Brighton Pavilion (UK Parliament constituency)


Brighton Pavilion is a constituency in East Sussex represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2024 by Siân Berry of the Green Party.
At 11.9% of the population, Brighton Pavilion has the highest proportion of LGBTQ people in the country.

Constituency profile

The Brighton Pavilion constituency is located in East Sussex on England's south coast. It includes the city centre of Brighton and the suburban areas to its north, including Patcham, Hollingdean and Coldean. The constituency is named after the Royal Pavilion, a royal residence built for the future King George IV located within the constituency. Brighton is a popular seaside resort and the Brighton Pavilion constituency contains the highest proportion of lesbian, gay or bisexual residents of any constituency in England and Wales.
Compared to national averages, residents are considerably younger and less religious and have high levels of education and professional employment. House prices and household income are generally higher than average, although there are some areas of high deprivation like Hollingdean, which has a large amount of social housing. The ethnic makeup of the constituency is similar to the country as a whole, with White people forming 85% of the population.
Local politics are mixed; at the city council, residents in city centre wards are represented by Green Party councillors, the more deprived areas around Hollingdean elected Labour Party councillors and Conservatives represent the outskirts near Patcham. In the 2016 referendum on European Union membership, voters in the constituency overwhelmingly supported remaining in the European Union with an estimated 83% voting for this option. This made Brighton Pavilion the second-most remain-supporting constituency in the United Kingdom.

Boundaries

Historic

1950–1955: The County Borough of Brighton wards of Hollingbury, Montpelier, Patcham, Pavilion, Preston, Preston Park, Regency, St Nicholas, St Peters, and West.
1955–1983: The County Borough of Brighton wards of Hollingbury, Montpelier, Patcham, Preston, Preston Park, Regency, Stanmer, St Nicholas, and St Peter's.
1983–1997: The Borough of Brighton wards of Hollingbury, Patcham, Preston, Regency, St Peter's, Seven Dials, Stanmer, and Westdene.
1997–2010: The Borough of Brighton wards of Hanover, Hollingbury, Patcham, Preston, Regency, St Peter's, Seven Dials, Stanmer, and Westdene.
2010–2024: The City of Brighton and Hove wards of Hanover and Elm Grove, Hollingdean and Stanmer, Patcham, Preston Park, Regency, St Peter's and North Laine, and Withdean.

Current

Further to the 2023 review of Westminster constituencies which came into effect for the 2024 general election, the composition of the renamed constituency was reduced slightly by transferring to Brighton Kemptown and Peacehaven part of the Hanover and Elm Grove ward – namely polling district PHEA, and that part of polling district PHEF to the east of Queen's Park Road.
Following a local government boundary review in Brighton and Hove which came into effect in May 2023, the constituency now comprises the following from the 2024 general election:

Electoral history

The constituency was created in 1950 from the former two-member constituency of Brighton, for which Brighton Pavilion's first Member of Parliament, Sir William Teeling, had previously been the joint representative.
From 1950 to 1997, the seat elected Conservative MPs. In 1997, David Lepper of the Labour Party, aided by somewhat notionally favourable minor boundary changes before the 1997 general election, began service as MP for thirteen years by winning the two subsequent elections. The Conservatives' share of the vote has declined at every election there since 1979.
In July 2007, the Green Party selected Caroline Lucas to contest the seat, at which point she was a Member of the European Parliament for the South East England constituency. In November 2009, Charlotte Vere was selected as the Conservative Party candidate at an open primary attended by local Conservative Party members and residents. In January 2010, the Liberal Democrats also selected a female candidate, Bernadette Millam. Labour had selected Nancy Platts, a local campaigner and former union worker, as their candidate in June 2007. This meant that, distinctively, all of the four leading parties in the constituency had female candidates. In 2010, Labour's share of the vote fell by 6.5%, and Lucas, then leading the Green Party, won the seat. In contrast to national results, the Conservative and Liberal Democrat share of the vote fell.
Lucas retained the seat for the Green Party at the 2015 general election with an increased majority. Purna Sen, who held senior roles at the Commonwealth, LSE, and Amnesty International, was selected to contest the seat for Labour. Clarence Mitchell, a former BBC News reporter and spokesman for the family of Madeleine McCann, was selected as the Conservative Party candidate.
For the 2017 general election and the 2019 general election, the local Liberal Democrat party chose not to field a candidate in the seat, endorsing Lucas instead due to their shared pro-EU stance. Lucas retained Brighton Pavilion for the Green Party, which was returned with the biggest numerical majority for any candidate in the seat since 1959. In the 2019 election, the seat had the largest winning margin and the highest winning vote share of any seat not held by the Conservatives or Labour. Lucas announced on 8 June 2023, that she would not be standing in the subsequent UK general election. On 19 July 2023, the Green Party picked Siân Berry to replace her. Berry was elected as the MP for Brighton Pavilion at the 2024 election with a slightly reduced majority of 27%.

Members of Parliament

''Brighton prior to 1950''