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Dunfermline West (Scottish Parliament constituency)

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Region or constituency of the Scottish Parliament Not to be confused with Dunfermline West (UK Parliament constituency).

Dunfermline West
Former burgh constituency
for the Scottish Parliament
Dunfermline West shown within the Mid Scotland and Fife electoral region and the region shown within Scotland
Former constituency
Created1999
Abolished2011
Council areaFife

Dunfermline West was a constituency of the Scottish Parliament (Holyrood). It elected one Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) by the plurality (first past the post) method of election. From the 2011 Scottish Parliament election, parts of the Dunfermline East constituency were merged with Dunfermline West to form a single Dunfermline constituency.

Electoral region

See also: Mid Scotland and Fife (Scottish Parliament electoral region)

The region covers all of the Clackmannanshire council area, all of the Fife council area, all of the Perth and Kinross council area, all of the Stirling council area and parts of the Angus council area.

Constituency boundaries and council area

The constituency was created at the same time as the Scottish Parliament, in 1999, with the name and boundaries of a pre-existing Westminster (House of Commons) constituency. In 2005, however, Scottish Westminster constituencies were mostly replaced with new constituencies. The Dunfermline West Westminster constituency was merged into Dunfermline and West Fife.

The Holyrood constituency of Dunfermline West was one of five Mid Scotland and Fife constituencies covering the Fife council area, the others being Dunfermline East, Fife Central, Fife North East and Kirkcaldy. All were entirely within the council area.

Dunfermline West covered a south-western portion of the council area, west of Dunfermline East.

Description of the constituency

The constituency included all of the town of Dunfermline and some land on the north bank of the Firth of Forth.

Historically, the town was once Scotland's capital city. Eight kings are buried there, amongst them Robert the Bruce. Today, textiles, engineering and synthetic material manufacturing are the primary industries. The constituency also contains rural areas.

Like its neighbour, Dunfermline East, the constituency was one of Labour’s safest seats in Scotland. In Westminster elections voters in the area elected Labour Members of Parliament (MPs) continuously from 1935 until 2006. In a 2006 by-election, however, the Liberal Democrats won the equivalent Westminster seat, and they proceeded to win the Holyrood seat in 2007 as well, calling into question Labour's future as a dominant party in the area.

Member of the Scottish Parliament

Election Member Party
1999 Scott Barrie Labour
2007 Jim Tolson Liberal Democrats
2011 Constituency abolished; see Dunfermline

Election results

2007 Scottish Parliament election: Dunfermline West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Democrats Jim Tolson 9,952 33.7 +19.3
Labour Scott Barrie 9,476 32.1 −2.2
SNP Len Woods 7,296 24.7 +7.3
Conservative Peter Lyburn 2,363 8.0 +0.6
Scottish Voice Susan Archibald 238 1.5 New
Majority 476 1.6 N/A
Turnout 29,252 51.8 +5.0
Liberal Democrats gain from Labour Swing +10.8
2003 Scottish Parliament election: Dunfermline West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Scott Barrie 8,644 34.3 −9.9
Independent Campaign for Local Hospital Services David Wishart 4,584 18.2 New
SNP Brian Goodall 4,372 17.4 −10.4
Liberal Democrats Jim Tolson 3,636 14.4 −3.8
Conservative Jim Mackie 1,868 7.4 −2.3
Scottish Socialist Andy Jackson 923 3.7 New
Independent Alastair Harper 714 2.8 New
Independent Damien Quigg 459 1.8 New
Majority 4,080 16.1 −0.3
Turnout 25,240 46.8
Labour hold Swing
1999 Scottish Parliament election: Dunfermline West
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour Scott Barrie 13,560 44.21 N/A
SNP Douglas Chapman 8,539 27.84 N/A
Liberal Democrats Elizabeth Harris 5,591 18.23 N/A
Conservative James Mackie 2,981 9.72 N/A
Majority 5,021 16.37 N/A
Turnout 30,671 N/A
Labour win (new seat)

Footnotes

  1. See The 5th Periodical Report of the Boundary Commission for Scotland Archived September 21, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
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