Wessex Regionalist Party

Wessex Regionalists
Leader Colin Bex
Founded 1974
Headquarters 55 Brookside
Wokingham
Berkshire
Youth wing None
Ideology Wessex Regionalism,
Wessex Devolution,
Civic nationalism,
Social democracy,
Environmental protection
Agrarianism
Localism
Political position Centre-left
European affiliation None
International affiliation None
Colours Green, Red and Gold
Wessex Councils
Website
wessexregionalists.info

The Wessex Regionalist Party is a minor political party in the United Kingdom, that seeks a degree of legislative and administrative home rule for Wessex, an area in the south and south-west of England, loosely based on the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of that name. It is also known, less formally, as the Wessex Regionalists, the name under which it usually campaigns.

The party has contested Wessex-area constituencies in most elections since it was established, but with little success. In the 2015 general election, the party contested one seat, Witney, and received 110 votes. It has, however, secured representation at parish council level.

According to its Electoral Commission records, it had income of £100 (including £95 subscriptions), and expenditure of £35.52, for the year 2004, in which it contested no elections. In the year 2008, it had an income of £153, and an expenditure of £25.[1]

History

The party was formed by Alexander Thynn, then styled Viscount Weymouth in 1974 in response to growing demands for home rule in both Scotland and Wales. After a number of years' informal existence, the party organisation was constituted in 1981. The first President (party leader) was Weymouth; subsequent Presidents have included Anthony Mockler and John Banks. The current President is Colin Bex.

The party's archives for the 1970s and 1980s are deposited at the University of Bristol.

How the party defines Wessex

The party originally used Thomas Hardy's definition of Wessex as consisting of the ancient counties of Berkshire, Devon, Dorset, Hampshire (which includes the Isle of Wight), Somerset and Wiltshire, but recently accepted a proposal to add Gloucestershire and Oxfordshire to this list, bringing their definition into line with that used by the Wessex Constitutional Convention and the Wessex Society. The areas now constituting Gloucestershire and Oxfordshire did not form part of the kingdom of the West Saxons, but were for a time ruled by that entity under its earlier name of the Gewisse. Subsequently, the areas came under Mercian control and today they are claimed by movements for autonomy in both Wessex and Mercia.

The party opposed abandoned plans by the British government to give South West England some form of elected assembly along the lines of the London Assembly and continues to oppose current administrative regional boundaries. These place the heart of Wessex, Hampshire, including its traditional capital, Winchester, in the separate South East region, as well as bisect the Cotswolds Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. They also divide two major transport corridors, the M4 corridor and the South Coast Metropole, which the party argues has adverse economic effects that further regionalisation on the basis of current boundaries would increase.

Goals

The party's overarching goal is to secure self-government for Wessex within the United Kingdom, on a similar basis to Scotland and Wales. Its constitutional policy document, The Statute of Wessex,[2] first published in 1982, detailed those powers which the party believed should be devolved to a Wessex parliament or "witan", with between 150 and 230 members. The list, reproduced below, is modelled largely on the powers which were exercised by the devolved administration in Northern Ireland between 1922 and 1974. Current policy is that the powers devolved should be "broadly" those of the Scottish Parliament, though the list below remains the only comprehensive statement.

The party has actively participated in the Wessex Constitutional Convention since its establishment. The party's political ambitions are roughly equivalent to those of Mebyon Kernow and the Cornish Constitutional Convention's proposals for the future of Cornwall.

During the 1990s, the party codified its fundamental aims and principles in the form of a 'Charter', which in its most recent form lists six:

Westminster election candidates

Election Candidate Constituency Votes[3]
1974 (February) Viscount Weymouth Westbury 521
1979 Colin Bex Windsor & Maidenhead 251
Henrietta Rous Devon North 50
Gwendoline Ewen Dorset West 192
Michael Mahoney Winchester 392
Viscount Weymouth Wells 155
Anthony Mockler Devizes 142
Tom Thatcher Westbury 1,905
1983 Anthony Mockler Wantage 183
Colin Bex Windsor & Maidenhead 68
Henrietta Rous Devon West & Torridge 113
David Fox Dorset North 294
Simon Winkworth Winchester 155
Adam Stout Wansdyke 213
David Robins Woodspring 177
Gwendoline Ewen Devizes 234
Maya Kemp Salisbury 182
John Banks Westbury 131
1997 Colin Bex Portsmouth North 72
2001 Colin Bex Wells 167
Henrietta Rous Winchester 66
2005 Colin Bex Dorset South 83
2010 Colin Bex Witney 62
2013(b) Colin Bex Eastleigh 30
2015 Colin Bex Witney 110

European election candidates

Election Candidate Constituency Votes

1979

Viscount Weymouth Wessex 1,706
1984 Henrietta Rous Devon 659
1989 Gwendoline Ewen Bristol 1,017
Henrietta Rous Devon 385
Anthony Mockler Somerset and Dorset West 930

Local Elections

In 2016 Wessex Regionalist candidate Nick Xylas unsuccessfully contested the Eastville ward in the Bristol City Council elections gaining 62 votes (0.85%).

References

Notes

  1. "Statement of Accounts for Wessex Regionalist Party for the year ending 2008" (PDF). Electoral Commission. 28 May 2009. Retrieved 26 March 2010.
  2. Wessex Regionalists (1996)
  3. Banks (1986)

Sources

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