2024 United Kingdom general election in the East Midlands

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2024 United Kingdom general election in the East Midlands
← 2019 4 July 2024

All 47 East Midlands seats in the House of Commons
 
Portrait of Prime Minister Rishi Sunak (cropped).jpg
Official portrait of Keir Starmer crop 2.jpg
Official portrait of Rt Hon Sir Edward Davey MP crop 2.jpg
Leader Rishi Sunak Keir Starmer Ed Davey
Party Conservative Labour Liberal Democrats
Leader since 24 October 2022 4 April 2020 27 August 2020[note 1]
Last election 38 seats, 54.9% 8 seats, 31.8% 0 seats, 7.8%

The 2024 United Kingdom general election is scheduled to be held on Thursday, 4 July 2024. 47 seats will be up for election in the East Midlands.

Electoral system[edit]

The election will be fought under the boundaries created by the 2023 Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies.[2]

Constituencies[edit]

The East Midlands will elect 47 MPs, which is 1 more than the 46 elected in 2019 general election.[3]

Candidates[edit]

Candidates in bold were MPs at dissolution and represented a constituency in that parliamentary term which is succeeded at least partially by the constituency they're standing for election in at this election, in some cases not for the party they were aligned with when they were originally elected, and also includes those elected at by-elections in the preceding parliament. Italics denotes incumbent MPs not contesting the election.

Constituency (2024–) Constituency (2010–24) Succ. %

[note 2]

Conservative Labour Liberal Democrats Reform UK Green Party Others Incumbent
Amber Valley 100% Linsey Farnsworth[4] Kate Smith[5][6] Alex Stevenson[7] Matt McGuinness[citation needed] Conservative Nigel Mills
Ashfield 86% Rhea Keehn[8] Lee Anderson[9] Alexander Coates[10] Jason Zadrozny (Ashfield Independents)[11] Reform UK (elected as Conservative) Lee Anderson
Bassetlaw 96% Brendan Clarke-Smith[12] Jo White[13][14] Helen Tamblyn-Saville[15] Rachel Reeves[10]^ Conservative Brendan Clarke-Smith
Bolsover 100% Natalie Fleet[16] Robert Reaney[7] David Kesteven[citation needed] Jack Evans[17] (Workers)   Conservative Mark Fletcher
Boston and Skegness 99% Alex Fawbert[18] Richard Tice[19]   Conservative Matt Warman
Hinckley and Bosworth Bosworth 87% Rebecca Pawley[20] Michael Mullaney[6] Peter Cheshire[7]   Conservative Luke Evans
Broxtowe 82% Juliet Campbell[21] James Collis[22] Andrew Medley[7] Teresa Needham[10] Syed Maqsood[23] (Workers)   Conservative Darren Henry
Chesterfield 100% Ben Flook[24] Toby Perkins[25] Ian Barfield[26] Simon Geikie[27] Labour Toby Perkins
Corby and East Northamptonshire Corby 89% Lee Barron[28] Chris Lofts[29] Edward McDonald[7] Callan Barrett Page[30] (Workers)   Conservative Tom Pursglove
Daventry 90% Marianne Kimani[31] Jonathan Harris[6] Scott Cameron[7]   Conservative Chris Heaton-Harris[note 3]
Derby North 100% Catherine Atkinson[32] Tim Prosser[7] Imran Hamid[33] (Workers)   Conservative Amanda Solloway
Derby South 100% Jamie Mulhall[34] Baggy Shanker[35] Alan Graves[7] Chris Williamson[36] (Workers) Labour Margaret Beckett[note 3]
Derbyshire Dales 95% John Whitby[37] Robert Court[38][6] Edward Oakenfull[39] Helen Wetherall (True and Fair)[40]

Rachel Elnaugh (Independent)[41]

  Conservative Sarah Dines
Erewash 100% Maggie Throup[42] Adam Thompson[43] James Archer[6] Brent Poland[44]   Conservative Maggie Throup
Gainsborough 97% Edward Leigh[45] Jess McGuire[31] Pat O'Connor[7] Tim Mellors[46] (SDP)   Conservative Edward Leigh
Gedling 100% Tom Randall[47] Michael Payne[48] Tad Jones[6]   Conservative Tom Randall
Harborough, Oadby and Wigston Harborough 92% Hajira Piranie[49][50] Phil Knowles[6] Danuta Jeeves[7] Darren Woodiwiss[51] Robin Lambert[46] (SDP) Conservative Neil O'Brien
High Peak 100% Robert Largan[52] Jon Pearce[53] Catherine Cullen[7] Joanna Collins[54]   Conservative Robert Largan
Kettering 100% Philip Hollobone[55] Rosie Wrighting[56] Daniel Monie[7] Emily Fedorowycz[57] Matthew Murphy[46] (SDP)

Thomas Dudfield[58] (Workers)

  Conservative Philip Hollobone
Leicester East 97% Rajesh Agrawal[59] Zuffar Haq[citation needed] Raj Solanki[7] Mags Lewis[60] Claudia Webbe (Independent) [61] Independent (elected as Labour) Claudia Webbe
Leicester South 89% Jonathan Ashworth [citation needed] Carol Weaver[6] Craig Harwood[7] Sharmen Rahman[60] Shaukat Patel (Independent) [61] Labour Jonathan Ashworth
Leicester West 100% Liz Kendall [citation needed] Benjamin Feist[6] Ian Hayes[7] Labour Liz Kendall
Lincoln 100% Hamish Falconer[62] Clare Smalley Jamie-Lee McMillan[7] Sally Horscroft[63] Craig Marshall[46] (SDP)

Linda Richardson[64] (Workers)

  Conservative Karl McCartney
Loughborough 92% Jeevun Sandher[65] Ian Sharpe[66][6] Andy McWilliam[7] Hans Zollinger[67]   Conservative Jane Hunt
Louth and Horncastle 92% Victoria Atkins Jonathan Slater[31] Ross Pepper[6] Sean Matthews[7]   Conservative Victoria Atkins
Mansfield 97% Ben Bradley[68] Steve Yemm[69] Philip Shields[10]   Conservative Ben Bradley
Mid Derbyshire 100% Luke Gardiner[70] Jonathan Davies[71] Barry Holliday[72] Stephen Dean[7] Gez Kinsella Josiah Uche[73] (Workers)   Conservative Pauline Latham
Newark 94% Robert Jenrick[citation needed] Saj Ahmad[74] David Watts[75] Robert Hall-Palmer[7] Michael Ackroyd[10][76]   Conservative Robert Jenrick
North East Derbyshire 100% Lee Rowley[citation needed] Louise Jones[77] Ross Shipman[6] Andy Egginton[7] Frank Adlington-Stringer[78]   Conservative Lee Rowley
North West Leicestershire 95% Craig Smith[79] Amanda Hack[80] Noel Matthews[7] Carl Benfield[67] Andrew Bridgen (Independent)[81]

Jevan Heatherley[82] (Workers)

  Independent (elected as Conservative) Andrew Bridgen
Northampton North 97% Lucy Rigby[83] Martin Sawyer[84] Antony Antoniou[7] Khalid Razzaq[85] (Workers)   Conservative Michael Ellis
Northampton South 71% Andrew Lewer[86] Mike Reader[87] Jill Hope[88] Anthony Owens[7]   Conservative Andrew Lewer
Nottingham East 100% Johno Lee[citation needed] Nadia Whittome[89] Labour Nadia Whittome
Nottingham North and Kimberley Nottingham North 82% Alex Norris[90] Christina Morgan-Danvers[6] Labour Alex Norris
Nottingham South 81% Lilian Greenwood[91] Anita Prabhakar[6] Labour Lilian Greenwood
Rushcliffe 99% James Naish[92] James Grice[7] Richard Mallender[93]   Conservative Ruth Edwards
Mid Leicestershire Charnwood 67% Peter Bedford[94] Robert Martin[citation needed] Tony Deakin[95]   Conservative Edward Argar
Melton and Syston 33% Edward Argar[96] Zafran Khan[citation needed] Andy Konieczko[97] Peter Morris[7] Alastair McQuillan[98] Teck Khong (Alliance for Democracy and Freedom)[99]
Rutland and Melton 49%   Conservative Alicia Kearns
Rutland and Stamford 51% Alicia Kearns[100] Joe Wood[citation needed] James Moore[6] Chris Clowes[7] Emma Baker[98]
Grantham and Stamford 36%   Conservative Gareth Davies
Grantham and Bourne 64% Vipul Bechar[citation needed] Mike Rudkin[7] Anne Gayfer[101][44]
Sherwood Forest Sherwood 92% Michelle Welsh[102] Helen O'Hare[7] Sheila Greatrex-White[76] Lee Waters (Ashfield Independents)[103]   Conservative Mark Spencer
Sleaford and North Hykeham 79% Caroline Johnson[104] Hanif Khan[citation needed] Matthew Winnington[citation needed] Ben Jackson[7] Christopher Padley[63]   Conservative Dr Caroline Johnson
South Derbyshire 88% Samantha Niblett[105] Lucy Care[6] Joseph West[7]   Conservative Heather Wheeler
South Holland and The Deepings 100% John Hayes[106] Paul Hilliar[107] Jack Braginton[108] Rhys Baker[109][110] Mark Le Sage[111] (Independent)   Conservative John Hayes
South Leicestershire 86% Alberto Costa[112] Robert Parkinson[citation needed] Paul Hartshorn[113] Bill Piper[7] Mike Jelfs[44][114]   Conservative Alberto Costa
South Northamptonshire 70% Rufia Ashraf[citation needed] Stewart Tolley[115] Paul Hogan[7] Mick Stott[116] (Workers)   Conservative Andrea Leadsom
Wellingborough and Rushden Wellingborough 88% Gen Kitchen[117][note 4] Christopher Townsend[citation needed] Ben Habib[7] Paul Mannion[118] Jeremy Brittin[46] (SDP) Labour Gen Kitchen[note 4]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Davey served as Acting Leader from 13 December 2019 to 27 August 2020 alongside the Party Presidents Baroness Sal Brinton and Mark Pack, following Jo Swinson's election defeat in the 2019 general election. Davey was elected Leader in August 2020.[1]
  2. ^ New constituency contains this percentage of its predecessor constituency
  3. ^ a b Not running for re-election
  4. ^ a b Elected in by-election

References[edit]

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