Belfast West (UK Parliament constituency)

Belfast West
Borough constituency
for the House of Commons
Outline map
Boundary of Belfast West in Northern Ireland
Districts of Northern Ireland
Electorate60,817 (March 2011)
BoroughBelfast
Major settlementsBelfast
Current constituency
Created1922
Member of ParliamentPaul Maskey (Sinn Fein)
Seats1
Created from
18851918
Seats1
Type of constituencyBorough constituency
Created fromBelfast
Replaced by

Belfast West is a parliamentary constituency (seat) in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament.[1] The MP since 2011 is Paul Maskey of Sinn Fein.

History

Belfast West has historically been the most nationalist of Belfast's four constituencies, though it is only in the last few decades that the votes for unionist parties have plunged to tiny levels. The constituency is largely made of a long, slender, belt along the Falls Road and its suburban extensions, with three of the five wards from the staunchly unionist Shankill area now something of a bolt-on, with a several kilometre (miles) long peace line dividing them from the rest of the constituency. There is also a smaller Protestant enclave at Suffolk.

The tenor of the constituency is largely working class and in the 1991 census it was one of only twenty constituencies where the majority of housing was still state-owned. Although there are now large pockets of middle-class housing in Andersonstown and other suburban parts of the seat. Closer to the centre public-sector terraced housing, both Victorian and high quality modern housing, predominates, while in the suburbs, leafy pockets are scattered among post-War housing estates such as Lenadoon and Twinbrook.

For twenty years, the Westminster constituency was consistently held by the Ulster Unionist Party but always had strong Labour movement sympathies. In the 1923 general election, the Belfast Labour Party came within 1,000 votes of taking the seat. A by-election in 1943 was won by Jack Beattie, standing for the Northern Ireland Labour Party. For the next twenty-three years the seat would regularly change from unionist to nationalist/labour, with the latter represented by a variety of parties.

In the 1966 general election the seat was won by Gerry Fitt of the Republican Labour Party. Later in 1970 he left that party to become a founder and first leader of the Social Democratic and Labour Party. In the February 1974 general election, Belfast West was the only constituency in Northern Ireland to elect an MP supporting the Sunningdale Agreement. Fitt's majority was a narrow 2,180 votes in February 1974 primarily due to the candidature of Albert Price, father of the Price sisters who were in prison in England for Provisional IRA–related offences. However the candidacy of a UVF-backed candidate in October 1974 and a declining Unionist vote in 1979 led to him increasing his majorities in subsequent years. He retained the seat for the next nine years but increasingly distanced himself from nationalist groups and in late 1979 he left the SDLP. He sat as an independent socialist but lost his seat in the 1983 general election when it was won by Gerry Adams of Sinn Féin. The Unionist vote which had still been at 30% in the 1982 Assembly elections was cut to 20% as a result of the 1983 boundary changes which, while adding the loyalist Glencairn area, removed the Donegall Road, Sandy Row and added the Nationalist Lenadoon area.

Adams's share of the vote, at 37%, was short of a majority and he achieved victory only due to Fitt and the SDLP candidate splitting the non–Sinn Féin vote. At the 1987 general election Adams narrowly held his seat, but lost it in the 1992 general election amidst a strong tactical voting campaign in favour of Joe Hendron of the Social Democratic and Labour Party by unionists[2] in the Shankill Road area of the constituency. After the election a constituent, Maura McCrory, lodged an election petition challenging the result. The election court reported Hendron personally guilty of the illegal practice of failing to deliver a declaration verifying the return of his election expenses, and guilty through his election agent of failing to deliver a verified return of election expenses within 35 days, exceeding the maximum spending by £782.02, and failing to pay all the expenses within 28 days. Hendron's agent was also reported personally guilty of distributing election material without the name and address of the printer and publisher. The Judges granted both Hendron and his agent relief from their findings, on the grounds that the law had been broken through inadvertence; they therefore certified that Hendron had been duly elected.[3]

In the mid-1990s the Boundary Commission originally suggested removing the Shankill wards from the constituency and replacing them with about half of the Belfast South constituency, namely the 6 wards of the Balmoral Electoral Area and the Shaftesbury ward, effectively transforming the seat into a Belfast South West constituency.

The subsequent local enquiries were bitterly contested with the SDLP favouring the commission's original proposals which would add an area where Sinn Féin had little support (and aside from the Shaftesbury ward, had not contested in council elections), while Sinn Féin argued instead for adding the mostly republican Twinbrook and Poleglass estates (where they were outpolling the SDLP in council elections by a margin of 3 to 1). With all parties except the SDLP supporting an option of retaining four seats in Belfast the latter option became the commissions final proposals and the Shankill wards remained in the constituency.

The boundary changes, coupled with the IRA ceasefire, meant that support for Sinn Féin in the constituency soared to new levels and in all elections held in the seat since 1996 they have taken over 50% of the vote. In 1997 Adams regained the seat and held it in 2001, 2005 and 2010. In 2011, Adams decided to stand in the 2011 Irish general election and vacated his seat.

In the 2016 referendum to leave the European Union, the constituency voted remain by 74.1%.[4]

In 2017, it ranked the most secure of Northern Ireland's 18 seats by percentage and/or numerical tally of its winning majority, followed by North Down and by North Antrim respectively.[5]

Boundaries

Under the Redistribution of Seats Act 1885, the parliamentary borough of Belfast was expanded. The 2-seat borough constituency of Belfast was divided into four divisions: East, South, West, and North.

The city boundaries were expanded under the Belfast Corporation Act 1896. Under the Redistribution of Seats (Ireland) Act 1918, the parliamentary borough was extended to include the whole city and the number of divisions increased from 4 to 9. The Falls, St Anne's and Woodvale divisions largely replaced the West division.[6][7] These boundaries were in effect at the 1918 general election.

The Government of Ireland Act 1920 established the Parliament of Northern Ireland, which came into operation in 1921. The representation of Northern Ireland in the Parliament of the United Kingdom was reduced from 30 MPs to 13 MPs, taking effect at the 1922 United Kingdom general election. These changes saw a 4-seat Belfast West constituency in the House of Commons of Northern Ireland and Belfast West re-established as a one-seat constituency at Westminster.

1885–1918 So much of St. Anne's Ward as is bounded on the north-west by a line drawn along the centre of Carrick Hill; so much of St. George's Ward as lies to the north of a line drawn along the centre of Grosvenor Street and west of a line drawn along the centre of Durham Street; Smithfield Ward; and in the parish of Shankill, in the County of Antrim, the townlands of— Ballymagarry, and Ballymurphy.[8]
1922–1950 The divisions of Falls (Falls and Smithfield wards), St. Anne's (St. Anne's and St. George's wards) and Woodvale (Court and Woodale wards).[9]
1950–1974 In the county borough of Belfast, the wards of Court, Falls, St. Anne's, St. George's, Smithfield, and Woodvale.[10]
1974–1983 In the county borough of Belfast, the wards of Court, Falls, St Anne's, St George's, Smithfield, and Woodvale,

and in the rural district of Lisburn, the electoral divisions of Andersonstown, Ballygammon, and Ladybrook.[11]

1983–1997 The district of Belfast wards of Andersonstown, Ballygomartin, Central, Clonard, Court, Falls, Grosvenor, Highfield, Ladybrook, Milltown, North Howard, St James, Suffolk, and Whiterock.[12][13][14]
1997–2010 The district of Belfast wards of Andersonstown, Beechmount, Clonard, Falls, Falls Park, Glencairn, Glencolin, Glen Road, Highfield, Ladybrook, Shankill, Upper Springfield and Whiterock,

and the district of Lisburn wards of Collin Glen, Kilwee, Poleglass and Twinbrook.[15]

2010–2024 The district of Belfast wards of Andersonstown, Beechmount, Clonard, Falls, Falls Park, Glencairn, Glencolin, Glen Road, Highfield, Ladybrook, Shankill, Upper Springfield and Whiterock;

and the Lisburn city wards of Collin Glen, Dunmurry, Kilwee, Poleglass, and Twinbrook; and

in Lisburn City, that part of Derryaghy ward lying to the north of the Derryaghy and Lagmore townland boundary.[16]

2024– The following wards of Belfast City Council— Andersonstown, Ballygomartin, Ballymurphy, Beechmount, Clonard, Collin Glen, Dunmurry, Falls, Falls Park, Ladybrook, Lagmore, Poleglass, Shankill, Shaw's Road, Stewartstown, Turf Lodge, Twinbrook, Woodvale.

In the area of Lisburn and Castlereagh City Council, the Derryaghy ward.[17]

Members of Parliament

The Member of Parliament since a 2011 by-election is Paul Maskey of Sinn Féin, who succeeded Gerry Adams. Adams previously held the seat from 1983 to 1992 when he lost it to Joe Hendron of the Social Democratic and Labour Party but regained it in 1997.

In November 2010, Adams announced his intention to contest the imminent election in the Republic of Ireland. Although the Disqualifications Act 2000 permits MPs to sit in Dáil Éireann, he submitted a letter of resignation to the Speaker in January 2011. However, the prescribed procedure for vacating a parliamentary seat involves applying for the post of Crown Steward and Bailiff of the Manor of Northstead, which he had "no intention" of doing. Thus he was still considered to hold the seat.[18] On 26 January, HM Treasury announced that Adams had been appointed as Steward and Bailiff of the Manor of Northstead. The Prime Minister, David Cameron, claimed that Adams had applied for the appointment, but this was later clarified to state that he had not requested the appointment. Adams stated the Prime Minister's private secretary had apologised to him for making the announcement that Adams had 'accepted' the position, when in fact Adams' resignation letter was taken to be a request to be so appointed, whatever his own wishes.[19]

Monument to James Horner Haslett, MP & Mayor of Belfast, grounds of Belfast City Hall
Election Member Party
1885 James Horner Haslett Conservative
1886 Thomas Sexton Irish Parliamentary
1890 Irish National Federation
1892 H. O. Arnold-Forster Liberal Unionist
1906 Joseph Devlin Irish Parliamentary
1918 constituency abolished
1922 constituency recreated
1922 Robert Lynn Ulster Unionist
1929 W. E. D. Allen
1931 New Party
1931 Alexander Browne Ulster Unionist
1943 by-election Jack Beattie Labour (NI)
1943 Independent Labour
1945 Federation of Labour
1949 Irish Labour
1950 J. G. MacManaway Ulster Unionist
1950 by-election Thomas Teevan
1951 Jack Beattie Irish Labour
1955 Patricia McLaughlin Ulster Unionist
1964 James Kilfedder
1966 Gerry Fitt Republican Labour
1970 Social Democratic and Labour
1979 Independent
1983 Gerry Adams Sinn Féin
1992 Joe Hendron Social Democratic and Labour
1997 Gerry Adams Sinn Féin
2011 by-election Paul Maskey

Election results

Elections in the 2020s

2024 general election: Belfast West[20][21][22]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Sinn Féin Paul Maskey 21,009 52.9 +4.4
People Before Profit Gerry Carroll 5,048 12.7 −1.4
SDLP Paul Doherty 4,318 10.9 +3.5
DUP Frank McCoubrey 4,304 10.8 −7.4
TUV Ann McClure 2,010 5.1 New
Alliance Eóin Millar 1,077 2.7 −4.4
Aontú Gerard Herdman 904 2.3 −1.4
UUP Ben Sharkey 461 1.2 +0.3
Green (NI) Ash Jones 451 1.1 New
Independent Tony Mallon 161 0.4 New
Majority 15,961 40.2 +2.4
Turnout 39,743 52.7 −6.4
Registered electors 75,346
Sinn Féin hold Swing +2.9

Elections in the 2010s

2019 general election: Belfast West[23]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Sinn Féin Paul Maskey 20,866 53.8 −12.9
People Before Profit Gerry Carroll 6,194 16.0 +5.8
DUP Frank McCoubrey 5,220 13.5 +0.1
SDLP Paul Doherty 2,985 7.7 +0.7
Alliance Donnamarie Higgins 1,882 4.9 +3.0
Aontú Monica Digney 1,635 4.2 New
Majority 14,672 37.8 −15.5
Turnout 38,782 59.1 −6.3
Registered electors 65,621
Sinn Féin hold Swing

This seat had the largest Sinn Féin vote share at the 2019 general election. It also saw the only increase in vote share for the DUP at the election.[24]

2017 general election: Belfast West[25][26]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Sinn Féin Paul Maskey 27,107 66.7 +12.5
DUP Frank McCoubrey 5,455 13.4 +5.6
People Before Profit Gerry Carroll 4,132 10.2 −9.0
SDLP Tim Attwood 2,860 7.0 −2.8
Alliance Sorcha Eastwood 731 1.9 +0.1
Workers' Party Conor Campbell 348 0.9 −0.8
Majority 21,652 53.3 +18.3
Turnout 40,633 65.09 +8.8
Registered electors 62,423
Sinn Féin hold Swing +12.5
2015 general election: Belfast West[27][28][29][30]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Sinn Féin Paul Maskey 19,163 54.2 −16.9
People Before Profit Gerry Carroll 6,798 19.2 New
SDLP Alex Attwood 3,475 9.8 −6.6
DUP Frank McCoubrey 2,773 7.8 +0.2
UUP Bill Manwaring 1,088 3.1 0.0
UKIP Brian Higginson 765 2.2 New
Alliance Gerard Catney 636 1.8 −0.1
Workers' Party John Lowry 597 1.7 New
NI Conservatives Paul Shea 34 0.1 New
Majority 12,365 35.0 −19.7
Turnout 35,329 56.3 +2.3
Registered electors 62,697
Sinn Féin hold Swing −14.0
2011 Belfast West by-election[31][32]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Sinn Féin Paul Maskey 16,211 70.6 −0.5
SDLP Alex Attwood 3,088 13.5 −2.9
People Before Profit Gerry Carroll 1,751 7.6 New
DUP Brian Kingston 1,393 6.1 −1.5
UUP Bill Manwaring 386 1.7 −1.4
Alliance Aaron McIntyre 122 0.5 −1.4
Majority 13,123 57.1 +2.4
Turnout 22,951 37.5 −16.5
Registered electors 61,441
Sinn Féin hold Swing +1.2
2010 general election: Belfast West[33]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Sinn Féin Gerry Adams 22,840 71.1 +2.5
SDLP Alex Attwood 5,261 16.4 +0.3
DUP William Humphrey 2,436 7.6 −3.3
UCU-NF Bill Manwaring 1,000 3.1 +0.6
Alliance Máire Hendron 596 1.9 +1.8
Majority 17,579 54.7 −1.2
Turnout 32,133 54.0 −13.5
Registered electors 59,522
Sinn Féin hold Swing +1.1

Elections in the 2000s

2005 general election: Belfast West[34]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Sinn Féin Gerry Adams 24,348 70.5 +4.4
SDLP Alex Attwood 5,033 14.6 −4.3
DUP Diane Dodds 3,652 10.6 +4.2
UUP Chris McGimpsey 779 2.3 −3.9
Workers' Party John Lowry 432 1.3 −0.5
Rainbow Dream Ticket Lynda Gilby 154 0.4 +0.2
Independent Liam Kennedy 147 0.4 New
Majority 19,315 55.9 +8.7
Turnout 34,545 64.2 −4.5
Registered electors 53,536
Sinn Féin hold Swing +4.4
2001 general election: Belfast West[35]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Sinn Féin Gerry Adams 27,096 66.1 +10.2
SDLP Alex Attwood 7,754 18.9 −19.8
DUP Eric Smyth 2,641 6.4 New
UUP Chris McGimpsey 2,541 6.2 +2.8
Workers' Party John Lowry 736 1.8 +0.2
Third Way David Kerr 116 0.3 New
Rainbow Dream Ticket Rainbow George Weiss 98 0.2 New
Majority 19,342 47.2 +30.0
Turnout 40,982 68.7 −5.6
Registered electors 59,617
Sinn Féin hold Swing +15.0

Elections in the 1990s

1997 general election: Belfast West[36]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Sinn Féin Gerry Adams 25,662 55.9 +13.9
SDLP Joe Hendron 17,753 38.7 −5.5
UUP Frederick Parkinson 1,556 3.4 −8.2
Workers' Party John Lowry 721 1.6 −0.3
Human Rights Liam Kennedy 102 0.2 New
Natural Law Mary Daly 91 0.2 −0.3
Majority 7,909 17.2
Turnout 45,885 74.3 +1.1
Registered electors 61,785
Sinn Féin gain from SDLP Swing −9.7

1997 Changes are compared to the 1992 notional results shown below.[37]

Notional 1992 UK general election result : Belfast West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
SDLP N/A 20,045 44.2 N/A
Sinn Féin N/A 19,027 42.0 N/A
UUP N/A 5,275 11.6 N/A
Others N/A 975 2.2 N/A
Majority 1,018 2.2 N/A
1992 general election: Belfast West[38]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
SDLP Joe Hendron 17,415 43.6 +7.9
Sinn Féin Gerry Adams 16,826 42.1 +1.0
UUP Fred Cobain 4,766 11.9 −6.8
Workers' Party John Lowry 750 1.9 −2.5
Natural Law Michael Francis Kennedy 213 0.5 New
Majority 589 1.5
Turnout 34,545 73.2 +4.1
Registered electors 54,644
SDLP gain from Sinn Féin Swing

Elections in the 1980s

1987 general election: Belfast West[39]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Sinn Féin Gerry Adams 16,862 41.1 +4.2
SDLP Joe Hendron 14,641 35.7 +11.1
UUP Frank Millar 7,646 18.7 +13.2
Workers' Party Mary McMahon 1,819 4.4 +0.1
Majority 2,221 5.4 −6.9
Turnout 40,968 69.1 −5.2
Registered electors 59,324
Sinn Féin hold Swing
1983 general election: Belfast West[40]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Sinn Féin Gerry Adams 16,379 36.9 New
SDLP Joe Hendron 10,934 24.6 −14.4
Independent Socialist Gerry Fitt 10,326 23.3 −26.2
UUP Thomas Passmore 2,435 5.5 −19.0
DUP George Albert Haffey 2,399 5.4 −5.8
Workers' Party Mary McMahon 1,893 4.3 −2.4
Majority 5,445 12.3
Turnout 44,366 74.3 +13.7
Registered electors 59,675
Sinn Féin gain from SDLP Swing

Following the 1979 election, Fitt became increasingly at odds with the SDLP and left it, continuing to sit as an independent socialist.

Elections in the 1970s

1979 general election: Belfast West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
SDLP Gerry Fitt 16,480 49.5 +0.5
UUP Thomas Passmore 8,245 24.8 New
DUP Billy Dickson 3,716 11.2 −25.3
Republican Clubs Brian Brennan 2,284 6.9 −1.1
Alliance John Cousins 2,024 6.1 New
NI Labour Derek O'Brien Peters 540 1.6 New
Majority 8,235 24.7 +12.2
Turnout 33,289 56.5 −10.7
Registered electors 58,884
SDLP hold Swing
October 1974 general election: Belfast West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
SDLP Gerry Fitt 21,821 49.0 +8.0
DUP John McQuade 16,265 36.5 0.0
Republican Clubs Kitty O'Kane 3,547 8.0 +1.5
Volunteer Political Party Ken Gibson 2,690 6.0 New
Marxist–Leninist Peter Donal Patrick Kerins 203 0.5 New
Majority 5,556 12.5 +8.0
Turnout 44,526 67.2 −4.3
Registered electors 66,279
SDLP hold Swing
February 1974 general election: Belfast West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
SDLP Gerry Fitt 19,554 41.0
DUP John McQuade 17,374 36.5
Ind. Republican Albert Price 5,662 11.9
Republican Clubs John Brady 3,088 6.5
NI Labour Billy Boyd 1,989 4.2
Majority 2,180 4.5
Turnout 47,667 71.5 −13.0
Registered electors 66,639
SDLP gain from Republican Labour Swing

After the 1970 election Fitt left the Republican Labour Party to co-found the Social Democratic & Labour Party. The remains of Republican Labour had disintegrated by 1974.

1970 general election: Belfast West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Labour Gerry Fitt 30,649 52.8 +0.8
UUP Brian McRoberts 27,451 47.3 −0.7
Majority 3,198 5.5 +1.5
Turnout 58,100 84.5 +9.7
Registered electors 68,665
Republican Labour hold Swing

Elections in the 1960s

1966 general election: Belfast West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Republican Labour Gerry Fitt 26,292 52.0 +23.7
UUP James Kilfedder 24,281 48.0 +6.8
Majority 2,011 4.0
Turnout 50,573 74.8 +0.1
Registered electors 67,588
Republican Labour gain from UUP Swing
1964 general election: Belfast West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
UUP James Kilfedder 21,337 41.2 −12.9
Republican Labour Harry Diamond 14,678 28.3 New
NI Labour Billy Boyd 12,579 24.3 New
Ind. Republican Billy McMillen 3,256 6.3 New
Majority 6,659 12.9 −3.6
Turnout 51,850 74.7 +2.0
Registered electors 69,399
UUP hold Swing

Elections in the 1950s

1959 general election: Belfast West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
UUP Patricia McLaughlin 28,898 54.1 −4.2
Ind. Labour Group John Joseph Brennan 20,062 37.6 New
Sinn Féin Thomas Heenan 4,416 8.3 −6.1
Majority 8,836 16.5 −14.4
Turnout 53,376 72.7 −2.0
Registered electors 73,405
UUP hold Swing
1955 general election: Belfast West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
UUP Patricia McLaughlin 34,191 58.3 +8.3
Irish Labour Jack Beattie 20,062 27.4 −22.6
Sinn Féin Eamonn Boyce 8,447 14.4 New
Majority 18,141 30.9 +30.9
Turnout 62,700 74.7 −9.4
Registered electors 78,589
UUP gain from Irish Labour Swing
1951 general election: Belfast West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Irish Labour Jack Beattie 33,174 50.0 +3.7
UUP Thomas Teevan 33,149 50.0 −1.5
Majority 25 0.0
Turnout 66,323 84.1 +0.5
Registered electors 78,828
Irish Labour gain from UUP Swing
1950 Belfast West by-election[41]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
UUP Thomas Teevan 31,796 50.8 −0.7
Irish Labour Jack Beattie 30,833 49.2 +2.9
Majority 913 1.4 −3.8
Turnout 62,629 79.8 −3.8
Registered electors 78,459
UUP hold Swing
1950 general election: Belfast West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
UUP J. G. MacManaway 33,917 51.5 +5.0
Irish Labour Jack Beattie 30,539 46.3 −7.2
Sinn Féin Jimmy Steele 1,482 2.2 New
Majority 3,378 5.2
Turnout 65,938 83.6 +10.5
Registered electors 78,896
UUP gain from Independent Labour Swing

Elections in the 1940s

1945 general election: Belfast West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Labour Jack Beattie 30,787 53.5 New
UUP Knox Cunningham 26,729 46.5 −16.1
Majority 4,058 7.0
Turnout 57,516 73.1 +5.1
Registered electors 78,674
Independent Labour gain from NI Labour Swing
Belfast West by-election, 1943[42]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
NI Labour Jack Beattie 19,936 46.2 New
UUP Knox Cunningham 14,426 33.4 −29.2
Ind. Unionist Party William McConnell Wilton 7,551 17.5 New
Ind. Republican Hugh Corvin 1,250 2.9 −34.5
Majority 5,510 12.8
Turnout 43,163 54.8 −13.2
Registered electors 78,763
NI Labour gain from UUP Swing

Elections in the 1930s

1935 general election: Belfast West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
UUP Alexander Browne 34,060 62.6 +4.0
Ind. Republican Charles Leddy 20,313 37.4 −4.0
Majority 13,747 25.2 +8.0
Turnout 54,373 68.0 −0.1
Registered electors 79,902
UUP hold Swing
1931 general election: Belfast West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
UUP Alexander Browne 31,113 58.6 +0.7
Nationalist Thomas Joseph Campbell 22,006 41.4 −0.7
Majority 9,107 17.2 +1.4
Turnout 53,119 68.1 −5.8
Registered electors 77,993
UUP hold Swing

Note: The sitting MP, W.E.D. Allen, had joined the New Party earlier in 1931 but did not contest the seat at the general election.

Elections in the 1920s

1929 general election: Belfast West[43]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
UUP William Edward David Allen 33,274 57.9 +3.4
Nationalist Frank C.J. MacDermot 24,177 42.1 New
Majority 9,097 15.8 +1.7
Turnout 57,451 73.9 −5.2
Registered electors 77,721
UUP hold Swing
1924 general election: Belfast West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
UUP Robert John Lynn 28,435 54.5 +1.6
NI Labour Harry Midgley 21,122 40.4 −3.7
Sinn Féin Patrick Nash 2,688 5.1 New
Majority 7,313 14.1 +8.3
Turnout 52,245 79.1 +8.8
Registered electors 66,010
UUP hold Swing
1923 general election: Belfast West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
UUP Robert John Lynn 24,975 52.9 N/A
Belfast Labour Harry Midgley 22,255 47.1 N/A
Majority 2,720 5.8 N/A
Turnout 47,230 70.3 N/A
Registered electors 67,161
UUP hold Swing N/A
1922 general election: Belfast West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
UUP Robert John Lynn Unopposed
Registered electors
UUP win (new seat)

Elections in the 1910s

December 1910 general election: Belfast West[44]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Irish Parliamentary Joseph Devlin 4,543 52.7 −0.2
Irish Unionist John Boyd Carpenter 4,080 47.3 +1.1
Majority 463 5.4 −1.3
Turnout 8,623 93.4 −1.8
Registered electors
Irish Parliamentary hold Swing
January 1910 general election: Belfast West[44]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Irish Parliamentary Joseph Devlin 4,651 52.9 +3.7
Irish Unionist John Boyd Carpenter 4,064 46.2 −2.8
Ind. Nationalist Patrick J. Magee 75 0.9 New
Majority 587 6.7 +6.5
Turnout 8,790 95.2 +0.6
Registered electors
Irish Parliamentary hold Swing

Elections in the 1900s

1906 general election: Belfast West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Irish Parliamentary Joseph Devlin 4,138 49.2 N/A
Liberal Unionist J. R. Smiley 4,122 49.0 N/A
Independent Liberal Unionist Alexander Carlisle 153 1.8 N/A
Majority 16 0.2 N/A
Turnout 8,413 94.6 N/A
Registered electors 8,891
Irish Parliamentary gain from Liberal Unionist Swing N/A
1903 Belfast West by-election[45][46][47][48]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Unionist H. O. Arnold-Forster 3,912 51.6 N/A
Irish Parliamentary Patrick Dempsey 3,671 48.4 N/A
Majority 241 3.2 N/A
Turnout 7,583 88.0 N/A
Registered electors 8,617
Liberal Unionist hold Swing N/A
1900 general election: Belfast West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Unionist H. O. Arnold-Forster Unopposed
Registered electors
Liberal Unionist hold

Elections in the 1890s

1895 general election: Belfast West[44]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Unionist H. O. Arnold-Forster Unopposed
Registered electors
Liberal Unionist hold
1892 general election: Belfast West[44]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Unionist H. O. Arnold-Forster 4,266 55.5 +6.2
Irish National Federation Thomas Sexton 3,427 44.5 −6.2
Majority 839 11.0
Turnout 7,693 92.3 −0.7
Registered electors 8,334
Liberal Unionist gain from Irish Parliamentary Swing +6.2

Elections in the 1880s

1886 general election: Belfast West[44]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Irish Parliamentary Thomas Sexton 3,832 50.7 +0.9
Irish Conservative James Horner Haslett 3,729 49.3 −0.9
Majority 103 1.4
Turnout 7,561 93.0 +0.5
Registered electors 8,131
Irish Parliamentary gain from Irish Conservative Swing +0.9
1885 general election: Belfast West[44]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Irish Conservative James Horner Haslett 3,780 50.2
Irish Parliamentary Thomas Sexton 3,743 49.8
Majority 37 0.4
Turnout 7,523 92.5
Registered electors 8,131
Irish Conservative win (new seat)

See also

References

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Further reading