Monday 30 September 2013

Greater Manchester - the 1992 General Election

This map shows roughly how Greater Manchester voted in the 1992 general election. It's based on the current constituency map which has changed since then so it's not exact. Generally this is a region where the Labour vote has to be weighed rather than counted, but it used to be a lot bluer than it is now.

Clearly the inner core is red. Salford East (11,000); Manchester Blackley (12,500); Manchester Central (18,000); Manchester Gorton (16,000); Manchester Withington (9,000); Stretford (11,000). These are the five inner-most seats with the difference between the Labour and the Tory vote in brackets.

But it's not a simple case of a Labour core and a Tory periphery. Manchester Withington had been held by the Tories from 1931 until as recently as 1987.

Labour's biggest strongholds were on the outskirts:
  • Wigan (22,000), Leigh (19,000) and Makerfield (18,000) in the far west 
  • Worsley (10,000), Eccles (13,000) and Bolton South East (12,500) in the near west 
  • Ashton-under-Lyne (11,000), Denton & Reddish (12,000) and Stalybridge & Hyde (15,000) in the east
  • Heywood & Middleton (8,000), Oldham West (8,000) and Oldham Central & Royton (8,000) in the north/north-east
  • Manchester Wythenshawe (10,000) in the south 
The main Tory strongholds on the peripheries

MORE TO FOLLOW...

[Notes...]

Cheadle was Tories (32,500), Lib Dems (16,700), Labour (6,400). This is of course only the tip of the Cheshire iceberg, now split into Cheadle (8) and Hazel Grove (11) in the south-east corner of the map.

The south-west corner is also strongly Tory here. Altringham & Sale (1) was Tories (29,000), Labour (12,200), Lib Dems (11,600).

2 comments:

  1. Fascinating, interesting to be reminded of how things were then, and the Tories still got in then.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Knowing about history. is always very interesting. Your short blog is full of information. Airport Car parking at Manchester

    ReplyDelete