s. The constituency was created for the
1997 general election. Notional calculations indicated that it would be one of the safest
Conservative seats in the country and so the Conservative nomination was much sought. In the run-up to the 1997 election the nomination was initially won by
Nicholas Scott, MP for
the previous Chelsea constituency, but following allegations of alcoholism he was deselected. The nomination was subsequently secured by
Alan Clark, the former minister and diarist who was seeking to return to the Commons after standing down at the
1992 general election. Clark was elected, but died of brain cancer in 1999 after only two years in office. As a safe Conservative seat in London there was much speculation that former
Defence Secretary and widely predicted future Conservative leader
Michael Portillo would seek to return to the Commons after losing the
Enfield Southgate constituency in the 1997 election. Portillo was elected in
the subsequent by-election and became
Shadow Chancellor but his subsequent career stalled and he crashed out of the
2001 Conservative leadership election and returned to the backbenches. In 2003 he announced his intention to retire from politics at the next general election to pursue a career in the media. Another former Cabinet Minister, who had also lost his seat in 1997,
Malcolm Rifkind, was nominated for the seat in Portillo's stead and elected at the
2005 general election. In October 2007, amid speculation that then-Prime Minister
Gordon Brown was about to call a snap
general election, former
Labour minister
Tony Benn announced that he wanted to come out of retirement and return to the Commons, offering himself to the Kensington and Chelsea
constituency Labour Party to challenge Malcolm Rifkind. Ultimately, however, no election was held that year, and the Kensington and Chelsea seat was abolished for the 2010 election. == Members of Parliament ==