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Wales Results

Welsh Assembly Results
PartyWelsh LabourPlaid CymruWelsh ConservativeUKIP WalesWelsh Liberal Democrat
Seats29121171
Change−1+1−3+7−4

After 60 of 60 seatsAbout these resultsResults in full

Latest headlines

  1. Labour win 29 seats - but fall short of a majority
  2. UKIP wins its first seats in the Assembly
  3. Plaid Cymru leader Leanne Wood ousts Labour in Rhondda
  4. Mapping the election - see party vote share by constituency across Wales

Montgomeryshire

Welsh Assembly constituencyRegion - Mid and West Wales
Result:CON HOLD

Scoreboard

PartyCandidatesVotes%Net percentage change in seats
Party

CON

Welsh Conservative

CandidatesRussell GeorgeVotes9,87541.8%Net percentage change in seats−1.9
Party

LD

Welsh Liberal Democrat

CandidatesJane DoddsVotes6,53627.7%Net percentage change in seats−5.9
Party

UKIP

UKIP Wales

CandidatesDes ParkinsonVotes2,45810.4%Net percentage change in seats+10.4
Party

PC

Plaid Cymru

CandidatesAled Morgan HughesVotes2,41010.2%Net percentage change in seats−1.1
Party

LAB

Welsh Labour

CandidatesMartyn SingletonVotes1,3895.9%Net percentage change in seats−5.5
Party

GRN

Wales Green Party

CandidatesRichard ChalonerVotes9323.9%Net percentage change in seats+3.9

Turnout and Majority

Welsh Conservative Majority

3,339

Turnout

48.5%

Vote share

Party%
Welsh Conservative41.8
Welsh Liberal Democrat27.7
UKIP Wales10.4
Plaid Cymru10.2
Welsh Labour5.9
OTHERS3.9

Vote share change since 2011

−%
+%
UKIP Wales
+10.4
Plaid Cymru
−1.1
Welsh Conservative
−1.9
Welsh Labour
−5.5
Welsh Liberal Democrat
−5.9

Constituency Profile

Montgomeryshire is a rural constituency where agriculture and tourism are key industries.

The constituency is made up of the northern part of Powys in mid-Wales, and many of the area's constituents rely on essential services across the English border in neighbouring Shrewsbury. A museum dedicated to the late Robert Owen - one of Britain's greatest social reformers - is located in the seat's largest town of Newtown. Despite having a higher proportion of people in employment (79.1%) than the Welsh average (69.5%), gross weekly pay is lower at £425.50 compared to the Welsh average of £479.40. The Liberal Democrats won the seat in the first three Assembly elections but the Conservatives won the seat for the first time in 2011 - having won the seat in the 2010 General Election. Russell George secured a majority of 2,324 and 43.7% of the vote for the Conservatives to take the seat from the Liberal Democrats (33.6%), who were ahead of Labour (11.4%) and Plaid Cymru (11.3%).

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