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Wales Results

Welsh Assembly Results
Party Welsh Labour Plaid Cymru Welsh Conservative UKIP Wales Welsh Liberal Democrat
Seats 29 12 11 7 1
Change −1 +1 −3 +7 −4

After 60 of 60 seats Results in full

Latest headlines

  1. Labour win 29 seats - but fall short of a majority
  2. UKIP wins its first seats in the Assembly
  3. Plaid Cymru leader Leanne Wood ousts Labour in Rhondda
  4. - see party vote share by constituency across Wales

Carmarthen West and South Pembrokeshire

Welsh Assembly constituency Region - Mid and West Wales
Result: CON HOLD

Scoreboard

Party Candidates Votes % Net percentage change in seats
Party

CON

Welsh Conservative

Candidates Angela Burns Votes 10,355 35.4% Net percentage change in seats −0.4
Party

LAB

Welsh Labour

Candidates Marc Tierney Votes 6,982 23.9% Net percentage change in seats −6.6
Party

PC

Plaid Cymru

Candidates Simon Thomas Votes 5,459 18.7% Net percentage change in seats −11.1
Party

UKIP

UKIP Wales

Candidates Allan Brookes Votes 3,300 11.3% Net percentage change in seats +11.3
Party

ISW

Independent Save Withybush Save Lives

Candidates Chris Overton Votes 1,638 5.6% Net percentage change in seats +5.6
Party

GRN

Wales Green Party

Candidates Valerie Bradley Votes 804 2.7% Net percentage change in seats +2.7
Party

LD

Welsh Liberal Democrat

Candidates Alistair Cameron Votes 699 2.4% Net percentage change in seats −1.5

Turnout and Majority

Welsh Conservative Majority

3,373

Turnout

51.2%

Vote share

Party %
Welsh Conservative 35.4
Welsh Labour 23.9
Plaid Cymru 18.7
UKIP Wales 11.3
Independent Save Withybush Save Lives 5.6
OTHERS 5.1

Vote share change since 2011

−%
+%
UKIP Wales
+11.3
Independent Save Withybush Save Lives
+5.6
Welsh Conservative
−0.4
Welsh Labour
−6.6
Plaid Cymru
−11.1

Constituency Profile

The constituency stretches from Carmarthen in the east, to the southern tip of the Haven waterway on the Pembrokeshire coast.

The traditional seaside resorts of Tenby and Saundersfoot are in the constituency, as is Laugharne, which was once home to the poet Dylan Thomas.The rate of economic inactivity at the end of 2014 was 27% and higher than the average for Wales. The proportion of self-employed workers here at the end of 2014 was 11.8% - higher than the Welsh and British averages. At 11.9% the proportion of people with no qualifications is also higher than the Welsh and British averages. Fewer than 1,504 votes have separated first and second place since 1999 in a seat which has been a three way battle between Labour, the Conservatives and Plaid Cymru. Labour held the seat in the first two Assembly elections. In 2007 the Conservatives won with a majority of 98, which increased to 1,504 in 2011.

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