarkin
Conservative
Matthew Patten
Brexit Party
MEP
Party
Bill Newton Dunn
Conservative (1999–2000)
Liberal Democrat (2000–2014)
Andrew Lewer
Conservative
Rupert Matthews
Conservative
Bill Newton Dunn
Liberal Democrat
MEP
Party
Nick Clegg
Liberal Democrat
Robert Kilroy-Silk
UKIP (2004)
Veritas (2004–05)
Independent (2005–09)
Seat abolished

Notes:

  • 1 Roger Helmer announced on 12 October 2011 his intention to stand down from the European Parliament. After uncertainty whether his place would be taken by the next person on the Conservative Party's list for the East Midlands region, he defected to UKIP and completed his term as MEP.[5][6]
PartyFaction 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 62
Sinn Féin 1   European United Left–Nordic Green Left 41
Total 73 Total 750

Complaint against Kilroy-Silk

In August 2005, four of the MEPs for the region (Clark, Heaton-Harris, Helmer and Whitehead) sent a joint letter to President of the European Parliament Josep Borrell to complain of Kilroy-Silk:

"He seems to have done little or no work as a constituency MEP for the East Midlands. This leaves five MEPs to do the work of six and the electorate have been short-changed". They complained that Kilroy-Silk was not "fulfilling the pledge he made on becoming an MEP, to serve the electorate of his region" and to call for him to "either do the job for which he is paid, or get out and leave it to those who can."[8]

The parliament has no power to remove Mr Kilroy-Silk, who is understood to have attended the minimum number of plenary sessions required to be eligible for his parliamentary allowances. Such a complaint was unprecedented. Kilroy-Silk refused to comment on it. The European Parliament does not have any power to expel a member, and Borrell took no action.

Election results

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

2019 results
2014 results

2019

European Election 2019: East Midlands[9][10][11]
List Candidates Votes % ±
Brexit Party Annunziata Rees-Mogg (1)
Jonathan Bullock (2)
Matthew Patten (5)
Tracy Knowles, Anna Bailey
452,321
(150,773.67)
38.23 +38.23
Liberal Democrats Bill Newton Dunn (3)
Michael Mullaney, Lucy Care, Suzanna Austin, Caroline Kenyon
203,989 17.24 +11.82
Labour Rory Palmer (4)
Leonie Mathers, Tony Tinley, Nicole Ndiweni, Gary Godden
164,682 13.92 -11.01
Conservative Emma McClarkin, Rupert Matthews, Tony Harper, Brendan Clarke-Smith, Thomas Randall 126,138 10.66 -15.33
Green Kat Boettge, Gerhard Lohmann-Bond, Liam McClelland, Daniel Wimberley, Simon Tooke 124,630 10.53 +4.55
UKIP Alan Graves, Marietta King, Anil Bhatti, Fran Loi, John Evans 58,198 4.92 -27.98
Change UK Kate Godfrey, Joan Laplana, Narinder Sharma, Pankajkumar Gulab, Emma Manley 41,117 3.47 +3.47
Independent Network Nick Byatt, Marianne Overton, Daniel Simpson, Pearl Clarke, Nikki Dillon 7,641 0.65 +0.65
Independent Simon Rood 4,511 0.38 +0.38
Turnout 1,183,227 34.9 +1.7

2014

European Election 2014: East Midlands
List Candidates Votes % ±
UKIP Roger Helmer, Margot Parker,
Jonathan Bullock, Nigel Wickens, Barry Mahoney[12][13]
368,734
(184,367)
32.90 +16.45
Conservative Emma McClarkin, Andrew Lewer,
Rupert Matthews, Stephen Castens, Brendan Clarke-Smith[13][14]
291,270
(145,635)
25.99 −4.16
Labour Glenis Willmott,
Rory Palmer, Linda Woodings, Khalid Hadadi, Nick Brooks[13][15]
279,363 24.93 +8.08
Green Katharina Boettge, Sue Mallender, Richard Mallender, Peter Allen, Simon Hales[13][16] 67,066 5.98 −0.85
Liberal Democrats Bill Newton Dunn, Issan Ghazni, Phil Knowles, George Smid, Deborah Newton-Cook[13][17] 60,772 5.42 −6.91
An Independence from Europe Chris Pain, Val Pain, Alan Jesson, John Beaver, Carl Mason[13][15] 21,384 1.91 New
BNP Catherine Duffy, Robert West, Bob Brindley, Geoffrey Dickens, Paul Hilliard[13][15] 18,326 1.64 −7.02
English Democrat Kevin Sills, David Wickham, John Dowie, Oliver Healey, Terry Spencer[13][15] 11,612 1.04 −1.28
Harmony Party Steve Ward[13][15] 2,194 0.2 New
Turnout 1,120,722 33.2 −3.9

2009

European Election 2009: East Midlands[18]
List Candidates Votes % ±
Conservative Roger Helmer, Emma McClarkin
Rupert Matthews, Fiona Bulmer, George Lee[19]
370,275
(185,137.5)
30.2 +3.8
Labour Glenis Willmott
Roy Kennedy, Kathryn Salt, J David Morgan, Cate Taylor[20]
206,945 16.9 −4.1
UKIP Derek Clark
Christopher Pain, Stephen Allison, Deva Kumarasiri, Irena Marriott[21]
201,184 16.4 −9.7
Liberal Democrats Bill Newton Dunn
Ed Maxfield, Veena Hudson, Denise Hawksworth, Deborah Newton-Cook[22]
151,428 12.3 −0.6
BNP Robert West, Cathy Duffy, Peter Jarvis, Lewis Alsebrook, Kevin Stafford[23] 106,319 8.7 +2.2
Green Sue Blount, Richard Mallender, Ashley Baxter, Matthew Follett, Barney Smith[24] 83,939 6.8 +1.3
English Democrat Derek Hilling, Tony Ellis, Diane Bilgrami, David Ball, Anthony Edwards[25] 28,498 2.3 New
UK First Ian Gillman, Christopher Elliot, Nadine Platt, David Noakes, Mariann Finch 20,561 1.7 New
Christian Suzanne Nti, Thomas Rogers, Timothy Webb, Colin Bricher, Doreen Schrimshaw[26] 17,907 1.5 New
Socialist Labour David Roberts, Paul Liversuch, Shaun Kirkpatrick, Michael Clifford, Thea Roberts 13,590 1.1 New
NO2EU John McEwan, Avtar Sadiq, Jean Thorpe, Shangara Singh Gahonia, Laurence Platt 11,375 0.9 New
Libertas Richard Elvin, Margot Parker, Peter Chaplin[27] 7,882 0.6 New
Jury Team (UK) James Lowey, Simon Flude, James Parker, Henry Blanchard, Perry Wilsher 7,362 0.6 New
Turnout 1,228,065 37.1 −6.3

2004

European Election 2004: East Midlands[28]
List Candidates Votes % ±
Conservative Roger Helmer, Chris Heaton-Harris
Pauline Latham, Sharon Buckle, Jonathan Bullock, Sarah Richardson
371,362
(185,681)
26.4 −13.1
UKIP Robert Kilroy-Silk, Derek Clark
Ian Gillman, Peter Baker, John Browne, Barry Mahoney
366,498
(183,249)
26.1 +18.5
Labour Phillip Whitehead
Glenis Willmott, Ross Willmott, Vandna Kalia, Alan Rhodes, Elizabeth Donnelly
294,918 21.0 −7.6
Liberal Democrats Bill Newton Dunn
Nick Clegg, Alan Riley, Veena Hudson, Richard Church, Deborah Newton-Cook
181,964 12.9 +0.2
BNP Peter Francis, Clive Potter, Patrick May, John Pennington, Wendy Russell, John Hall[29] 91,860 6.5 +5.2
Green Brian Fewster, Susan Blount, Robert Ball, Simon Anthony, Paul Bodenham, John Chadwick 76,633 5.5 +0.1
Respect Mohammed Suleman, Sulma Mansuri, Pauline Robinson, Helen Merryman, Craig Plowman, Mary Littlefield 20,009 1.4 New
Independent Russell Rogers 2,615 0.2 New
Independent Shadmyraine Halliday 847 0.1 New
Turnout 1,406,706 43.4 +20.6

1999

European Election 1999: East Midlands[30]
List Candidates Votes % ±
Conservative Roger Helmer, Bill Newton Dunn, Chris Heaton-Harris
Javed Arain, Sharon Buckle, Pauline Latham
285,662
(95,220.67)
39.5
Labour Mel Read, Phillip Whitehead
Angela Billingham, Susan Waddington, Valerie Vaz, Veronica Hardstaff, John Mann
206,756
(103,378)
28.6
Liberal Democrats Nick Clegg
Susan Barber, Ash Vadher, Lisa Gabriel, Brian Niblett, Lesley Dunbar
92,398 12.7
UKIP Hugh Meechan, Edward Spalton, Derek Clark, David Barraclough, Barry Mahoney, Dusan Torbica 54,800 7.6
Green Gaynor Backhouse, Geoffrey Forse, Brian Fewster, Sue Blount, Ashley Baxter, Jill Bullock 38,954 5.4
Leeds Left Alliance Ken Coates, Tony Simpson, Jill Dawn, Peter Jackson, Peter McGowan, Robert West 17,409 2.4
Pro-Euro Conservative Freddie de Lisle, John Szermerey, Julien Goodman, Katheryn Stokes, Greg Chadwick, Clive Stoddart 11,359 1.6
BNP Steven Belshaw,[31] Adrian Belshaw, Barry Roberts, Neil Phillips, Edward Sheppard, Michael Coleman 9,342 1.3
Socialist Labour David Roberts, Paul Liversuch, Valerie Seabright, Thea Hutt, Stanley Taylor, Stephen Marvin 5,528 0.8
Natural Law Russell France, Susan Lincoln, Patricia Saunders, David Cooke, Andrew Doughty, Neil Allison 1,525 0.2
Turnout 723,733 22.8

References

  1. "European Parliament elections 1999 Results and explanations: United Kingdom". Europarl. 2010. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
  2. "European Elections 10–13 June 2004". Europarl. 10 July 2004. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
  3. Died 31 December 2005
  4. Appointed on 1 January 2006 to replace Phillip Whitehead
  5. 'Disillusioned' Tory MEP Roger Helmer to stand down, BBC News. Retrieved 12 October 2011
  6. Lincolnshire MEP Roger Helmer to quit his seat Archived 13 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine ThisisLincolnshire
  7. "Results by national party: 2019-2024 United Kingdom - Final results". European Parliament. Retrieved 28 May 2019.
  8. Stares, Justin. Kilroy-Silk does 'little or no work' and should quit, say MEPs, The Telegraph, 13 August 2005. Quote: "A cross-party coalition has called for Robert Kilroy-Silk to quit the European Parliament on the grounds that he seldom attends and does "little or no work" for his East Midlands constituency. [...] His four regional colleagues – Christopher Heaton-Harris (Conservative), Roger Helmer (Conservative), Phillip Whitehead (Labour) and Derek Clark (Ukip) – said they "deplore" Mr Kilroy-Silk's non-attendance.
  9. Council, Northampton Borough. "Statement of Persons Nominated - European Parliamentary Election on 23 May 2019 | Northampton Borough Council". www.northampton.gov.uk. Retrieved 26 April 2019.
  10. "Brexit Party sweeps to victory in the East Midlands". www.itv.com. Retrieved 27 May 2019.
  11. "European Election 2019: UK results in maps and charts". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 27 May 2019.
  12. "We announce regional MEP candidates for the Euro Elections". UKIP. Archived from the original on 10 October 2013. Retrieved 7 October 2013.
  13. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Cook, David (24 April 2014). "Statement of Persons Nominated". Kettering Borough Council. Archived from the original on 18 July 2014. Retrieved 3 May 2014.
  14. Wallace, Mark (31 July 2013). "Selection results published for European election regional lists". Conservative Home. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 Brookes, Andrew (25 April 2014). "European election candidates revealed – with ousted UKIP county leader bidding for seat". Horncastle News. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
  16. "European Election Candidates 2014". East Midlands Green Party. 13 May 2014. Archived from the original on 1 July 2014. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
  17. "European selection results – complete". Liberal Democrat Voice. 1 December 2012. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
  18. "European Election 2009: East Midlands". BBC News.
  19. Conservative Party
  20. "Labour's 2009 EP candidates". Jon Worth Euroblog. 4 April 2008.
  21. UK Independence Party Archived 8 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  22. Liberal Democrats Archived 8 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  23. British National Party Archived 7 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  24. "2009 European Elections". www.greenparty.org.uk.
  25. "The English Democrats". englishdemocrats.party. Archived from the original on 3 January 2019. Retrieved 20 June 2019.
  26. The Christian Party – CPA Archived 9 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  27. "Libertas East Midlands". libertas-em.blogspot.com.
  28. "2004 Election candidates". UK Office of the European Parliament. Archived from the original on 4 October 2009. Retrieved 4 June 2009.
  29. "Our European Election List for the East Midlands Euro-Constituency". British National Party. Archived from the original on 3 June 2004. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
  30. "1999 Election candidates". UK Office of the European Parliament. Archived from the original on 28 August 2009. Retrieved 4 June 2009.
  31. "Under the skin of the BNP". London: BBC News. 2005. Retrieved 29 July 2014.
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