;Prominent frontbenchers The unit is heavily associated with the controversial Conservative politician
Enoch Powell who was MP for the seat from 1950 until 1974, when he departed to the
Ulster Unionist Party. It was during this time that he served in
Edward Heath's
shadow cabinet, from which he was dismissed in 1968 after his controversial
Rivers of Blood speech in which he predicted severe civil unrest if mass immigration from the
Commonwealth continued. This speech was reportedly the result of Powell's meeting with a woman in the constituency who was the last white person living in her street. He was succeeded by fellow Conservative
Nicholas Budgen, who held the seat until 1997. Budgen is best known as one of the
Maastricht Rebels of the mid-1990s. ;Summary of results Wolverhampton South West returned
Conservative until a
Labour candidate gained it in their 1997 landslide. Budgen was defeated in the
1997 election by Labour's
Jenny Jones, a landslide victory for the party. As the next general election loomed, she announced that she would not be seeking re-election. From the
2001 general election, the constituency was represented by
Rob Marris of the Labour Party for nine years until he lost it in the
2010 general election to
Paul Uppal of the Conservative Party, by a margin of 691 votes. Marris regained the seat from Uppal at the
2015 general election. The 2015 result gave the seat the 14th-smallest majority of Labour's 232 seats by percentage of majority. In
2017, despite Marris standing down after 11 (non-consecutive) years as an MP and Uppal standing for a third time, the new Labour candidate,
Eleanor Smith, more than doubled the Labour majority. In 2019, riding the surge from
Boris Johnson's Conservative Party, Stuart Anderson was elected as the new Conservative MP for the constituency. ;Other parties' candidates Of the four other candidates standing in 2015, the
UKIP candidate kept his
deposit by winning more than 5% of the vote, in the year before the
2016 EU referendum. He failed to do so in the 2017 election. ;Turnout Turnout has ranged from 87.2% in 1950 to 62.1% in 2001 and in 2005. == Members of Parliament ==