
It’s all change for the General Election this year in Cumbria – because you may have swapped constituencies without realising.
The Boundary Commission shook up the way the county is divided when it comes to MP representation – and the existing six constituencies have now become five, with different footprints.
Rules require that every constituency in England – apart from the Isle of Wight – has an electorate that is no smaller than 69,724.
Constituencies had become unbalanced, prompting the review, which began in 2021. Its recommendations were accepted last year and around 10% of constituencies have no change to their boundaries across England.
Parliament has 650 MPs in total – and that number has not changed following the shake-up. But what does it mean for you?
Here’s Cumbria Crack’s interactive guide to the new-look constituencies – slide the red bar to see how where you live has changed.
How has Carlisle changed?
Candidates for Carlisle
John Stevenson, of The Conservative Party, won the 2019 election with a majority of 8,319. The electorate for the former footprint of the constituency was 65,105.
The new constituency has an estimated electorate of 78,492.
How has the rest of the county changed?
We’ve created maps for the rest of the county. You can see them by clicking on the constituency name below: