Express & Star

Tipton and Wednesbury – all the general election info you need to know

Voters from across Sandwell will go to the polls on Thursday, July 4 to choose who they want to represent them in the House of Commons.

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Polls open at 7am on July 4 with voters given the chance to vote until 10pm to select which party and candidate they want representing them in each of the three Sandwell constituencies – Tipton and Wednesbury, Smethwick, and West Bromwich.

The new seats that are up for grabs in the borough were created following a recent review of parliamentary constituencies.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak announced the snap general election in May which sparked six weeks of campaigning and canvassing from political parties and independent candidates across the political spectrum.

The Conservatives picked up two historic wins in 2019 – winning in the old West Bromwich West and West Bromwich East seats for the first time ever – with Labour’s John Spellar representing the old Warley seat from its inception in 1997.

Who is standing in Tipton and Wednesbury?

  • Shaun Bailey (Conservative)

  • Antonia Bance (Labour)

  • Abdul Husen (Independent)

  • Mohammed Hussain-Billa (Independent)

  • Mark Redding (Green)

  • Mark Rochell (Liberal Democrat)

  • Jack Sabharwal (Reform)

When can I vote? Where can I vote? 

Polls will be open across the borough from 7am on Thursday, July 4 and will close at 10pm. You can vote as long as you are in the queue by 10pm.

The boxes of votes from polling stations from across Sandwell will then be delivered to Tipton Sports Academy where they will be verified and counted.

The location of the polling station where you will be able to cast your vote is named on the polling card delivered to your home address.

You must show an acceptable form of photo ID to vote. This includes a driving licence or passport. You don’t need to take your polling card but you must take ID.

And when will we know the winner?

Sandwell’s three MPs in the new Tipton and Wednesbury, West Bromwich and Smethwick will be declared by the council’s chief executive and borough’s returning officer Shokat Lal in the early hours. The results are expected to be declared at around 3am.

What about the boundary changes in Sandwell? What has happened to West Bromwich West?

Due to boundary changes, your polling station may have changed from the last election so it is best to double-check the stated address before heading off to vote.

The old West Bromwich West seat has been divided up with Great Bridge, Princes End, Tipton Green, Wednesbury North and Wednesbury South forming the new Tipton and Wednesbury boundary.

Friar Park and Hateley Heath move from the old West Bromwich East (now West Bromwich) to help form the new Tipton and Wednesbury seat. The new Tipton and Wednesbury seat also includes the Coseley East ward from the Wolverhampton South East constituency – which was part of the Dudley borough and not Sandwell.

What was the result in Tipton and Wednesbury at the last general election in 2019?

Tipton and Wednesbury is a new constituency created for the 2024 election where it will be used for the first time. The constituency is made up of the majority of the old West Bromwich West seat.

West Bromwich West was a Labour stronghold from its inception in 1974, and was the long-term home of Betty Boothroyd, the country’s first, and to date, only female speaker of the House of Commons, before the Conservatives gained an historic win in 2019. Shaun Bailey was the first Conservative to win in West Bromwich West in its history with 50.5 per cent of the vote – an 11.7 per cent swing to the Tories. Turnout was 53.4 per cent.

He was among a host of Tory candidates snatching a wave of seats across the Black Country, which included neighbouring West Bromwich East, and the rest of the Midlands nearly five years ago – turning several bricks of the ‘red wall’ blue as the Conservatives sailed to victory.