The seat includes most of
Dover District. It comprises the towns of
Deal,
Dover,
Walmer and surrounding villages in a productive chalkland, long-cultivated area adjoining the
Strait of Dover. Since 1983 it has excluded the northern part of the District in and around the historically important
Cinque Port of
Sandwich with its golf links and accessible shore, which was then transferred to the
South Thanet seat.
Since 1945 Dover has been a Labour/Conservative swing seat. In local elections, most of its rural villages and the two small towns favour the
Conservative Party, whereas Dover favours the
Labour Party, as well as the former mixed mining and agricultural villages in the
local coal belt (East Kent coalfield), such as
Aylesham. Labour's vote held on very solidly here in 2005, but the seat went Conservative in the
2010 election on a swing of 10.4% compared with a 4.9% swing nationally.
Cinque Port Seat
Dover's representation was originally as a
Cinque Port constituency. In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries the
Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports nominated one member as with other Cinque Ports, but this was outlawed by an act of Parliament in 1689.[3] There was still some residual influence but there was also a local independent element in the borough with two local leading families, the Papillons and Furneses, starting to send MPs. By the mid eighteenth century it had come more under government influence through the influence of the
Earl of Hardwicke, although government control was often more fragile than it seemed.[4]
Dover lost its status as a Cinque Port seat, becoming a borough seat under the
Reform Act 1832 (
2 & 3 Will. 4. c. 45).
Boundaries
Map of boundaries 2010-2024
Map of boundaries from 2024
1918–1950: The Boroughs of Dover and Deal, the Urban District of Walmer, and the Rural Districts of Dover and Eastry.
1950–1983: The Boroughs of Dover, Deal, and Sandwich, the Rural District of Dover, and the Rural District of Eastry except the parishes included in the Isle of Thanet constituency.
1983–2010: The District of Dover wards of Aylesham, Barton, Buckland, Capel-le-Ferne, Castle, Cornilo, Eastry, Eythorne, Lower Walmer, Lydden and Temple Ewell, Maxton and Elms Vale, Middle Deal, Mill Hill, Mongeham, Noninstone, North Deal, Pineham, Priory, Ringwould, River, St Margaret's-at-Cliffe, St Radigund's, Shepherdswell with Coldred, Tower Hamlets, Town and Pier, and Upper Walmer.
2010–present: The District of Dover wards of Aylesham, Buckland, Capel-le-Ferne, Castle, Eastry, Eythorne and Shepherdswell, Lydden and Temple Ewell, Maxton, Elms Vale and Priory, Middle Deal and Sholden, Mill Hill, North Deal, Ringwould, River, St Margaret's-at-Cliffe, St Radigund's, Tower Hamlets, Town and Pier, Walmer, and Whitfield.
The District of Dover wards of: Alkham & Capel-le-Ferne; Aylesham, Eythorne & Shepherdswell; Buckland; Dover Downs & River; Eastry Rural; Guston, Kingsdown & St. Margaret’s-at-Cliffe; Maxton & Elms Vale; Middle Deal; Mill Hill; North Deal; St. Radigunds; Tower Hamlets; Town & Castle; Walmer; Whitfield.[5]
Minor change to the current constituency of Dover due to revision of ward boundaries.
Charlie Elphicke scandal
From 2010, the MP was
Charlie Elphicke, elected as a member of the Conservative Party. On 3 November 2017, Elphicke was suspended by the Conservative Party after "serious allegations" were made against him, and then sat as an Independent until 12 December 2018 when he had the Conservative Whip restored ahead of
a party vote on a no-confidence motion against Theresa May.[6][7] In July 2019, the whip was withdrawn again after he was charged by the
Crown Prosecution Service with three counts of
sexual assault against two women.[8][9][10] Charlie Elphicke stood down as an MP shortly before the 2019 UK General Election, with his wife,
Natalie Elphicke standing as the Conservative Party candidate in his place. Natalie Elphicke was elected as the MP for Dover at the 2019 UK General Election, increasing on her husband's majority.