Origin This seat was created by the
Redistribution of Seats Act 1885. This zone had been in the
East Sussex constituency, which in turn had been created with two seats by the
Reform Act 1832 as a division of the 13th century-founded
Sussex parliamentary county which had two seats (returned two
knights of the shire).
From safe seat to marginal seat With the exception of the landslide
Liberal victory in
1906, the seat returned Conservative Party candidates at every election from its creation in 1885 until 1987. The seat in the 1930s saw three unopposed candidates: in 1932, March 1935 and
November 1935. The large rural vote within the seat, until boundary changes in 1983, resulted in strong Conservative support – rural English voters tended to be richer and more right-wing (anti-
socialist, pro-Empire before 1960s,
pro-Established Church and pro-defence) compared to other voters. The seat was first won by the
Liberal Democrats at the 1990 by-election. Although it was recaptured by the Conservatives at the subsequent
general election in 1992 and held until 2010, it became a
marginal, or swing seat, from 1990 onwards, being closely fought for between the two locally dominant parties. In the nine elections from 1990 to 2019, the winning majority was never more than 10%, and the seat has changed hands between the Conservative and Liberal Democrat candidates at each of the five elections from 2010 to 2024 inclusive.
Recent results A Liberal Democrat,
Stephen Lloyd, regained the seat at the
2010 general election, beating incumbent Conservative MP
Nigel Waterson who had won the previous four elections. The 2010 result saw Eastbourne return the sixth-lowest
Labour share of the vote of the 631 candidates who stood at the election, with only 4.8%. In 2015, the seat was won by
Caroline Ansell by just 773 votes, making it the 9th most marginal of the Conservative Party's 331 seats, by share of the vote. Ansell held the seat from 2015 to 2017 and again from 2019 to 2024, in both cases beating Lloyd, who held it from 2010 to 2015 and again from 2017 to 2019. In 2024, the seat was once again recaptured for the Liberal Democrats by
Josh Babarinde, this time with a healthy majority of 26.8%. This made 2024 the first election since the constituency's creation that a Conservative candidate was not within 10% of the winning vote. == Boundaries ==