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Parliamentary Constituencies Act receives Royal
Assent and becomes law
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Constituencies across the UK will be updated and have
a near equal number of electors
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Every vote will count the same, delivering manifesto
commitment for fairer elections
Every vote cast in a general election will carry equal
weight, after new legislation passed today will make
constituencies across the UK more equal in size.
The Government’s Parliamentary Constituencies Act has
received Royal Assent, which means the geographical boundaries of
the UK’s 650 constituencies will be redrawn to each contain a
near equal number of eligible voters.
The updated constituencies will reflect significant changes
in demographics, house building and migration - the current ones
having been defined using outdated data from two decades
ago.
Constitution Minister, , said:
“Every voter deserves to have confidence that their vote
counts the same, no matter where it is cast. This assurance is
long overdue and today’s Act delivers exactly that.
“Up-to-date, more equally sized constituencies is a
sensible policy that will make our elections fairer, ensuring
that people from all four nations of the UK have equal
representation in Parliament.”
Reviews of UK parliamentary constituencies are undertaken
by four judge-led and independent bodies - the Boundary
Commissions for England, Wales, Scotland and Northern
Ireland.
The Government’s new legislation will strengthen the
independence of the process further, ensuring reviews take place
every eight years and the subsequent proposals are implemented
automatically. This will stop any potential for political
interference or further delays to updating constituencies,
protecting fair representation of the British people for the
future.
Starting their review in January 2021, the Boundary
Commissions will use the most up-to-date data on the current UK
electorate available, to determine the average number of electors
that will be in each constituency and their new boundaries. This
will take into account five protected constituencies which must
remain as they are out of geographical necessity.
The Commissions’ proposed new electoral maps will be
subject to extensive scrutiny, each undergoing three separate
periods of consultation, where members of local communities can
submit written suggestions for consideration and attend public
hearings. The Commissions must present their final reports to the
Speaker of the House of Commons by 1 July 2023.
Updated and equalised constituencies is one of a number of
manifesto commitments this Government is already progressing in
its first year, to strengthen the integrity of our elections and
public trust in democracy.
We have recently published world-leading proposals to make
political campaigning online more transparent for voters; a draft
Bill to repeal the Fixed-term Parliaments Act; and will introduce
voter ID at polling stations to protect our elections from
potential fraud.
ENDS
Notes to editors:
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The previous law on parliamentary constituencies stated
that reviews should take place every five years and required
Parliament to vote on the Commissions’ proposals, however all
recent independent proposals were blocked by
Parliament.
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Constituency sizes will allow a 10% range of the
average electorate size (+/-5%), as has been the case under
governments of all colours. This tolerance allows flexibility
to the Commissions in order to propose the right
constituencies, with broadly equal electorates, while taking
into account the geographical diversity and rich community
ties that exist across the UK.
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The Office of National Statistics will publish data on
the size of the UK electorate as of March 2020, which will be
used by the Commissions for their review. This was the point
before widespread impacts of Covid-19 came into effect and is
therefore the most up-to-date reflection of the UK electorate
available, for the Commissions to start their review in
2021.
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The Parliamentary Constituencies Act maintains the
existing four protected constituencies of Orkney and
Shetland, Na h-Eileanan an Iar, and the two constituencies on
the Isle of Wight and creates the additional protected
constituency of Ynys Môn (Anglesey).