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Welwyn Hatfield (UK Parliament constituency)
・ Welwyn Hatfield Borough Council
・ Welwyn Hatfield Borough Council election, 2007
・ Welwyn Hatfield Borough Council election, 2008
・ Welwyn Hatfield Borough Council election, 2012
・ Welwyn Hatfield Borough Council election, 2014
・ Welwyn Hatfield Borough Council election, 2015
・ Welwyn Hatfield Borough Council elections
・ Welwyn Hatfield Borough Council elections 2012
・ Welwyn Hatfield District Council election, 1998
・ Welwyn Hatfield District Council election, 1999
・ Welwyn Hatfield District Council election, 2000
・ Welwyn Hatfield District Council election, 2002
・ Welwyn Hatfield District Council election, 2003
・ Welwyn Hatfield District Council election, 2004


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Welwyn Hatfield (UK Parliament constituency) : ウィキペディア英語版
Welwyn Hatfield (UK Parliament constituency)

Welwyn Hatfield is a constituency represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2005 by Grant Shapps, a Conservative.
== History==
The seat was called for by the second periodic review of Westminster seats (the first periodic review led by the Boundary Commission was in 1945 and followed that of the Representation of the People Act 1918). Its changes were made in time for the first 1974 general election which resulted in a temporary minority administration on a hung parliament.
;Political history
Despite its short history, the seat has seen two parties serve it, with two Labour periods of representation, during the longer part of the Labour Government 1974-1979 and during the first two terms of the Blair ministry. Other than this the seat has elected a Conservative as its MP.
The present majority more than tripled on the second election of Grant Shapps, in 2010, from a historically breakable (in the constituency) majority of 5,946 votes to the 26th largest Conservative share of the vote,〔(The Electoral Commission ) 2010 results〕 which on standard uniform swing seen in elections since 1931 represents a safe seat.
;Prominent frontbenchers
The first MP ended his term in the Commons as the member for Welwyn Hatfield before which he was Defence Minister from 1970 to 1972 then a Foreign Office Minister until February 1974 - later that year Lord Balniel was awarded a life peerage, accelerating and safeguarding his right to sit in the Lords. The second MP later became the politically neutral Lord Speaker, Baroness Hayman.
Melanie Johnson during five years of the Blair-Brown government was a frontbench minister: Economic Secretary to the Treasury, Minister for Competition and Consumers and the Minister for Public Health.

Grant Shapps was appointed the Minister of State for Housing and Local Government for the first two years of the UK coalition government 2010 before being appointed to chair his party. Following the Conservatives victory in 2015, he was appointed Secretary of State at the Department for International Development.〔https://www.gov.uk/government/people/grant-shapps〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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