Scotland Results

Scottish Parliament Results
PartyScottish National PartyScottish ConservativesScottish LabourScottish Green PartyScottish Lib DemsIndependent
Seats633124650
Change−6+16−13+4-−1

After 129 of 129 seatsAbout these resultsResults in full

Latest headlines

  1. Victory for the SNP with 63 seats - two short of a majority
  2. Conservatives are the second largest party on 31 seats - but Labour on 24 lost 13 seats
  3. Scottish Greens are the fourth largest party with six seats, ahead of the Lib Dems who won five
  4. See the changing political map of Scotland

Kilmarnock and Irvine Valley

Scottish Parliament constituencyRegion - South Scotland
Result:SNP HOLD

Scoreboard

PartyCandidatesVotes%Net percentage change in seats
Party

SNP

Scottish National Party

CandidatesWillie CoffeyVotes19,04755.4%Net percentage change in seats+2.1
Party

LAB

Scottish Labour

CandidatesDave MeechanVotes7,85322.8%Net percentage change in seats−11.6
Party

CON

Scottish Conservatives

CandidatesBrian WhittleVotes6,59719.2%Net percentage change in seats+8.8
Party

LD

Scottish Lib Dems

CandidatesRebecca PlenderleithVotes8882.6%Net percentage change in seats+0.7

Turnout and Majority

Scottish National Party Majority

11,194

Turnout

54.9%

Vote share

Party%
Scottish National Party55.4
Scottish Labour22.8
Scottish Conservatives19.2
Scottish Lib Dems2.6

Vote share change since 2011

−%
+%
Scottish Conservatives
+8.8
Scottish National Party
+2.1
Scottish Lib Dems
+0.7
Scottish Labour
−11.6

Constituency Profile

Kilmarnock is by far the largest town in this constituency and is home to both heavy and light engineering plants and meat-canning factories.

The smaller towns east of Kilmarnock, namely Galston, Hurlford, Newmilns and Darvel, grew up on textile manufacturing, carpet, knitwear and the shoe industries. Unemployment here is higher than the average for Scotland and the Johnnie Walker whisky bottling factory closed in 2012. The seat is famously associated with Alexander Fleming, who was born in Darvel, and discovered the antibiotic penicillin. This part of Ayrshire is also associated with poet Robert Burns, whose first book of poems was published in Kilmarnock.

Labour’s Margaret Jamieson had been the victor in the 1999 and 2003 elections. In 2007, the SNP’s Willie Coffey won the seat – which was reconfigured under boundary changes, and he retained it in Scottish Parliament election of 2011.

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