Belfast West has historically been the most
nationalist of Belfast's four constituencies. The constituency is largely made of a long, slender, belt along the
Falls Road and its suburban extensions, with three of the five wards from the staunchly
unionist Shankill area now something of a bolt-on, with a several kilometre (miles) long
peace line dividing them from the rest of the constituency. There is also a smaller
Protestant enclave at Suffolk. The tenor of the constituency is largely working class and in the 1991 census it was one of only twenty constituencies where the majority of housing was still state-owned. Although there are now large pockets of middle-class housing in
Andersonstown and other suburban parts of the seat. Closer to the centre public-sector terraced housing, both
Victorian and high quality modern housing, predominates, while in the suburbs, leafy pockets are scattered among post-War housing estates such as
Lenadoon and
Twinbrook. For twenty years, the Westminster constituency was consistently held by the
Ulster Unionist Party but always had strong
Labour movement sympathies. In the
1923 general election, the
Belfast Labour Party came within 1,000 votes of taking the seat. A
by-election in 1943 was won by
Jack Beattie, standing for the
Northern Ireland Labour Party. For the next twenty-three years the seat would regularly change from unionist to nationalist/labour, with the latter represented by a variety of parties. In the
1966 general election the seat was won by
Gerry Fitt of the
Republican Labour Party. Later in 1970 he left that party to become a founder and first leader of the
Social Democratic and Labour Party. In the
February 1974 general election, Belfast West was the only constituency in Northern Ireland to elect an MP supporting the
Sunningdale Agreement. Fitt's majority was a narrow 2,180 votes in February 1974 primarily due to the candidature of Albert Price, father of the
Price sisters who were in prison in England for
Provisional IRA–related offences. However the candidacy of a UVF-backed candidate in October 1974 and a declining Unionist vote in 1979 led to him increasing his majorities in subsequent years. He retained the seat for the next nine years but increasingly distanced himself from nationalist groups and in late 1979 he left the SDLP. He sat as an independent socialist but lost his seat in the
1983 general election when it was won by
Gerry Adams of
Sinn Féin. The Unionist vote which had still been at 30% in the 1982 Assembly elections was cut to 20% as a result of the 1983 boundary changes which, while adding the loyalist Glencairn area, removed the
Donegall Road,
Sandy Row and added the Nationalist Lenadoon area. Adams's share of the vote, at 37%, was short of a majority and he achieved victory only due to Fitt and the SDLP candidate splitting the non–Sinn Féin vote. At the
1987 general election Adams held his seat, but lost it in the
1992 general election amidst a strong
tactical voting campaign in favour of
Joe Hendron of the
Social Democratic and Labour Party by unionists in the Shankill Road area of the constituency. After the election a constituent, Maura McCrory, lodged an election petition challenging the result. The
election court reported Hendron personally guilty of the illegal practice of failing to deliver a declaration verifying the return of his election expenses, and guilty through his election agent of failing to deliver a verified return of election expenses within 35 days, exceeding the maximum spending by £782.02, and failing to pay all the expenses within 28 days. Hendron's agent was also reported personally guilty of distributing election material without the name and address of the printer and publisher. The Judges granted both Hendron and his agent relief from their findings, on the grounds that the law had been broken through inadvertence; they therefore certified that Hendron had been duly elected. In the mid-1990s the Boundary Commission originally suggested removing the Shankill wards from the constituency and replacing them with about half of the
Belfast South constituency, namely the six wards of the Balmoral Electoral Area and the Shaftesbury ward. The subsequent local enquiries were bitterly contested with the SDLP favouring the commission's original proposals which would add an area where Sinn Féin had little support (and aside from the Shaftesbury ward, had not contested in council elections), while Sinn Féin argued instead for adding the mostly republican Twinbrook and Poleglass estates (where they were outpolling the SDLP in council elections by a margin of 3 to 1). With all parties except the SDLP supporting an option of retaining four seats in Belfast the latter option became the commissions final proposals and the Shankill wards remained in the constituency. The boundary changes, coupled with the
Irish Republican Army (IRA) ceasefire, meant that support for Sinn Féin in the constituency soared to new levels and in all elections held in the seat since 1996 they have taken over 50% of the vote. In
1997 Adams regained the seat and held it in
2001,
2005 and
2010. In 2011, Adams decided to stand in the
2011 Irish general election and vacated his seat. In the
2016 referendum to leave the European Union, the
constituency voted remain by 74.1%. ==Boundaries==