South Wales West
Gorllewin De Cymru
Senedd electoral region
Created
1999
Current representation
Labour7 MSs
Plaid Cymru2 MSs
Conservative2 MSs
Constituencies
1. Aberavon
2. Bridgend
3. Gower
4. Neath
5. Ogmore
6. Swansea East
7. Swansea West
Preserved counties
Mid Glamorgan (part)
South Glamorgan (part)
West Glamorgan

South Wales West (Welsh: Gorllewin De Cymru) is an electoral region of the Senedd, consisting of seven constituencies. The region elects 11 members, seven directly elected constituency members and four additional members. The electoral region was first used in 1999, when the National Assembly for Wales was created.

Each constituency elects one Member of the Senedd by the first past the post electoral system, and the region as a whole elects four additional or top-up Members of the Senedd, to create a degree of proportional representation. The additional member seats are allocated from closed lists by the D'Hondt method, with constituency results being taken into account in the allocation.

County boundaries

The region covers the whole of the preserved county of West Glamorgan, part of the preserved county of Mid Glamorgan and part of the preserved county of South Glamorgan. The rest of Mid Glamorgan is divided between the South Wales Central and South Wales East electoral regions. The rest of South Glamorgan is within the South Wales Central region.

Electoral region profile

The region is predominantly urban, taking in Wales' second-largest city, Swansea, as well as working-class towns such as Neath and Port Talbot. However, there are also rural regions, such as on the Gower peninsula. A higher proportion of the local populace are Welsh speakers than in the neighbouring region, South Wales Central.

Constituencies

The seven constituencies have the names and boundaries of constituencies of the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom (Westminster):

Constituency[nb 1] Electorate Majority[nb 2] Member of the Senedd Nearest opposition Preserved counties
Aberavon 49,891 6,402 (30.7%)   David Rees   Victoria Griffiths Entirely within West Glamorgan
Bridgend 62,185 5,623 (20.9%)   Sarah Murphy   Rachel Nugent-Finn Partly Mid Glamorgan, partly South Glamorgan
Gower 62,163 1,829 (6.1%)   Rebecca Evans   Myles Langstone Entirely within West Glamorgan
Neath 55,859 2,923 (11.5%)   Jeremy Miles   Sioned Williams Entirely within West Glamorgan
Ogmore 56,661 9,468 (40.5%)   Huw Irranca-Davies   Luke Fletcher Partly Mid Glamorgan, partly South Glamorgan
Swansea East 58,521 7,452 (36.2%)   Mike Hedges   Rhiannon Barrar Entirely within West Glamorgan
Swansea West 56,892 5,080 (22.9%)   Julie James   Samantha Chohan Entirely within West Glamorgan

Assembly members and Members of the Senedd

Constituency AMs and MSs

Term Election Aberavon Bridgend Gower Neath Ogmore Swansea East Swansea West
1st 1999 Brian Gibbons
(Lab)
Carwyn Jones
(Lab)
Edwina Hart
(Lab)
Gwenda Thomas
(Lab)
Janice Gregory
(Lab)
Val Feld
(Lab)
Andrew Davies
(Lab)
2001 Val Lloyd
(Lab)
2nd 2003
3rd 2007
4th 2011 David Rees
(Lab)
Mike Hedges
(Lab)
Julie James
(Lab)
5th 2016 Rebecca Evans
(Lab)
Jeremy Miles
(Lab)
Huw Irranca-Davies
(Lab)
6th 2021 Sarah Murphy
(Lab)

Regional list AMs and MSs

N.B. This table is for presentation purposes only

Term Election AM / MS AM / MS AM / MS AM / MS
1st 1999 Peter Black
(LD)
Alun Cairns
(Con)
Dai Lloyd
(PC)
Janet Davies
(PC)
2nd 2003
3rd 2007 Bethan Jenkins
(PC)
4th 2011 Suzy Davies
(Con)
Byron Davies
(Con)
2015[nb 3] Altaf Hussain
(Con)
5th 2016 Caroline Jones
(UKIP)
(later Ind, BREX, Ind)
Dai Lloyd
(PC)
2018
2019
2020
6th 2021 Tom Giffard
(Con)
Altaf Hussain
(Con)
Sioned Williams
(PC)
Luke Fletcher
(PC)

2021 Senedd election

2021 Senedd election: South Wales West[1]
List Candidates Votes % ±
Labour Siân Catherine James, Mahaboob Basha, Neelo Farr, Kevin Pascoe 78,318 42.9 Increase3.4
Conservative Thomas Giffard, Altaf Hussain, Samantha Chohan, Liz Hill O'Shea, Suzy Davies, Rachel Nugent-Finn 38,244 20.9 Increase5.9
Plaid Cymru Sioned Williams, Luke Fletcher, John Davies, Jamie Evans, Rhiannon Barrar, Leanne Lewis, Victoria Griffiths, Richard Sambrook, Daniel Williams, James Radcliffe 33,753 18.5 Increase1.3
Green Megan Poppy Lloyd, Chris Evans, Alex Harris, Tom Muller 7,155 3.9 Increase1.3
Abolish Simon Ross, Robin Hunter-Clarke, Sarah Allen, James Cole 6,975 3.8 Decrease0.4
Liberal Democrats Chloe Hutchinson, Samuel Bennett, Harvey Jones, Helen Clarke 6,010 3.3 Decrease3.2
UKIP Thomas Jenkins, Daniel Morgan, Stan Robinson, Gillian Mason 2,809 1.5 Decrease12.2
Independent Caroline Jones 2,747 1.5 Increase1.5
Reform UK Christine Roach, Glenda Davies, Byron John, Sean Prior, Darren Rees 1,774 1.0 Increase1.0
Propel Tim Thomas, Gail John, James Henton, Lee Felrton 1,506 0.8 Increase0.8
Gwlad Geraint Jones, Wayne Erasmus, David Smith, John Young 1,306 0.7 Increase0.7
Freedom Alliance Michelle Valerio, Jonathan Tilt, Zoe Fry 1,271 0.7 Increase0.7
Communist Laura Picand, Owain Phillips, Jonathan Chilvers, Roger Jones 483 0.3 Steady
TUSC John Evans, Karen Geraghty, Gareth Bromhall, Oisin Mulholland, Charlie Wells 345 0.2 Decrease0.2

2021 Senedd election additional members

Party Constituency
seats
List votes
(vote %)[1]
D'Hondt
entitlement
Additional
members
elected
Total members
elected
Deviation
from D'Hondt
entitlement
Labour 778,318 (43%)607+1
Conservative 038,244 (21%)322-1
Plaid Cymru 033,753 (19%)2220
Green 07,155 (4%)0000
Abolish 06,976 (4%)0000
Liberal Democrats 06,010 (3%)0000
UKIP 02,809 (2%)0000
Independent - Jones 02,747 (2%)0000
Reform UK 01,774 (1%)0000
Propel 01,506 (1%)0000
Gwlad 01,306 (1%)0000
Freedom Alliance 01,271 (1%)0000
Communist 0483 (0%)0000
TUSC 0345 (0%)0000

Regional MSs elected 2021

PartyName
Conservative Tom Giffard
Plaid Cymru Sioned Williams
Conservative Altaf Hussain
Plaid Cymru Luke Fletcher

2016 Welsh Assembly election additional members

In the 2016 National Assembly for Wales election, the results for additional members were as follows:[2]

Party Constituency
seats
List votes
(vote %)
D'Hondt
entitlement
Additional
members
elected
Total members
elected
Deviation
from D'Hondt
entitlement
Labour 766,903 (39.5%)507+2
Plaid Cymru 029,050 (17.2%)2220
Conservative 025,414 (15.0%)211-1
UKIP 023,096 (13.7%)211-1
Liberal Democrats 010,946 (6.5%)0000
Abolish the Welsh Assembly 07,137 (4%)0000
Green 04,420 (3%)0000
Official Monster Raving Loony Party 01,106 (1%)0000
TUSC 0686 (0%)0000
Welsh Communist Party 0431 (0%)0000

Regional AMs elected 2016

PartyName
Plaid Cymru Bethan Jenkins
Plaid Cymru David Lloyd
Conservative Suzy Davies
UKIP Caroline Jones

2011 Welsh Assembly election additional members

In the 2011 National Assembly for Wales election, the results for additional members were as follows:

Party Constituency
seats
List votes
(vote %)
D'Hondt
entitlement
Additional
members
elected
Total members
elected
Deviation
from D'Hondt
entitlement
Labour 771,766 (46.5%)607+1
Conservative 027,457 (17.8%)2220
Plaid Cymru 021,258 (13.8%)211−1
Liberal Democrats 010,683 (6.9%)1110
UKIP 06,619 (4.3%)0000
Socialist Labour 05,057 (3.3%)0000
BNP 04,714 (3.1%)0000
Green 03,952 (2.6%)0000
Welsh Christian 01,602 (1.0%)0000
TUSC 0809 (0.5%)0000
Communist 0464 (0.3%)0000

Regional AMs elected 2011

PartyName
Conservative Byron Davies
Conservative Suzy Davies
Liberal Democrats Peter Black
Plaid Cymru Bethan Jenkins

† Resigned as AM following his election to the UK House of Commons on 7 May 2015; replaced by Altaf Hussain from 19 May 2015.

2007 Welsh Assembly election additional members

In the election for additional members in the 2007 National Assembly for Wales election, the results were as follows:[3]

Party Constituency
seats
List votes
(vote %)
D'Hondt
entitlement
Additional
members
elected
Total members
elected
Deviation
from D'Hondt
entitlement
Labour 758,374 (35.8%)507+2
Plaid Cymru 028,819 (17.7%)2220
Conservative 026,119 (16.1%)211−1
Liberal Democrats 020,226 (12.4%)211-1
BNP 08,993 (5.5%)0000
Green 06,130 (3.8%)0000
UKIP 05,914 (3.6%)0000
Socialist Labour 02,367 (1.5%)0000
Welsh Christian 01,685 (1.0%)0000
Independent 01,186 (0.7%)0000
Socialist Alternative 01,027 (0.6%)0000
Respect 0713 (0.4%)0000
Ind. Conservative 0582 (0.4%)0000
Communist 0546 (0.3%)0000
CPA 0393 (0.2%)0000

2003 Welsh Assembly election additional members

In the election for additional members in the 2003 National Assembly for Wales election, the results were as follows: [4]

Party Constituency
seats
List votes
(vote %)
D'Hondt
entitlement
Additional
members
elected
Total members
elected
Deviation
from D'Hondt
entitlement
Labour 758,066 (41.61%)607+1
Plaid Cymru 024,799 (17.77%)2220
Conservative 020,981 (15.03%)211-1
Liberal Democrats 017,746 (12.72%)1110
Green 06,696 (4.80%)0000
UKIP 06,113 (4.38%)0000
Socialist Labour 03,446 (2.47%)0000
Cymru Annibynnol 01,346 (0.96%)0000
ProLife Alliance 0355 (0.25%)0000

1999 Welsh Assembly election additional members

In the election for additional members in the 1999 National Assembly for Wales election, the results were as follows:[4]

Party Constituency
seats
List votes
(vote %)
D'Hondt
entitlement
Additional
members
elected
Total members
elected
Deviation
from D'Hondt
entitlement
Labour 770,625 (41.79%)507+2
Plaid Cymru 050,757 (30.04%)422−2
Conservative 020,993 (12.42%)1110
Liberal Democrats 018,527 (10.96%)1110
Green 04,082 (2.42%)0000
People's Representative 02,074 (1.23%)0000
Socialist Alliance 01,257 (0.74%)0000
Natural Law 0676 (0.40%)0000

Notes

  1. BC denotes borough constituency, CC denotes county constituency.
  2. The majority is the number of votes the winning candidate receives more than their nearest rival.
  3. Following his election to the House of Commons, Byron Davies resigned as an AM in May 2015 and was replaced by Altaf Hussain.

References

  1. 1 2 "Senedd Cymru Election Result- South Wales West Region". Swansea Council. Archived from the original on 11 May 2021. Retrieved 11 May 2021.
  2. "Election results for South Wales West, 6 May 2016". business.senedd.wales. 6 May 2016. Archived from the original on 1 October 2020. Retrieved 2 July 2021.
  3. "Welsh assembly election 2007". BBC News. 21 March 2007. Archived from the original on 11 November 2012. Retrieved 31 May 2020.
  4. 1 2 "Welsh National Assembly regional constituency: South Wales West". www.politicsresources.net. Archived from the original on 7 August 2017.
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