Major events The
Redistribution of Seats Act 1885 provided that the Constituency was to consist of- • "No. 2 Ward of Battersea Parish, • No. 3 Ward of Battersea Parish, and • So much of No. 4 Ward of Battersea Parish as lies to the north of a line drawn along the centre of Battersea Rise, and to the west of a line drawn along the centre of the St. John's Road." Battersea constituency was originally created in 1885. From 1892 to 1918 the seat was held by trade union leader
John Burns who served as a Minister (of the Crown) in the Liberal Cabinets of Sir
Henry Campbell-Bannerman and
H. H. Asquith from 1905 until 1914. The constituency was split in 1918 into: •
Battersea North, which included the cheap housing accompanying
Battersea Power Station and railway-works focused Nine Elms; it saw gradual replacement in its lifespan to overcrowded terraces, and had only four years of a Conservative MP (from 1931), gradually becoming a very safe Labour seat from 1935 until 1979. •
Battersea South had average-middle income and few pockets of
slum clearance, and was far more marginal than its northern counterpart. It saw 38 years of a Conservative MP, lastly from 1959 to 1964, without electing one during new latter-day Conservative governments which came to power in 1970 and 1979, held by the Labour Party, though mostly by narrow majorities. The two seats have been rejoined since 1983, such that some areas of Battersea South became part of the adjoining
Tooting seat.
Alf Dubs (Labour), before the election the incumbent for Battersea South, won Battersea in 1983. Conservative
John Bowis won in the next elections, 1987 and 1992.
Martin Linton, a Labour politician, took it back in 1997 and held the seat until 2010, when it was recaptured by the Conservatives'
Jane Ellison. The constituency's bellwether status was broken in 2017 when
Marsha de Cordova won for Labour. She retained the seat in 2019 and again in 2024, when she achieved a records majority of 25.6%.
Minor events In 2001, the candidate T.E Barber used the candidate description "No fruit out of context party", and advocated the end of, amongst other crimes against food,
pineapples on pizza. In the book
Things Can Only Get Better: Eighteen Miserable Years in the Life of a Labour Supporter,
John O'Farrell describes his experiences of being the secretary of Queenstown Branch of the Battersea Labour party, during which time the branch suffered a net loss at every local election and, in 1987, lost their MP,
Alf Dubs. Benefiting from an exclusivity arrangement, the old
Battersea North was one of two seats in London to have had a
Communist MP:
Shapurji Saklatvala represented the area from 1922 to 1929. A wealthy aristocratic Indian, he was among the five Communists elected to the national chamber in its history and was the third of the young Socialist Labour/Communist/Labour parties from an ethnic minority background. At first, Saklatvala had local Labour party support and was also a member of that party but then stood as a Communist in 1924 with local Labour party backing. The head office of the less radical Labour party mandated an official Labour candidate stand against him in 1929. The
Battersea Labour Club (a drinking club not directly connected with the political party) had a notice on its notice board up until the 1980s banning Communists from admission to the club. ==Members of Parliament==