United Kingdom general election, 1997























United Kingdom general election, 1997







← 1992
1 May 1997
2001 →

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elected members →



All 659 seats to the House of Commons
330 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Turnout 71.3% (Decrease6.4%)
















































































 
First party
Second party
Third party
 

Tony Blair WEF (cropped).jpg

John Major 1996.jpg

ASHDOWN Paddy.jpg
Leader

Tony Blair

John Major

Paddy Ashdown
Party

Labour

Conservative

Liberal Democrat
Leader since

21 July 1994

4 July 1995[n 1]

16 July 1988
Leader's seat

Sedgefield

Huntingdon

Yeovil
Last election
271 seats, 34.4%
336 seats, 41.9%
20 seats, 17.8%
Seats before
273
343
18
Seats won

418
165
46
Seat change

Increase145*

Decrease178*

Increase28*
Popular vote

13,518,167
9,600,943
5,242,947
Percentage

43.2%
30.7%
16.8%
Swing

Increase8.8%

Decrease11.2%

Decrease1.0%




UK General Election, 1997.svg
Colours denote the winning party, as shown in the main table of results.

* Indicates boundary change – so this is a nominal figure

Notional 1992 results on new boundaries.


^ Figure does not include the speaker








Prime Minister before election

John Major
Conservative



Appointed Prime Minister

Tony Blair
Labour






















Ring charts of the election results showing popular vote against seats won, coloured in party colours

Seats won in the election (outer ring) against number of votes (inner ring).


The 1997 United Kingdom general election was held on Thursday, 1 May 1997, five years after the previous general election on 9 April 1992, to elect 659 members to the British House of Commons. Under the leadership of Tony Blair, the Labour Party ended its eighteen-year spell in opposition and won the general election with a landslide victory, winning 418 seats, the most seats the party has ever held to date, and the highest proportion of seats held by any party in the post-war era. For the first time since 1931, the outgoing government lost more than half its parliamentary seats in an election.


The election saw a 10.0% swing from Conservative to Labour on a national turnout of 71%, and would be the last national vote where turnout exceeded 70% until the 2016 EU referendum nineteen years later. Blair, as a result, became Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, a position he held until his resignation on 27 June 2007.


Under Blair's leadership, the Labour Party had adopted a more centrist policy platform under the name 'New Labour'. This was seen as moving away from the traditionally more left-wing stance of the Labour Party. Labour made several campaign pledges such as the creation of a National Minimum Wage, devolution referendums for Scotland and Wales and promised greater economic competence than the Conservatives, who were unpopular following the events of Black Wednesday in 1992; from then until 1997, the party consistently trailed behind Labour in the opinion polls.


The Labour Party campaign was ultimately a success and the party returned an unprecedented 418 MPs and began the first of three consecutive terms for Labour in government. However, 1997 was the last general election in which Labour had a net gain of seats until the snap 2017 general election 20 years later. A record number of women were elected to parliament, 120, of whom 101 were Labour MPs. This was in part thanks to Labour's policy of using all-women shortlists.


The Conservative Party was led by incumbent Prime Minister John Major and ran their campaign emphasising falling unemployment and a strong economic recovery following the early 1990s recession. However, a series of scandals,[2] party division over the European Union, the events of Black Wednesday and a desire of the electorate for change after 18 years of Conservative rule all contributed to the Conservatives' worst defeat since 1906, with only 165 MPs elected to Westminster, as well as their lowest share of the vote since 1832.


The party was left with no seats whatsoever in Scotland or Wales, and many key Conservative politicians, including Defence Secretary Michael Portillo, Foreign Secretary Malcolm Rifkind, Trade Secretary Ian Lang, Scottish Secretary Michael Forsyth and former ministers Edwina Currie, Norman Lamont, David Mellor and Neil Hamilton lost their parliamentary seats.


However, future Prime Minister Theresa May was elected to the safe Conservative seat of Maidenhead, and current Speaker John Bercow at Buckingham. Following the defeat, the Conservatives began their longest continuous spell in opposition in the history of the present day (post–Tamworth Manifesto) Conservative Party, and indeed the longest such spell for any incarnation of the Tories/Conservatives since the 1760s, lasting 13 years, including the whole of the 2000s. Throughout this period, their representation in the Commons remained consistently below 200 MPs.


The Liberal Democrats, under Paddy Ashdown, returned 46 MPs to parliament, the most for any third party since 1929 and more than double the number of seats they got in 1992, despite a drop in popular vote, in part due to tactical voting by anti-Conservative voters supporting them in lieu of Labour in areas where that party had little strength. The Scottish National Party (SNP) returned 6 MPs, double their total in 1992.


As with all general elections since the early 1950s, the results were broadcast live on the BBC; the presenters were David Dimbleby, Peter Snow and Jeremy Paxman.[3]




Contents






  • 1 Overview


  • 2 Loss of parliamentary majority


  • 3 Timing


  • 4 Campaign


    • 4.1 Conservative campaign


    • 4.2 Labour campaign


    • 4.3 Liberal Democrat campaign




  • 5 Notional 1992 results


  • 6 Results


    • 6.1 Results by constituent country




  • 7 Defeated MPs


    • 7.1 Conservative Ministers who lost their seats


    • 7.2 Other Conservative MPs who lost their seats


    • 7.3 Liberal Democrats who lost their seats


    • 7.4 Social and Democratic Labour Party MP who lost his seat


    • 7.5 Democratic Unionist MP who lost his seat


    • 7.6 Referendum Party MP who lost his seat




  • 8 Post election events


  • 9 Internet coverage


  • 10 See also


  • 11 Footnotes


  • 12 References


  • 13 Further reading


    • 13.1 Manifestos




  • 14 External links





Overview


The British economy had been in recession at the time of the 1992 election, which the Conservatives had won, and although the recession had ended within a year, events such as Black Wednesday had tarnished the Conservative government's reputation for economic management. Labour had elected John Smith as its party leader in 1992, but his death from heart attack in 1994 led the way for Tony Blair to become Labour leader.


Blair brought the party closer to the political centre and abolished the party's Clause IV in their constitution, which had committed them to mass nationalisation of industry. Labour also reversed its policy on unilateral nuclear disarmament and the events of Black Wednesday allowed Labour to promise greater economic management under the Chancellorship of Gordon Brown. A manifesto, entitled New Labour, New Life For Britain was released in 1996 and outlined 5 key pledges:



  • Class sizes to be cut to 30 or under for 5, 6 and 7 year olds by using money from the assisted places scheme.

  • Fast track punishment for persistent young offenders, by halving the time from arrest to sentencing.

  • Cut NHS waiting lists by treating an extra 100,000 patients as a first step by releasing £100 million saved from NHS red tape.

  • Get 250,000 under 25 year olds off benefit and into work by using money from a windfall levy on the privatised utilities.

  • No rise in income tax rates, cut VAT on heating to 5%, and keeping inflation and interest rates as low as possible.


Disputes within the Conservative government over European Union issues, and a variety of "sleaze" allegations had severely affected the government's popularity. Despite the strong economic recovery and substantial fall in unemployment in the four years leading up to the election, the rise in Conservative support was only marginal with all of the major opinion polls having shown Labour in a comfortable lead since late 1992.[4]



Loss of parliamentary majority


Following the 1992 General Election, the Conservatives held government with 336 of the 651 House of Commons seats. Through a series of defections and by-election defeats, the Conservative government gradually lost its absolute majority in the House of Commons. By 1997, the Conservatives held only 324 House of Commons seats (and had not won a by election since 1989).



  • 1993 Judith Chaplin (Newbury) died, by-election won by Liberal Democrats.

  • 1993 Robert Adley (ChristChurch) died, by-election won by Liberal Democrats.

  • 1994 Stephen Milligan (Eastleigh) died, by-election won by Liberal Democrats.

  • 1994 John Blackburn (Dudley West) died, by-election won by Labour.

  • 1995 Sir Nicholas Fairbairn (Perth and Kinross) died, by-election won by Scottish National Party.

  • 1995 Geoffrey Dickens (Littleborough and Saddleworth) died, by-election won by Liberal Democrats.

  • 1995 Alan Howarth (Stratford-on-Avon) defected from Conservative to Labour.

  • 1995 Emma Nicholson (Devon West and Torridge) defected from Conservatives to Liberal Democrats.

  • 1996 Sir David Lightbown (South East Staffordshire) died, by-election won by Labour.

  • 1996 Peter Thurnham (Bolton North East) defected from Conservatives to Liberal Democrats.

  • 1996 Barry Porter (Wirral South) died, by-election won by Labour.

  • 1997 George Gardiner (Reigate) defected from Conservatives to Referendum Party.

  • 1997 Iain Mills (Meriden) died, no by-election held due to imminent general election



Timing


The previous Parliament first sat on 29 April 1992. The Parliament Act 1911 required at the time for each Parliament to be dissolved before the fifth anniversary of its first sitting, therefore the latest date the dissolution and the summoning of the next parliament could have been held on was 28 April 1997.


The 1985 amendment of the Representation of the People Act 1983 required that the election must take place on the eleventh working day after the deadline for nomination papers, which in turn must be no more than six working days after the next parliament was summoned.


Therefore, the latest date the election could have been held on was 22 May 1997 (which happened to be a Thursday). British elections (and referendums) have been held on Thursdays by convention since the 1930s, but can be held on other working days.



Campaign


Prime Minister John Major called the election on Monday 17 March 1997, ensuring the formal campaign would be unusually long, at six weeks (Parliament was dissolved on 8 April[5]). The election was scheduled for 1 May, to coincide with the local elections on the same day. This set a precedent, as the three subsequent general elections were also held alongside the May local elections.


The Conservatives argued that a long campaign would expose Labour and allow the Conservative message to be heard. However, Major was accused of arranging an early dissolution to protect Neil Hamilton from a pending parliamentary report into his conduct: a report that Major had earlier guaranteed would be published before the election.


In March 1997, soon after the election was called, Asda introduced a range of election themed beers, these being Major's Mild, Tony's Tipple and Ashdown's Ale.[6]



Conservative campaign


The Conservatives started low in the polls, and had experienced great difficulties over the past 5 years, with polling often putting it some 40 points adrift of Labour. Major hoped that a long campaign would expose Labour's "hollowness" and the Conservative campaign emphasised stability, as did its manifesto title 'You can only be sure with the Conservatives'.[7] However, the campaign was beset by deep set problems, such as the rise of James Goldsmith's Referendum Party, advocating a referendum on continued membership of the European Union.


The Party threatened to take away many right leaning voters from the Conservatives. Furthermore, about 200 candidates broke with official Conservative policy to oppose British membership of the single European currency.[8] Major fought back, saying: "Whether you agree with me or disagree with me; like me or loathe me, don't bind my hands when I am negotiating on behalf of the British nation." The moment is remembered as one of the defining, and most surreal, moments of the election.[9][7]


Meanwhile, there was also division amongst the Conservative cabinet, with Chancellor Kenneth Clarke describing the views of Home Secretary Michael Howard on Europe as "paranoid and xenophobic nonsense". The Conservatives also struggled to come up with a definitive theme to attack Labour, with some strategists arguing for an approach which castigated Labour for "stealing Tory clothes" (copying their positions), with others making the case for a more confrontational approach, stating that "New Labour" was just a façade for "old Labour".


The New Labour, New Danger poster, which depicted Tony Blair with demon eyes, was an example of the latter strategy. Major veered between the two approaches, which left Conservative Central Office staff frustrated. As Andrew Cooper explained: "We repeatedly tried and failed to get him to understand that you couldn't say that they were dangerous and copying you at the same time."[10] In any case, the campaign failed to gain much traction, and the Conservatives went down to a landslide defeat at the polls.



Labour campaign


Labour ran a slick campaign, which emphasised the splits within the Conservative government, and argued that the country needed a more centrist administration. Labour ran a centrist campaign that was good at picking up dissatisfied Tory voters, particularly moderate and suburban ones. Tony Blair, highly popular, was very much the centrepiece of the campaign, and proved a highly effective campaigner.


The Labour campaign was reminiscent of those of Bill Clinton for the US Presidency, focusing on centrist themes, as well as adopting policies more commonly associated with the right, such as cracking down on crime and fiscal responsibility. The influence of political "spin" came into great effect for Labour at this point, as media centric figures such as Alastair Campbell and Peter Mandelson provided a clear cut campaign, and establishing a relatively new political brand "New Labour" with enviable success.



Liberal Democrat campaign


The Liberal Democrats had suffered a disappointing performance in 1992, but they were very much strengthened in 1997 due to potential tactical voting between Labour and Lib Dem supporters in Tory marginal constituencies, particularly in the south - particularly given their share of the vote decreased while their number of seats nearly doubled. The Lib Dems promised to increase education funding paid for by a 1p increase in income tax.



Notional 1992 results


The election was fought under new boundaries, with a net increase of eight seats compared to the 1992 election (651 to 659). Changes listed here are from the notional 1992 result, had it been fought on the boundaries established in 1997. These notional results were calculated by Colin Rallings and Michael Thrasher and were used by all media organisations at the time.

































































UK General Election 1992
Party
Seats
Gains
Losses
Net gain/loss
Seats %
Votes %
Votes
+/−
 

Labour
273
17
15
+2
41.6
34.4
11,560,484

 

Conservative
343
28
21
+7
52.1
41.9
14,093,007

 

Liberal Democrat
18
0
2
−2
2.7
17.8
5,999,384

 

Other parties
25
1
0
+1
3.6
5.9





The notional results of the 1992 election, as shown on a map of the 1997 constituencies.



Results


Labour won a landslide victory with their largest parliamentary majority (179) to date. On the BBC's election night programme Professor Anthony King described the result of the exit poll, which accurately predicted a Labour landslide, as being akin to "an asteroid hitting the planet and destroying practically all life on Earth". After years of trying, Labour had convinced the electorate that they would usher in a new age of prosperity—their policies, organisation and tone of optimism slotting perfectly into place.


Labour's victory was largely credited to the charisma of Tony Blair and a Labour public relations machine managed by Alastair Campbell and Peter Mandelson. Between the 1992 election and the 1997 election there had also been major steps to modernise the party, including scrapping Clause IV that had committed the party to extending public ownership of industry. Labour had suddenly seized the middle ground of the political spectrum, attracting voters much further to the right than their traditional working class or left wing support. In the early hours of 2 May 1997 a party was held at the Royal Festival Hall, in which Blair stated that "a new dawn has broken, has it not?".


The election was a crushing defeat for the Conservative Party, with the party having its lowest percentage share of the popular vote since 1832 under the Duke of Wellington's leadership, being wiped out in Scotland and Wales. A number of prominent Conservative MPs lost their seats in the election, including Michael Portillo, Malcolm Rifkind, Edwina Currie, David Mellor, Neil Hamilton and Norman Lamont. Such was the extent of Conservative losses at the election that Cecil Parkinson, speaking on the BBC's election night programme, joked upon the Conservatives winning their second seat that he was pleased that the subsequent election for the leadership would be contested.


The Liberal Democrats more than doubled their number of seats thanks to the use of tactical voting against the Conservatives. Although their share of the vote fell slightly, their total of 46 MPs was the highest for any UK Liberal party since David Lloyd George led the party to 59 seats in 1929.


The Referendum Party, which sought a referendum on the United Kingdom's relationship with the European Union, came fourth in terms of votes with 800,000 votes mainly from former Conservative voters,[citation needed] but won no seats in parliament. The six parties with the next highest votes 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.


In the previously safe seat of Tatton, where incumbent Conservative MP Neil Hamilton was facing charges of having taken cash for questions, the Labour and Liberal Democrat parties decided not to field candidates in order that an independent candidate, Martin Bell, would have a better chance of winning the seat, which he did with a comfortable margin.


The result declared for the constituency of Winchester showed a margin of victory of just two votes for the Liberal Democrats. The defeated Conservative candidate mounted a successful legal challenge to the result on the grounds that errors by election officials (failures to stamp certain votes) had changed the result; the court ruled the result invalid and ordered 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 in the first place.


This election marked the start of Labour government for the next 13 years, until the formation of the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition in 2010.




















418

165

46

30

Labour

Conservative

Lib Dem

O









































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































UK General Election 1997

Candidates
Votes
Party
Leader
Stood
Elected
Gained
Unseated
Net
% of total
%
No.
Net %
 

Labour

Tony Blair
639
418
146
0[11]
+146
63.4
43.2
13,518,167
+8.8
 

Conservative

John Major
648
165
0
178
–178
25.0
30.7
9,600,943
–11.2
 

Liberal Democrat

Paddy Ashdown
639
46
30
2
+28
7.0
16.8
5,242,947
–1.0
 

Referendum

James Goldsmith
547
0
0
0
0

2.6
811,849

N/A
 

SNP

Alex Salmond
72
6
3
0
+3
0.9
2.0
621,550
+0.1
 

UUP

David Trimble
16
10

1
0
+1
1.5
0.8
258,349
0.0
 

SDLP

John Hume
18
3
0

1
–1
0.5
0.6
190,814
+0.1
 

Plaid Cymru

Dafydd Wigley
40
4
0
0
0
0.6
0.5
161,030
0.0
 

Sinn Féin

Gerry Adams
17
2
2
0
+2
0.3
0.4
126,921
0.0
 

DUP

Ian Paisley
9
2
0

1
–1
0.3
0.3
107,348
0.0
 

UKIP

Alan Sked
193
0
0
0
0

0.3
105,722

N/A
 

Independent

N/A
25

1

1
0
+1
0.2
0.1
64,482
0.0
 

Green

Peg Alexander and David Taylor
89
0
0
0
0

0.3
61,731
–0.2
 

Alliance

John Alderdice
17
0
0
0
0

0.2
62,972
0.0
 

Socialist Labour

Arthur Scargill
64
0
0
0
0

0.2
52,109

N/A
 

Liberal

Michael Meadowcroft
53
0
0
0
0

0.1
45,166
–0.1
 

BNP

John Tyndall
57
0
0
0
0

0.1
35,832
0.0
 

Natural Law
Geoffrey Clements
197
0
0
0
0

0.1
30,604
–0.1
 

Speaker

Betty Boothroyd

1

1

1
0
0

0.1
23,969

 

ProLife Alliance
Bruno Quintavalle
56
0
0
0
0

0.1
19,332

N/A
 

UK Unionist

Robert McCartney

1

1

1
0
+1
0.2
0.0
12,817

N/A
 

PUP

Hugh Smyth
3
0
0
0
0

0.0
10,928

N/A
 

National Democrats

Ian Anderson
21
0
0
0
0

0.0
10,829

N/A
 

Socialist Alternative

Peter Taaffe

0
0
0
0

0.0
9,906

N/A
 

Scottish Socialist

Tommy Sheridan
16
0
0
0
0

0.0
9,740

N/A
 

Independent Labour

N/A
4
0
0
0
0

0.0
9,233
– 0.1
 

Ind. Conservative

N/A
4
0
0
0
0

0.0
8,608
–0.1
 

Monster Raving Loony

Screaming Lord Sutch
24
0
0
0
0

0.0
7,906
–0.1
 

Rainbow Dream Ticket

Rainbow George Weiss
29
0
0
0
0

0.0
3,745

N/A
 

NI Women's Coalition

Monica McWilliams and Pearl Sagar
3
0
0
0
0

0.0
3,024

N/A
 

Workers' Party

Tom French
8
0
0
0
0

0.0
2,766
–0.1
 

National Front
John McAuley
6
0
0
0
0

0.0
2,716

N/A
 

Legalise Cannabis

Howard Marks
4
0
0
0
0

0.0
2,085

N/A
 

People's Labour
Jim Hamezian

1
0
0
0
0

0.0
1,995

N/A
 

Mebyon Kernow

Loveday Jenkin
4
0
0
0
0

0.0
1,906

N/A
 

Scottish Green

Robin Harper
5
0
0
0
0

0.0
1,721

 

Conservative Anti-Euro

Christopher Story

1
0
0
0
0

0.0
1,434

N/A
 

Socialist (GB)

None
5
0
0
0
0

0.0
1,359

N/A
 
Community Representative
Ralph Knight

1
0
0
0
0

0.0
1,290

N/A
 

Residents


1
0
0
0
0

0.0
1,263

N/A
 

SDP
John Bates
2
0
0
0
0

0.0
1,246
–0.1
 

Workers Revolutionary
Sheila Torrance
9
0
0
0
0

0.0
1,178

N/A
 
Real Labour

N/A

1
0
0
0
0

0.0
1,117

N/A
 
Independent Democratic

N/A

0
0
0
0

0.0
982

 

Independent Liberal Democrat

N/A

0
0
0
0

0.0
890

 

Communist

Mike Hicks
3
0
0
0
0

0.0
639

 
Independent Green

N/A

1
0
0
0
0

0.0
593

 

Green (NI)


1
0
0
0
0

0.0
539

 

Socialist Equality
Davy Hyland
3
0
0
0
0

0.0
505


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.[citation needed]


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


There was no incumbent Speaker in the 1992 election.
















Government's new majority

179
Total votes cast
31,286,284
Turnout
71.3%










































Popular vote
Labour
43.2%
Conservative
30.7%
Liberal Democrat
16.8%
Referendum
2.6%
Scottish National
2.0%
Others
1.9%












































Parliamentary seats
Labour
63.4%
Conservative
25.0%
Liberal Democrat
7.0%
Scottish National
0.9%
Ulster Unionist
1.5%
Others
2.1%





The disproportionality of the house of parliament in the 1997 election was 16.71 according to the Gallagher Index, mainly between Labour and the Liberal Democrats.



Results by constituent country






































































LAB
CON
LD
SNP
PC
NI parties
Others
Total
England
328
165
34
-
-
-
2
529
Wales
34
-
2
-
4
-
-
40
Scotland
56
-
10
6
-
-
-
72
Northern Ireland
-
-
-
-
-
18
-
18
Total
418
165
46
6
4
18
2 (inc Speaker)
659


Defeated MPs



Conservative Ministers who lost their seats


Boundary changes at this election abolished several ministers' seats. The ones that those affected contested instead are largely close to their old seats. Michael Bates, for example, had previously represented Langbaurgh in the North East, the wards from which were mostly placed in Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland (which Bates contested and lost), while some wards were placed in neighbouring Redcar.




  • Tony Newton (Braintree) - Lord President of the Council and Leader of the House of Commons


  • Michael Portillo (Enfield Southgate) - Secretary of State for Defence


  • Malcolm Rifkind (Edinburgh Pentlands) - Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs


  • Ian Lang (Galloway and Upper Nithsdale) - Secretary of State for Trade and Industry


  • Michael Forsyth (Stirling) - Secretary of State for Scotland


  • William Waldegrave (Bristol West) - Chief Secretary to the Treasury


  • Roger Freeman (Kettering) - Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster


  • Sir Derek Spencer (Brighton Pavilion) - Solicitor General for England and Wales


  • Michael Morris (Northampton South) - Chairman of Ways and Means


  • James Douglas-Hamilton (Edinburgh West) - Minister of State at the Scottish Office


  • Alistair Burt (Bury North) - Minister of State at Department of Social Security


  • Phillip Oppenheim (Amber Valley) - Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury


  • Michael Bates (Langbaurgh, contested Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland) - Paymaster-General


  • Raymond Robertson (Aberdeen South) - Minister for Education, Housing, Fisheries and Sport


  • Greg Knight (Derby North) - Minister of State for Industry at the Department of Trade and Industry


  • John Bowis OBE (Battersea) - Health Minister


  • Iain Sproat (Harwich) - Trade Minister


  • Robin Squire (Hornchurch) - Education Minister


  • Andrew Mitchell (Gedling) - Social Security Minister


  • The Hon. Tom Sackville (Bolton West) - Home Office Minister


  • Sir Nicholas Bonsor, 4th Baronet (Upminster) - Foreign Office Minister


  • Timothy Kirkhope (Leeds North East) - Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department


  • Gwilym Jones (Cardiff North) - Under Secretary of State in the Welsh Office


  • George Kynoch (Kincardine and Deeside, contested West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine) - Under-Secretary of State for Scotland


  • Roger Evans (Monmouth) - Social Security Minister


  • David Evennett (Erith and Crayford, contested Bexleyheath and Crayford) - Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Secretary of State for Education and Skills


  • Lady Olga Maitland (Sutton and Cheam) - Parliamentary Private Secretary to The Rt. Hon. Sir John Wheeler


  • Simon Coombs (Swindon, contested Swindon South)) - Parliamentary Private Secretary to The Rt. Hon. Ian Lang


  • Timothy Wood (Stevenage) - Comptroller of the Household


  • Gyles Brandreth (City of Chester) - Whip


  • Angela Knight (Erewash) - Economic secretary to the treasury


  • Anthony Coombs (Wyre Forest) - Whip


  • Jacqui Lait (Hastings and Rye) - Whip



Other Conservative MPs who lost their seats




  • Dame Angela Rumbold (Mitcham and Morden) - Deputy Chairman of the Conservative Party


  • Sir Graham Bright (Luton South) - Vice-Chairman of the Conservative Party


  • Sir Marcus Fox (Shipley) - Chairman of the 1922 committee


  • Neil Hamilton (Tatton) - Chairman of the Monday Club


  • Norman Lamont (Kingston-upon-Thames, contested Harrogate and Knaresborough) - former Chancellor of the Exchequer


  • David Hunt (Wirral West) - former Secretary of State for Wales


  • Edwina Currie (South Derbyshire) - former Health Minister


  • Richard Tracey (Kingston and Surbiton) - former Sports Minister


  • Sebastian Coe (Falmouth and Camborne) - Olympic gold medallist


  • David Mellor (Putney) - former Secretary of State for National Heritage


  • John Cope (Northavon) - former Paymaster General


  • Sir Robert Atkins (South Ribble) - former Minister for Sport


  • Sir Jeremy Hanley (Richmond and Barnes, contested Richmond Park) - former Chairman of the Conservative Party


  • Derek Conway (Shrewsbury and Atcham) - former Vice Chamberlain of HM Household


  • Jonathan Aitken (South Thanet) - former Chief secretary to the treasury


  • Sir Rhodes Boyson (Brent North)


  • Sir Jim Lester (Broxtowe)


  • Sir Ivan Lawrence (Burton)


  • Sir Donald Thompson (Calder Valley)


  • Sir Malcolm Thornton (Crosby)


  • Sir Roger Moate (Faversham, contested Sittingbourne and Sheppey)


  • Sir John Michael Gorst (Hendon North, contested Hendon)


  • Sir Andrew Bowden (Brighton Kemptown)


  • Dame Peggy Fenner DBE (Medway)


  • Sir Mark Lennox-Boyd (Morecambe and Lunesdale)


  • Sir Michael Neubert (Romford)


  • Sir James Hill (Southampton Test)


  • Sir Dudley Smith (Warwick and Leamington)


  • Sir Peter Fry (Wellingborough)


  • Nicholas Budgen (Wolverhampton South West)


  • Phil Gallie (Ayr)


  • Elizabeth Peacock (Batley and Spen)


  • Andrew Hargreaves (Birmingham Hall Green)


  • Harold Elletson (Blackpool North, contested Blackpool North and Fleetwood)


  • Jonathan Evans (Brecon and Radnorshire)


  • Nirj Deva (Brentford and Isleworth)


  • Michael Brown (Brigg and Cleethorpes, contested Cleethorpes)


  • Michael Stern (Bristol North West)


  • David Sumberg (Bury South)


  • Nigel Forman (Carshalton and Wallington)


  • Robert Spink (Castle Point)


  • Den Dover (Chorley)


  • Rod Richards (Clwyd North West, contested Clwyd West)


  • Graham Riddick (Colne Valley)


  • William Powell (Corby)


  • David Congdon (Croydon North East, contested Croydon Central)


  • Bob Dunn (Dartford)


  • David Shaw (Dover)


  • Harry Greenway (Ealing North)


  • Dr Ian Twinn (Edmonton)


  • Spencer Batiste (Elmet)


  • Matthew Carrington (Fulham, contested Hammersmith and Fulham)


  • James Couchman (Gillingham)


  • Douglas French (Gloucester)


  • Paul Marland (West Gloucestershire, contested Forest of Dean)


  • Jacques Arnold (Gravesham)


  • Michael Carttiss (Great Yarmouth)


  • Warren Hawksley (Halesowen and Stourbridge, contested Stourbridge)


  • Jerry Hayes (Harlow)


  • Hugh Dykes (Harrow East)


  • Robert Gurth Hughes (Harrow West)


  • John Leslie Marshall (Hendon South, contested Finchley and Golders Green)


  • Sir Colin Shepherd (Hereford)


  • Robert Jones (Hertfordshire West, contested Hemel Hempstead)


  • Charles Hendry (High Peak)


  • Vivian Bendall (Ilford North)


  • Gary Waller (Keighley)


  • Keith Mans (Wyre, contested Lancaster & Wyre)


  • Dr Keith Hampson (Leeds North West)


  • Tim Rathbone (Lewes)


  • Barry Legg (Milton Keynes South West)


  • Antony Marlow (Northampton North)


  • Peter Butler (North East Milton Keynes)


  • Richard Alexander (Newark)


  • Henry Bellingham (North West Norfolk)


  • Peter Griffiths (Portsmouth North)


  • David Martin (Portsmouth South)


  • Jim Pawsey (Rugby and Kenilworth)


  • John Sykes (Scarborough, contested Scarborough and Whitby)


  • Irvine Patnick (Sheffield Hallam)


  • John Arthur Watts (Slough, contested Reading East)


  • Mark Robinson (Somerton and Frome)


  • Matthew Banks (Southport)


  • Tim Devlin (Stockton South)


  • Roger Knapman (Stroud)


  • David Nicholson (Taunton)


  • Bill Walker (North Tayside)


  • Rupert Allason (Torbay)


  • Toby Jessel (Twickenham)


  • Walter Sweeney (Vale of Glamorgan)


  • David Porter (Waveney)


  • David Evans (Welwyn Hatfield)


  • Charles Goodson-Wickes (Wimbledon)


  • Gerry Malone (Winchester)



Liberal Democrats who lost their seats




  • Chris Davies (Littleborough and Saddleworth, constested Oldham East and Saddleworth)


  • Liz Lynne (Rochdale)


  • Diana Maddock (Christchurch)



Social and Democratic Labour Party MP who lost his seat



  • Joe Hendron (Belfast West)


Democratic Unionist MP who lost his seat



  • William McCrea (Ulster Mid)


Referendum Party MP who lost his seat



  • Sir George Gardiner (Reigate)


Post election events


The poor results for the Conservative Party led to infighting, with the One Nation, Tory Reform Group, and right wing Maastricht Rebels blaming each other for the defeat. Party chairman Brian Mawhinney said on the night of the election, that it was due to disillusionment with 18 years of Conservative rule. John Major resigned as party leader, saying "When the curtain falls, it is time to leave the stage".


Despite receiving fewer votes than in 1992, the Liberal Democrats more than doubled their number of seats and won their best general election result up to that point and a better such result than any achieved by its predecessor, the Liberal Party, since 1929 under David Lloyd George's leadership. Paddy Ashdown's continued leadership had been vindicated, despite a disappointing 1992 election, and they were in a position to build positively as a strong third party into the new millennium.



Internet coverage


With the huge rise in internet use since the previous general election, BBC News created a special website covering the election as an experiment for the efficiency of an online news service which was due for a launch later in the year.[12]



See also



  • MPs elected in the United Kingdom general election, 1997

  • Opinion polling for the United Kingdom general election, 1997



Footnotes





  1. ^ Conservative party leader John Major resigned as Leader of the Conservative Party on 22 June 1995 to face critics in his party and government, and was reelected as Leader on 4 July 1995. Prior to his resignation he had held the post of Leader of the Conservative Party since 28 November 1990.[1]




References





  1. ^ "1995: Major wins Conservative leadership". 4 July 1995 – via news.bbc.co.uk..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  2. ^ "BBC News - UK Politics - The Major Scandal Sheet". news.bbc.co.uk.


  3. ^ “”. "BBC Vote '97 Election coverage". YouTube. Retrieved 9 December 2010.CS1 maint: Multiple names: authors list (link)


  4. ^ "1997: Labour landslide ends Tory rule". BBC News. 15 April 2005. Retrieved 28 March 2010.


  5. ^ "House of Lords Debates 17 March 1997 vol 579 cc653-4: Dissolution of Parliament". House of Lords Hansard. Retrieved 21 June 2010.


  6. ^ "Advertising & Promotion: Ads contract election fever". www.campaignlive.co.uk. 20 March 1997. Retrieved 9 April 2017.


  7. ^ ab Snowdon 2010, p. 4.


  8. ^ Travis, Alan (17 April 1997). "Rebels' seven-year march". The Guardian (London).


  9. ^ Bevins, Anthony (17 April 1997). "Election '97 : John Major takes on the Tories". The Independent. Retrieved 19 December 2015.


  10. ^ Snowdon 2010, p. 35.


  11. ^ "General Election Results, 1 May 1997" (PDF). House of Commons Library. 1998. Retrieved 23 January 2018.


  12. ^ "Major events influenced BBC's news online | Social media agency London | FreshNetworks blog". Freshnetworks.com. 5 June 2008. Archived from the original on 28 December 2010. Retrieved 9 December 2010.




Further reading



  • Butler, David and Dennis Kavanagh. The British General Election of 1997 (1997), the standard scholarly study


  • Snowdon, Peter (2010) [2010]. Back from the Brink: The Extraordinary Fall and Rise of the Conservative Party. London: HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-00-730884-2.



Manifestos



  • Labour (New Labour, New Life For Britain)

  • Conservative (You can only be sure with the Conservatives)

  • Liberal Democrats (Make the Difference)

  • National Democrats (A Manifesto for Britain)

  • British National Party (British Nationalism- An Idea whose time has come)

  • Liberal Party (Radical ideas – not the dead centre)

  • UK Independence Party

  • Third Way

  • The ProLife Alliance

  • Sinn Féin (A New Opportunity for Peace)

  • Democratic Unionist Party

  • Alliance of Liberty (Agenda for Change)

  • Progressive Unionist Party

  • Ulster Unionist Party

  • Plaid Cymru (The Best for Wales)

  • Scottish National Party (Yes We Can Win the Best for Scotland)

  • Scottish Green Party

  • Socialist Equality Party (A strategy for a workers' government!)

  • Communist Party of Great Britain



External links



  • BBC Election Website


  • 1997 election manifestos – Link to 1997 election manifestos of various parties.


  • Catalogue of 1997 general election ephemera[permanent dead link] at the Archives Division of the London School of Economics.












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