Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

United Kingdom general election, 1997

Encyclopedia : U : UN : UNI : United Kingdom general election, 1997


1992 election
1997 election
2001 election

The UK general election, 1997 was held on 1 May 1997. The election brought the first change in UK Government for 18 years. The Labour Party led by Tony Blair defeated the incumbent Conservative Party by a huge margin (with 66% of the seats in the House of Commons), causing a major change to the political landscape of the United Kingdom. Northern England, Scotland and Wales became a Labour heartlands once again, Labour ousted the Conservatives in the Midlands, Yorkshire, London and East Anglia in terms of votes. The Liberal Democrats made big gains in Western England and the Conservatives were relegated to South West and South East England.

Overall picture

The election was described as a Labour "landslide" by the media, owing to the margin of their victory. Labour won their largest parliamentary majority (179) to date, and the Liberal Democrats more than doubled their number of seats. It was a disaster for the governing Conservative Party. They lost all seats outside England, and several prominent members of the party were not re-elected, including:

The Referendum Party, which sought a referendum on Britain's relationship with the European Union, came fourth in terms of votes, although it did not win any seats. It won over 800,000 votes, and may have taken some votes from the Conservatives. The next six parties stood only in either Scotland, Northern Ireland or Wales; in order, they were the Scottish National Party, the Ulster Unionist Party, the Social Democratic and Labour Party, Plaid Cymru, Sinn Féin, and the Democratic Unionist Party.

An independent, Martin Bell, won the Tatton seat, where incumbent Conservative MP Neil Hamilton was facing charges of having taken cash for questions, but was determined to stand nonetheless. The Labour and Liberal Democrat candidates withdrew in order for Bell to contest the seat.

The result declared for the constituency of Winchester showed a margin of victory of just 2 votes for the Liberal Democrats. The defeated Conservative candidate challenged the result on the grounds that errors by election officials (failures to stamp certain votes) had changed the result, forcing a by-election on 20 November which was won by the Liberal Democrats with a much larger majority, causing much recrimination in the Conservative Party about the decision to challenge the original result.

Leaders

100px
Tony Blair,
Labour
100px
John Major,
Conservative
100px
Paddy Ashdown,
Lib Dems

Results

The election was fought under new boundaries, with an additional 8 seats across the UK. Changes listed here are from the notional 1992 result had it been fought on those boundaries. These notional results were used by all media organisations at the time.

|}

Total votes cast: 31,286,284. All parties with more than 500 votes shown. Labour total includes New Labour and "Labour Time for Change" candidates; Conservative total includes candidates in Northern Ireland (excluded in some lists) and "Loyal Conservative" candidate.

The Popular Unionist MP elected in 1992 died in 1995 and the party folded shortly afterwards.

See also

Manifestos

External links

United Kingdom general elections

1802 | 1806 | 1807 | 1812 | 1818 | 1820 | 1826 | 1830 | 1831 | 1832 | 1835 | 1837 | 1841 | 1847 | 1852 | 1857 | 1859 | 1865 | 1868 | 1874 | 1880 | 1885 | 1886 | 1892 | 1895 | 1900 | 1906 | 1910 (Jan) | 1910 (Dec) | 1918 | 1922 | 1923 | 1924 | 1929 | 1931 | 1935 | 1945 | 1950 | 1951 | 1955 | 1959 | 1964 | 1966 | 1970 | 1974 (Feb) | 1974 (Oct) | 1979 | 1983 | 1987 | 1992 | 1997 | 2001 | 2005 | Future: 54th

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: