1918–1950: The Metropolitan Borough of Wandsworth wards of Putney and Southfields.
1950–1964: The Metropolitan Borough of Wandsworth wards of Fairfield, Putney and Southfields.[2]
1964–1974: The Metropolitan Borough of Wandsworth wards of Fairfield, Putney, Southfield, Thamesfield, and West Hill.[3]
1974–1983: The London Borough of Wandsworth wards of Putney, Roehampton, Southfield, Thamesfield, and West Hill.[4]
1983–2010: The London Borough of Wandsworth wards of East Putney, Parkside, Roehampton, Southfields, Thamesfield, West Hill, and West Putney.
Map of current boundaries
2010–present: As above less Parkside ward.
Proposed
Further to the
2023 Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies, which was based on the ward boundaries in place at 1 December 2020, and enacted by the Parliamentary Constituencies Order 2023, the composition of the constituency from the
2024 United Kingdom general election will be expanded to bring it within the permitted electoral range by including the majority of the Fairfield ward (polling districts FFA, FFB and FFC), transferred from
Battersea.[5]
Following a local government boundary review which came into effect in May 2022, the Fairfield ward was largely replaced by the Wandsworth Town ward.[6][7] The constituency will now comprise the following wards of the London Borough of Wandsworth from the 2024 general election:
East Putney; Roehampton; Southfields; Thamesfield; West Hill; West Putney; most of Wandsworth Town; and small part of St Mary's.[8]
History
When created in 1918 the constituency was carved out of the west of the abolished seat
Wandsworth. The rest of the latter formed
Wandsworth Central,
Balham and Tooting and
Streatham. Putney formed one of the divisions of the Parliamentary Borough of Wandsworth.
Political history
The seat was Conservative from 1918 until 1964, in a national context of Labour marginal wins in the 1920s, the landslide Labour victory in 1945 and the narrower Labour win in 1950. After the Labour win of 1964, the fairly narrow
Heath ministry win of 1970 failed to tip the seat back to the
Conservative Party, and the seat was held by Labour for 15 years with
Hugh Jenkins as MP.
Putney was the first Conservative gain on election night in
2005, when Justine Greening took back the seat from Labour on a two-party
swing (Lab-Con) of 6.5%. The 2015 result gave the seat the 148th most marginal majority of the Conservative Party's 331 seats by percentage of majority, similar to the 2010 result.[9] The
2017 election saw Greening re-elected, but with a 10% swing to Labour; this heavy swing against the Conservatives has been attributed to the fact that the Borough of Wandsworth (of which Putney is part) voted 75% in favour of remaining in the
European Union in
the previous year's referendum. In
2019, Putney was the only seat in the country gained by Labour.[10]
Constituency profile
Putney has long had many desirable properties of southwest London[11] with Southfields to the south and the
River Thames to the north with
Fulham lying across the river.
The majority of the area as in the 19th century is covered by mid-to-high income neighbourhoods[12] whereas the eastern boundary of the seat eating into Wandsworth town centre is more mixed, and Roehampton which has
its university (
University of Roehampton and part of the
Kingston University campus) consists of, in terms of housing, by a small majority, a diverse
council stock that owing to its cost has only fractionally been acquired under the
Right to Buy — much of this ward remains in one form or another reliant on
social housing.[12]
The
local council is not a
bellwether of who will win the Putney seat, and for a considerable time has imposed the lowest
council tax in the country.[13] Between 1997 and 2005 Putney had a unique attribute of being the only seat in the country where every single component ward elected a full slate of Conservative councillors, yet the constituency had a Labour MP,
Tony Colman.
In the 2016 EU Referendum, Putney voted 72.24% to Remain.[14]
^A televised verbal argument occurred between Mellor and
Referendum Party candidate
Sir James Goldsmith, who held contrasting views on European integration, during Mellor's vote of thanks to the public on his defeat as one of the early declared results in 1997.
^
abcdefghiCraig, F. W. S. (1983) [1969]. British parliamentary election results 1918–1949 (3rd ed.). Chichester: Parliamentary Research Services. p. 58.
ISBN0-900178-06-X.
^F. W. S. Craig, British Parliamentary Election Results 1918-49