Wednesday, 14 September 2016

Parliamentary Boundary Review

We have received notification that the Boundary Commission for England (BCE) has begun its review of parliamentary boundaries in England.

We have published further details below, along with links to the BCE website, so that you can see how their proposals may affect our area, along with details of how to contact them with your comments:

On 24 February, 2016, the Boundary Commission for England (BCE) announced the start of a review of the Parliamentary Constituencies in England. The BCE is required to report to Parliament in September 2018.

As part of the review, the BCE will look at current constituency boundaries and local government patterns in redrawing the map of boundaries before making its recommendation to Parliament. This will involve regularly consulting the public for their views and refining proposals in a number of stages.

Parliament has specified that the review must reduce the number of constituencies, and therefore MPs, in the UK, to 600. It has asked the BCE to consider where the boundaries of the new constituencies should be, ensuring that every new constituency has roughly the same number of electors – no fewer than 71,031 and no more than 78,507. England will have 501 constituencies, 32 fewer than there are currently. With regards to the North East, BCE proposes to reduce the number of constituencies from 29 to 25.

The BCE have today published their Guide for this review, which you can find on their website at the link below.


The Guide aims to explain:

·         The policies that the Commission will work to in conducting the review within the statutory framework;

·         The changes that were most recently made to the law governing Parliamentary constituency reviews by the Parliamentary Voting System and Constituencies Act 2011 (‘the 2011 Act’). The 2011 Act has a major impact on the way a review operates, and particularly the first review to be completed following that legislation is likely to result in some degree of change to a large number of existing constituencies; and

·         The details of the process that the 2018 Review will follow including the number of public hearings that we will conduct around the country this autumn.


The BCE have also announced that they intend to publish Initial Proposals for new boundaries on Tuesday 13 September 2016. Although it should be noted that while this is the Commission’s current intention, they reserve the right to revise that timetable if necessary.