First creation The seat was created in 1918 and for the next four years was served by Sir
Gordon Hewart KC, who resigned to become
Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales. In 1950 the area was divided between
Leicester North East and
Leicester South East.
Second (current) creation The constituency was re-created in 1974. ;Summary of results Leicester East has been won by the
Labour Party's candidate in 12 of the 14 elections since it was re-created. Its MP from 1987 to 2019,
Keith Vaz, won an absolute majority of votes from the
1992 general election onward. It had been narrowly won by
Conservative Party candidate
Peter Bruinvels (a
lay canon) at the height of his party's popularity in
1983. The following election saw Vaz regain the seat for Labour; he held it at every election thereafter, from
1997 onward always winning by margins of over 29% and 13,000 votes, until he stood down at the
2019 general election. The result in
2015 made the constituency the 37th-safest of Labour's 232 seats by percentage majority. Vaz won his highest majority, 22,428 votes (42.8%), in
2017. In 2019 Labour held the seat with a substantially reduced majority of 6,019, down from 22,428 – a swing of 15%. The constituency was the sole gain by the Conservatives at the
2024 general election, when
Shivani Raja was elected with 31.1% of the vote. ;Opposition parties The Conservative Party candidate has been runner-up in every election save for Bruinvels' win in 1983 and Raja's victory in 2024. The candidate of
UKIP took third place in 2015, for the first time; her 2010 counterpart had won 1.5% of the vote, the party not having previously stood in the constituency. The pro-UKIP swing between the 2010 and 2015 elections, of 7.4%, was less than the national average of 9.5%. Susan Cooper was 1.8% away from second place in 2005, giving the best result of a
Liberal Democrat to date, attracting just under a fifth of the vote. ;Turnout Turnout in the recreated seat has ranged between 78.7% in 1992 and 61.0% in 2024. == Boundaries ==