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1999 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1999 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom

← 199410 June 19992004 →

All 87 seats of the United Kingdom's seats
in theEuropean Parliament
Turnout24.0% (Decrease12.4%)[1]
 First partySecond partyThird party
 
LeaderEdward McMillan-ScottAlan DonnellyRobin Teverson
PartyConservativeLabourLiberal Democrats
AllianceEPPPESALDE
Leader since16 September 199719971994
Leader's seatYorkshire and the HumberNorth East
England
South West England(defeated)
Last election18 seats, 26.8%62 seats, 42.6%2 seats, 17%
Seats won362910
Seat changeIncrease18Decrease33Increase8
Popular vote3,578,2182,803,8211,266,549
Percentage33.5%26.3%11.9%
SwingIncrease6.5%Decrease16.4%Decrease4.3%

 Fourth partyFifth partySixth party
 
LeaderMichael HolmesJean Lambert[a]Ian Hudghton[b]
PartyUKIPGreenSNP
AllianceEDDGreenEFA
Leader sinceSeptember 199719981999
Leader's seatSouth West
England
LondonScotland
Last election0 seats, 1.0%0 seats, 3.0%2 seats, 3.1%
Seats won322
Seat changeIncrease3Increase2Steady
Popular vote696,057568,236268,528
Percentage6.5%5.3%2.5%
SwingIncrease5.5%Increase2.3%Decrease0.6%

Colours denote the winning party, as shown in themain table of results


Leader of Largest Party before election

Tony Blair
Labour

Subsequent Leader of Largest Party

William Hague
Conservative

Part ofa series of articles on
UK membership
of theEuropean Union
(1973–2020)

The1999 European Parliament election was theUnited Kingdom's part of theEuropean Parliament election 1999. It was held on 10 June 1999. Following theEuropean Parliamentary Elections Act 1999, it was the first European election to be held in the United Kingdom where the whole country used a system of proportional representation. In total, 87Members of the European Parliament were elected from the United Kingdom across twelve new regional constituencies.

The change in voting system resulted in significant changes in seats. TheConservatives won double the number of seats they had won in the previous European election, in1994, while theLabour Party saw its seats reduced from 62 to 29. TheLiberal Democrats saw their number of seats increase to 10 from just 2 in the previous election. TheUK Independence Party (UKIP),Green Party andPlaid Cymru gained their first seats in theEuropean Parliament.

A by-election to theBritish Parliament also took place on the same day in theLeeds Central constituency - Labour held the seat but with significantly reduced turnout.

The House of Commons Library calculated notional seat changes based on what the result would have been if the 1994 European elections had been held under proportional representation.[2] The notional results and seat changes are shown in the results box for this article.

It was the first European Parliament election to be held since the1997 general election which resulted in a change of government from Conservative to Labour.

Turnout was 24%, the lowest of any member state in the 1999 election where the EU average was 49.51%. It was also the lowest of any European election in the United Kingdom, and the lowest of any member state until the2009 election and to date is the lowest turnout for any national election in the history of the United Kingdom.[1]

Background

[edit]

Electoral system

[edit]

TheEuropean Parliamentary Elections Act 1999 introduced a closed-listparty list system method ofproportional representation, calculated using theD'Hondt method intoGreat Britain. In Northern Ireland, theSingle Transferable Vote, which is also a form of proportional representation, which had been used since the first European election in1979 was retained. The Act also created twelve new electoral regions, which were based on theBritish government's nineadministrative Regions of England,Northern Ireland,Scotland andWales.The effect of the introduction of proportional representation was that many small parties won seats to the European Parliament for the first time.

Results

[edit]
See also:Results of the 1999 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom

United Kingdom

[edit]
Map showing most popular party by counting area.

TheConservatives doubled the number of seats from the last European election.Labour saw their 62 seats reduced to just 29. It was the first European Parliament election to be held since the change of United Kingdom government from Conservative to Labourtwo years earlier. TheLiberal Democrats saw their number of seats increase to 10 from just 2 in the previous election. TheUK Independence Party,Green Party andPlaid Cymru won their first seats in theEuropean Parliament.

These changes were largely due to the move to proportional representation from first-past-the-post.[3] The House of Commons Library calculated that if the 1994 European elections had been held under proportional representation, Labour would have won 43 MEPs, the Conservatives 26, the Lib Dems 11, the SNP 3 and Plaid Cymru 1.[2]

PartyVotes won% of voteChangeSeats% of seatsLoss/Gain
vs actual
'94 result
Loss/Gain
vs notional
'94 result
Conservative3,578,21833.5Increase6.53641.4Increase18Increase10
Labour2,803,82126.3Decrease16.42933.3Decrease33Decrease14
Liberal Democrats1,266,54911.9Decrease4.31011.9Increase8Decrease1
UKIP696,0576.5Increase5.633.4Increase3Increase3
Green568,2365.3Increase2.322.4Increase2Increase2
SNP268,5282.5Decrease0.622.3SteadyDecrease1
DUP192,7621.8Increase0.811.1SteadySteady
SDLP190,7311.8Increase0.811.1SteadySteady
Plaid Cymru185,2351.7Increase0.722.3Increase2Increase1
Pro-Euro Conservative138,0971.3New0SteadySteadySteady
UUP119,5071.1Increase0.311.1SteadySteady
Sinn Féin117,6431.1Increase0.80SteadySteadySteady
BNP102,6471.0New0SteadySteadySteady
Liberal93,0510.9Increase0.30SteadySteadySteady
Socialist Labour86,7490.8New0SteadySteadySteady
Green57,1420.5Increase0.40SteadySteadySteady
Scottish Socialist39,7200.4New0SteadySteadySteady
PUP22,4940.2New0SteadySteadySteady
Natural Law21,3270.2Decrease0.40SteadySteadySteady
UK Unionist20,2830.2New0SteadySteadySteady
Alliance14,3910.1Steady0SteadySteadySteady
Socialist Alliance7,2030.1New0SteadySteadySteady
Humanist2,5860.0New0SteadySteadySteady
Weekly Worker1,7240.0New0SteadySteadySteady
Socialist (GB)1,5100.0New0SteadySteadySteady
Others84,8720.80SteadySteadySteady
Total10,681,08387100
Source: BBC News,[4] UK Parliament Briefing[2]

Great Britain

[edit]

Summary of the election results for Great Britain

PartyVotes won% of voteLoss/GainSeats% of seatsLoss/Gain
vs actual
'94 result
Loss/Gain
vs notional
'94 result
Conservative3,578,21835.8Increase7.93642.9Increase18
Labour2,803,82128.0Decrease16.12934.5Decrease33
Liberal Democrats1,266,54912.7Decrease4.11011.9Increase8
UKIP696,0577.0Increase6.033.6Increase3Increase3
Green568,2366.3Increase2.622.4Increase2Increase2
SNP268,5282.7Decrease0.522.4SteadyDecrease1
Plaid Cymru185,2351.9Increase0.822.4Increase2Increase1
Pro-Euro Conservative138,0971.4New0SteadySteadySteady
BNP102,6471.0New0SteadySteadySteady
Liberal93,0510.9Increase0.30SteadySteadySteady
Socialist Labour86,7490.9New0SteadySteadySteady
Green57,1420.6Increase0.40SteadySteadySteady
Scottish Socialist39,7200.4New0SteadySteadySteady
Natural Law20,3290.4Decrease0.20SteadySteadySteady
Socialist Alliance7,2030.1New0SteadySteadySteady
Humanist2,5860.0New0SteadySteadySteady
Weekly Worker1,7240.0New0SteadySteadySteady
Socialist (GB)1,5100.1New0SteadySteadySteady
Others84,8720.80SteadySteadySteady
Total10,002,27384100
Source: BBC News,[4] UK Parliament Briefing[2]

Northern Ireland

[edit]

Summary of the election results for Northern Ireland[4]

European Parliament election 1999: Northern Ireland[5]
PartyCandidate(s)SeatsLoss/GainFirst Preference Votes
Number% of vote
DUPIan Paisley10192,76228.4
SDLPJohn Hume10190,73128.1
UUPJim Nicholson10119,50717.6
Sinn FéinMitchel McLaughlin00117,64317.3
PUPDavid Ervine0022,4943.3
UK UnionistRobert McCartney0020,2833.0
AllianceSeán Neeson0014,3912.1
Natural LawJames Anderson009980.2
Turnout678,809

MEPs defeated

[edit]

Labour

Liberal Democrat

Conservative

Pro-Euro Conservative Party

Independent Labour

Scottish Socialist Party

Leeds Left Alliance

Aftermath

[edit]

Labour's results brought about a debate within the party about the introduction of proportional representation. In September 1998, a poll of 150 MPs had found that 58% backed the introduction of proportional representation. A follow-up poll ran on the Sunday after the election found that this had decreased to 43%, with the majority wanting a return to thefirst-past-the-post system.[6] It has also been argued, however, that the introduction of proportional representation actually reduced Labour's losses, as first-past-the-post is more sensitive to swings in public opinion.[7]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Lambert was one of the party's Principal Speakers.
  2. ^Hudghton was the SNP's lead candidate.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Previous European Parliamentary Elections – About Parliament". European Parliament. Retrieved26 May 2019.
  2. ^abcd"European Parliament Elections June 1999 – Commons Library briefing". UK Parliament. 21 June 1999. Retrieved5 March 2019.
  3. ^"Success for smaller parties". BBC News. 14 June 1999. Retrieved26 May 2014.
  4. ^abc"Euro Elections, Results – Great Britain and Northern Ireland". BBC News. Retrieved24 May 2014.
  5. ^The 1999 European Election, Northern Ireland Elections
  6. ^"Labour postmortem begins". BBC News. 14 June 1999. Retrieved25 May 2014.
  7. ^"Robin Oakley's Westminster Week – The Euro fallout". BBC News. 14 June 1999. Retrieved26 May 2014.

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