Article snapshot taken from[REDACTED] with creative commons attribution-sharealike license.
Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat.
We can research this topic together.
As part of the nation-wide ] which began in the year 2011, the Boundary Commission for England recommends dividing the Burnley constituency into two halves. One seat would be configured as 'Burnley North and Nelson', incorporating the Pendle borough with Burnley town centre; the second would be styled 'Burnley South and Accrington' and combine most of those two towns with the surrounding rural villages<ref> Boundary Commission for England<ref>.
As part of the nation-wide ] which began in the year 2011, the Boundary Commission for England recommends dividing the Burnley constituency into two halves. One seat would be configured as 'Burnley North and Nelson', incorporating the Pendle borough with Burnley town centre; the second would be styled 'Burnley South and Accrington' and combine most of those two towns with the surrounding rural villages<ref> Boundary Commission for England</ref>.
The seat was created in 1868. Since the Second World War, it was generally a safe Labour seat, but the Conservative Party came within 770 votes of taking the seat in 1983, and it swung heavily to the Liberal Democrats in 2005, and following controversy regarding outgoing MP Kitty Ussher's personal expenses, they gained the seat in 2010.
The review of parliamentary representation in Lancashire by the Boundary Commission for England in the 2000s proposed no change to the boundaries of the Burnley seat. The seat remains coterminous with the boundaries of the borough of Burnley.
Proposed changes
As part of the nation-wide Sixth Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies which began in the year 2011, the Boundary Commission for England recommends dividing the Burnley constituency into two halves. One seat would be configured as 'Burnley North and Nelson', incorporating the Pendle borough with Burnley town centre; the second would be styled 'Burnley South and Accrington' and combine most of those two towns with the surrounding rural villages.