All to play for: How voters in Shefford, Chicksands and Clifton will play significant part in helping Hitchin decide its next MP

By Will Durant - Local Democracy Reporter

4th Nov 2023 | Local News

Voters in Shefford, Chicksands and Clifton, who have just been to the polls, will help Hitchin decide its MP at the next general election.

The Hitchin and Harpenden seat, which will be split up after the boundary review, is represented by Bim Afolami MP who finished 6,895 votes ahead of the Liberal Democrats at the last general election.

In Hitchin and Harpenden, Labour finished third at the last general election, 10,865 votes behind the second-place Liberal Democrats.

The new Hitchin-with-Shefford seat will take in local government wards represented by 11 Conservative, 10 Labour and seven Lib Dem councillors.

Mr Afolami MP, the Conservative incumbent, has said he is "fully committed to representing Shefford, Chicksands, and Clifton with the same dedication" as "shown in Hitchin and Harpenden for the past six years".

He said: "I will continue to be an accessible MP, always working towards enhancing the well-being of our local community."

Mr Afolami has a six-point plan for Hitchin and the surrounding villages – including opposing Luton Airport expansion, delivering more jobs and apprenticeships, improving healthcare and opening up an eastern entrance to Hitchin's Thameslink station.

Lib Dems Hitchin candidate is Chris Lucas

As reported by Nub News the Liberal Democrats have chosen Hitchin Priory councillor Chris Lucas to stand at the next election.

"It's all to play for," Cllr Lucas said.

"There are no guarantees at all that Labour – or the Conservatives – are going to win the next Hitchin poll.

"We are going to be taking this very seriously."

Cllr Lloyd pointed out the Liberal Democrats almost doubled their vote share between 2019 and 2023 in Mid Bedfordshire – from 12.6 to 23.1 per cent.

He said: "The new Hitchin seat makes sense because when you have knocked on doors in Shefford, Clifton, Chicksands, Meppershall, people always say they are closer to and have more affinity with Hitchin than they do Bedford or Luton.

"The local issues are the same either side of the border – the NHS particularly how hard it is to get an appointment at the doctors and dentists and the cost of living crisis is never far away from the conversations most people are having."

Voters in Hitchin are no strangers to headline-making MPs

Under its old boundaries, Robert Cecil represented the town in Westminster between 1911 and 1923.

The Conservative minister and later Nobel Peace Prize winner was one of the architects of the League of Nations – the United Nations' predecessor.

Shirley Williams represented the constituency between 1964 and 1974 – her first of three stints in the Commons.

Baroness Williams was the town's last Labour MP, but she left the party to become one of the "Gang of Four" who set up the Social Democratic Party (SDP) in 1981.

Labour activists have made Hitchin's corner of the home counties a headline-making battleground this year.

Think tank Labour Together said that if Keir Starmer wants to pick up the keys to Number 10, his party must win over the "Stevenage Woman" – mums-of-two in their 40s who live in a town or suburb and feel "Westminster politics has delivered too little, for too long".

Stevenage is a bellwether seat and voters in the New Town have never returned an opposition MP in the constituency's 40-year history.

Shefford's last Mid Bedfordshire MP wears a red rosette – and the Labour Party has said it is ready for "a competition" on the Herts and Beds border.

Alistair Strathern represents the town on the Labour benches in Westminster. He overturned the 24,664-vote majority which former Conservative minister Nadine Dorries secured in 2019. His win on October 19 means the future Hitchin constituency, which will cover Shefford, is part-red, part-blue.

Other parts of the new constituency are represented by the Conservatives.

Stotfold's MP Richard Fuller enjoyed a majority of 24,283 in his North East Bedfordshire patch almost five years ago.

Labour councillor Ian Albert has claimed the new Hitchin seat is now a "classic Tory-Labour marginal".

He said: "I think it will be a competition, but only Labour can beat Bim Afolami in this seat and this is absolutely clear from what was an absolutely incredible result in Bedfordshire."

Cllr Albert said the Liberal Democrats could be onto a winner in Harpenden, which will join a new seat with Berkhamsted and Tring, "but not in Hitchin".

The Hitchin Bearton councillor claimed door-to-door data, which party candidates collect when they canvass in their neighbourhoods, suggests Hitchin is going to take in "the parts of Mid Bedfordshire that voted strongly for Labour".

He said: "Most people recognise and know from looking at their wallets and bank accounts that they are poorer than they were 13 years ago.

"We are focused on resolving the housing crisis, resolving the problems in our schools in Hertfordshire because we have fantastic teachers who I know are struggling to afford the basics in their classrooms, resolving the lack of a plan for social care, resolving the lack of places for children with special educational needs and disabilities.

"We think Hitchin will have its first Labour MP for 50 years – the first since Shirley Williams."

The next general election will take place before the end of January 2025.

Read Nub News for our forthcoming extensive, in-depth coverage on the battle for the Hitchin Parliamentary seat.

LIKE/FOLLOW HITCHIN NUB NEWS FOR ALL OUR LATEST POLITICAL REPORTING

     

New hitchin Jobs Section Launched!!
Vacancies updated hourly!!
Click here: hitchin jobs

Share:

Related Articles

Students from all three of Hitchin's Secondary Schools attended
Local News

Hitchin school students mark UK Parliament Week

Hitchin Nub News is delighted to provide a platform for expert financial commentary through our innovative partnership with Lyndhurst Financial Management
Local News

Hitchin Financial Experts explain how the recent Budget impacts residents of the town

Sign-Up for our FREE Newsletter

We want to provide hitchin with more and more clickbait-free local news.
To do that, we need a loyal newsletter following.
Help us survive and sign up to our FREE weekly newsletter.

Already subscribed? Thank you. Just press X or click here.
We won't pass your details on to anyone else.
By clicking the Subscribe button you agree to our Privacy Policy.