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2001 United Kingdom general election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

2001 United Kingdom general election

← 19977 June 20012005 →

All 659 seats to theHouse of Commons
330 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Registered44,403,238
Turnout26,367,383
59.4% (Decrease11.9pp)
 First partySecond partyThird party
 
Tony Blair in 2002.jpg
William Hague MP (3156637603) (cropped).jpg
Charles Kennedy MP (cropped).jpg
LeaderTony BlairWilliam HagueCharles Kennedy
PartyLabourConservativeLiberal Democrats
Leader since21 July 199419 June 19979 August 1999
Leader's seatSedgefieldRichmond (Yorks)Ross, Skye and
Inverness West
Last election418 seats, 43.2%165 seats, 30.7%46 seats, 16.8%
Seats won412[a]16652
Seat changeDecrease6Increase1Increase6
Popular vote10,724,9538,357,6154,814,321
Percentage40.7%31.7%18.3%
SwingDecrease2.5ppIncrease1.0ppIncrease1.5pp

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

Composition of theHouse of Commons after the election

Prime Minister before election

Tony Blair
Labour

Prime Minister after election

Tony Blair
Labour

The2001 United Kingdom general election was held on Thursday 7 June 2001, four years afterthe previous election on 1 May 1997, to elect659 members to theHouse of Commons. The governingLabour Party led byPrime MinisterTony Blair was re-elected to serve a second term in government with anotherlandslide victory with a 166-seat majority, returning 412 members of Parliament versus 418 from the previous election, a net loss of six seats, although with a significantly lower turnout than before—59.4%, compared to 71.6% at the previous election.[1]

The number of votes Labour received fell by nearly three million. Blair went on to become the only Labour prime minister to serve two consecutive full terms in office. As Labour retained almost all of their seats won in the 1997 landslide victory, the media dubbed the 2001 election "the quiet landslide".[2] There was little change outsideNorthern Ireland, with 620 out of the 641 seats inGreat Britain electing candidates from the same party as they did in 1997. A strong economy contributed to the Labour victory.

The oppositionConservative Party underWilliam Hague's leadership was still deeply divided on the issue ofEurope and the party's policy platform had drifted considerably to theright. The party put the issue ofEuropean monetary union, in particular the prospect of the UK joining theEurozone, at the centre of its campaign but failed to resonate with the electorate. The Conservatives briefly had a narrow lead in the polls during the 2000 fuel strikes but Labour successfully resolved them by year end. Furthermore, a series of publicity stunts that backfired also harmed Hague, and he immediately announced his resignation as party leader when the election result was clear, formally stepping down three months later, therefore becoming the first leader of the Conservative Party in the House of Commons sinceAusten Chamberlain nearly eighty years prior not to serve as prime minister.

The election was largely a repeat of the 1997 general election, with Labour losing only six seats overall and the Conservatives making a net gain of one seat (gaining nine seats but losing eight). The Conservatives gaineda seat inScotland, which ended the party's status as an "England-only" party in the prior parliament, but failed again to win any seats inWales. Although they did not gain many seats, three of the few new MPs elected were future Conservative Prime MinistersDavid Cameron andBoris Johnson and future ConservativeChancellor of the ExchequerGeorge Osborne; Osborne would serve in the same Cabinet as Cameron from 2010 to 2016. TheLiberal Democrats led byCharles Kennedy made a net gain of six seats.

Change was seen in Northern Ireland, with the moderateunionistUlster Unionist Party (UUP) losing four seats to the more hardlineDemocratic Unionist Party (DUP). A similar transition appeared in thenationalist community, with the moderateSocial Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) losing votes to the more staunchlyrepublican andabstentionistSinn Féin.

Exceptionally low voter turnout, which fell below 60% for the first time since1918, also marked this election.[3] The election was broadcast live onBBC One and presented byDavid Dimbleby,Jeremy Paxman,Andrew Marr,Peter Snow, andTony King.[4] The 2001 general election was notable for being the first in which pictures of the party logos appeared on the ballot paper. Prior to this, the ballot paper had only displayed the candidate's name, address, and party name.[5][failed verification]

Notable departing MPs included former Prime MinistersEdward Heath (alsoFather of the House) andJohn Major, former Deputy Prime MinisterMichael Heseltine, former Liberal Democrat leaderPaddy Ashdown, former Cabinet ministersTony Benn,Tom King,John Morris,Mo Mowlam,John MacGregor andPeter Brooke,Teresa Gorman, and thenMayor of LondonKen Livingstone.

Background

[edit]

The elections were marked by voter apathy, with turnout falling to 59.4%, the lowest (and first under 70%) since theCoupon Election of 1918. Throughout the election theLabour Party had maintained a significant lead in the opinion polls and the result was deemed to be so certain that somebookmakers paid out for a Labour majority before election day. However, the opinion polls the previous autumn had shown the first Tory lead (though only by a narrow margin) in the opinion polls for eight years as they benefited from the public anger towards the government over thefuel protests which had led to a severe shortage of motor fuel.

By the end of 2000, however, the dispute had been resolved and Labour were firmly back in the lead of the opinion polls.[6] In total, a mere 29 parliamentary seats changed hands at the 2001 Election.[7]

2001 also saw the rare election of an independent.Richard Taylor ofIndependent Kidderminster Hospital and Health Concern (usually now known simply as "Health Concern") unseated a government MP,David Lock, inWyre Forest. There was also a high vote forBritish National Party leaderNick Griffin inOldham West and Royton, in the wake of recentrace riots in the town ofOldham.

InNorthern Ireland, the election was far more dramatic and marked a move byunionists away from support for theGood Friday Agreement, with the moderate unionistUlster Unionist Party (UUP) losing to the more hardlineDemocratic Unionist Party (DUP). This polarisation was also seen in the nationalist community, with theSocial Democratic and Labour Party (SDLP) vote losing out to more left-wing and republicanSinn Féin. It also saw a tightening of the parties as the smallUK Unionist Party lost its only seat.

Campaign

[edit]

The election had been expected on 3 May, to coincide withlocal elections, but on 2 April 2001, the local elections were postponed to 7 June because of rural movement restrictions imposed in response to thefoot-and-mouth outbreak that had started in February.[8]

On 8 May, Prime Minister Tony Blair announced that the general election would be held on the 7 June as expected, on the same day as the local elections.[9] Blair made the announcement in a speech atSt Saviour's and St Olave's Church of England School inBermondsey, London rather than on the steps of Downing Street.[9]

For Labour, the last four years had run relatively smoothly.[10] The party had successfully defended all theirby election seats, and many suspected a Labour win was inevitable from the start.

Many in the party, however, were afraid of voter apathy, which was epitomised in a poster of "Hague withMargaret Thatcher's hair", captioned "Get out and vote. Or they get in."[11] Despite recessions in mainland Europe and theUnited States, due to the bursting of global tech bubbles, Britain was notably unaffected and Labour however could rely on a strong economy as unemployment continued to decline toward election day, putting to rest any fears of a Labour government putting the economic situation at risk.

ForWilliam Hague, however, the Conservative Party had still not fully recovered from the loss in 1997. The party was still divided over Europe, and talk of a referendum onjoining the Eurozone was rife, and as a result "Save The Pound" was one of the key slogans deployed in the Conservatives' campaign. As Labour remained at the political centre, the Conservatives moved to the right. A policy gaffe byOliver Letwin over public spending cuts left the party with an own goal that Labour soon exploited.

Thatcher gave a speech to the Conservative Election Rally in Plymouth on 22 May 2001, callingNew Labour "rootless, empty, and artificial." She also added to Hague's troubles when speaking out strongly against the Euro to applause. Hague himself, although a witty performer atPrime Minister's Questions, was dogged in the press and reminded of his speech, given at the age of 16, at the 1977Conservative Conference.The Sun newspaper only added to the Conservatives' woes by backing Labour for a second consecutive election, calling Hague a "dead parrot" during the Conservative Party's conference in October 1998.[12][13][14]

The Conservatives campaigned on a strongly right-wing platform, emphasising the issues of Europe, immigration and tax, the fabled"Tebbit Trinity". They also released a poster showing a heavily pregnantTony Blair, stating "Four years of Labour and he still hasn't delivered".[15] However, Labour countered by asking where the proposed tax cuts were going to come from, and decried the Tory policy as "cut here, cut there, cut everywhere", in reference to the widespread belief that the Conservatives would make major cuts to public services in order to fund tax cuts. Labour also capitalised on the strong economic conditions of the time, and another major line of attack (primarily directed towardsMichael Portillo, now Shadow Chancellor after returning to Parliament via aby-election) was to warn of a return to "Tory Boom and Bust" under a Conservative administration.

Charles Kennedy contested his first election as leader of the Liberal Democrats.[16]

During the election Sharron Storer, a resident ofBirmingham, criticised Prime Minister Tony Blair in front of television cameras about conditions in theNational Health Service. The widely televised incident happened on 16 May during a campaign visit by Blair to theQueen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham. Sharron Storer'spartner, Keith Sedgewick, a cancer patient withnon-Hodgkin lymphoma and therefore highly susceptible to infection, was being treated at the time in thebone marrow unit, but no bed could be found for him and he was transferred to the casualty unit for his first 24 hours.[17][18][19] On the evening of the same day Deputy Prime MinisterJohn Prescottpunched a protestor after being hit by an egg on his way to an election rally inRhyl, North Wales.[20]

Endorsements

[edit]

Opinion polling

[edit]
Main article:Opinion polling for the 2001 United Kingdom general election
Opinion polling for UK general elections
1992 election
Opinion polls
1997 election
Opinion polls
2001 election
Opinion polls
2005 election
Opinion polls
2010 election
Opinion polls
  Labour
  Conservatives
  Liberal Democrats

Results

[edit]
Constituency results by party
Equal-area projection of constituency results
Equal-area projection of constituency gains
Result by countries and English regions

The election result was effectively a repeat of 1997, as the Labour Party retained an overwhelming majority, with the BBC announcing the victory at 02:58 on the early morning of 8 June. Having presided over relatively serene political, economic and social conditions, the feeling of prosperity in the United Kingdom had been maintained into the new millennium, and Labour would have a free hand to assert its ideals in the subsequent parliament. Despite the victory, voter apathy was a major issue, as turnout fell below 60%, 12 percentage points down on 1997. All three of the main parties saw their total votes fall, with Labour's total vote dropping by 2.8 million on 1997, the Conservatives 1.3 million, and the Liberal Democrats 428,000. Some suggested this dramatic fall was a sign of the general acceptance of the status quo and the likelihood of Labour's majority remaining unassailable.[24]

For the Conservatives, the huge loss they had sustained in 1997 was repeated. Despite gaining nine seats, they lost seven to the Liberal Democrats, and one even to Labour (South Dorset).William Hague was quick to announce his resignation, doing so at 07:44 outside the Conservative Party headquarters. Some believed that Hague had been unlucky; although most considered him to be a talented orator and an intelligent statesman, he had come up against the charismaticTony Blair in the peak of his political career, and it was no surprise that little progress was made in reducing Labour's majority after a relatively smooth parliament.

Staying at what they considered rock bottom, however, showed that the Conservatives had failed to improve their negative public image, had remained somewhat disunited over Europe, and had not regained the trust that they had lost in the 1990s. Hague's focus on the "Save The Pound" campaign narrative had failed to gain any traction; Labour's successful countertactic was to be repeatedly vague over the issue of future monetary union – and said that the UK would only consider joining the Eurozone "when conditions were right". But inScotland, despite flipping one seat from theScottish National Party, their vote collapse continued. They failed to retake former strongholds in Scotland as the Nationalists consolidated their grip on the Northeastern portion of the country.[25]

The Liberal Democrats could point to steady progress under their new leader,Charles Kennedy, gaining more seats than the main two parties—albeit only six overall—and maintaining the performance of a pleasing 1997 election, where the party had doubled its number of seats from 20 to 46. While they had yet to become electable as a government, they underlined their growing reputation as a worthwhile alternative to Labour and Conservative, offering plenty of debate in Parliament and representing more than a mere protest vote.[citation needed]

The SNP failed to gain any new seats and lost a seat to the Conservatives by just 79 votes. InWales,Plaid Cymru both gaineda seat from Labour and lostone to them.

InNorthern Ireland the Ulster Unionists, despite gainingNorth Down, lost five other seats.

UK General Election 2001[26]
CandidatesVotes
PartyLeaderStoodElectedGainedUnseatedNet% of total%No.Net %
 LabourTony Blair640[b]412[c]28−6[d]62.5[e]40.7[f]10,724,953[g]−2.5[h]
 ConservativeWilliam Hague64316698+125.231.68,357,615+1.0
 Liberal DemocratsCharles Kennedy6395282+67.918.34,814,321+1.5
 SNPJohn Swinney72501−10.81.8464,314−0.2
 UKIPJeffrey Titford42800000.01.5390,563+1.2
 UUPDavid Trimble17615−40.90.8216,8390.0
 Plaid CymruIeuan Wyn Jones4041100.60.7195,893+0.2
 DUPIan Paisley14530+30.80.7181,999+0.4
 Sinn FéinGerry Adams18420+20.60.7175,933+0.3
 SDLPJohn Hume1830000.50.6169,8650.0
 GreenMargaret Wright andMike Woodin14500000.00.6166,477+0.3
 IndependentN/A137001−10.00.498,917+0.3
 Scottish SocialistTommy Sheridan7200000.00.372,516N/A
 Socialist AllianceN/A9800000.00.257,553N/A
 Socialist LabourArthur Scargill11400000.00.257,2880.0
 BNPNick Griffin3300000.00.247,129+0.1
 AllianceSeán Neeson1000000.00.128,999−0.1
 Health ConcernRichard Taylor1110+10.20.128,487N/A
 SpeakerN/A1110+10.20.116,053N/A
 LiberalMichael Meadowcroft1300000.00.113,6850.0
 UK UnionistRobert McCartney1001−10.00.113,509+0.1
 ProLife AllianceBruno Quintavalle3700000.00.09,453−0.1
 Legalise CannabisAlun Buffry1300000.00.08,677N/A
 People's JusticeShaukat Ali Khan300000.00.07,443N/A
 Monster Raving LoonyHowling Laud Hope andCatmando1500000.00.06,6550.0
 PUPHugh Smyth200000.00.04,7810.0
 Mebyon KernowDick Cole300000.00.03,1990.0
 NI Women's CoalitionMonica McWilliams andPearl Sagar100000.00.02,9680.0
 Scottish UnionistDanny Houston200000.00.02,728N/A
 Rock 'n' Roll LoonyChris Driver700000.00.02,634N/A
 National FrontTom Holmes500000.00.02,4840.0
 Workers' PartySeán Garland600000.00.02,3520.0
 Neath Port Talbot RatepayersPaul Evans100000.00.01,960N/A
 NI UnionistCedric Wilson600000.00.01,794N/A
 Socialist AlternativePeter Taaffe200000.00.01,4540.0
 Reform 2000Erol Basarik500000.00.01,418N/A
 Isle of WightPhilip Murray100000.00.01,164N/A
 Muslim400000.00.01,150N/A
 CommunistRobert Griffiths600000.00.01,0030.0
 New BritainDennis Delderfield100000.00.08880.0
 Free PartyBob Dobbs300000.00.0832N/A
 Leeds Left AllianceMike Davies100000.00.0770N/A
 New Millennium Bean PartyCaptain Beany100000.00.0727N/A
 Workers RevolutionarySheila Torrance600000.00.06070.0
 TattonPaul Williams100000.00.0505N/A
Government's new majority165
Total votes cast26,367,383
Turnout59.4%

All parties with more than 500 votes shown.

The seat gains reflect changes on the1997 general election result. Two seats had changed hands in by-elections in the intervening period. These were as follows:

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 results of the election give aGallagher index of dis-proportionality of 17.74.

Popular vote
Labour
40.7%
Conservative
31.7%
Liberal Democrat
18.3%
Scottish National
1.8%
UK Independence
1.5%
Others
6.1%
Parliamentary seats
Labour
62.7%
Conservative
25.2%
Liberal Democrat
7.9%
Ulster Unionist
0.9%
Scottish National
0.8%
Democratic Unionist
0.8%
Others
1.8%

Results by constituent country

[edit]
LABCONLDSNPPCNI partiesOthersTotal
England323165401529
Wales342440
Scotland56110572
Northern Ireland1818
Total4131665254181659

Seats changing hands

[edit]
Seat1997 electionConstituency result 2001 by party2001 election
ConLabLibPCSNPOthers
Belfast NorthUUPDUP
Carmarthen East and DinefwrLabour4,91213,5402,81516,130656Plaid Cymru
Castle PointLabour17,73816,7533,1161273Conservative
CheadleConservative18,4446,08618,477599Liberal Democrats
ChesterfieldLabour3,61318,66321,249437Liberal Democrats
Dorset Mid and Poole NorthConservative17,9746,76518,358621Liberal Democrats
Dorset SouthConservative18,87419,0276,531913Labour
Fermanagh and South TyroneUUPSinn Féin
Galloway and Upper NithsdaleSNP12,2227,2583,69812,148588Conservative
GuildfordConservative19,8206,55820,358736Liberal Democrats
Isle of WightLiberal Democrats25,2239,67622,3972,106Conservative
Londonderry EastUUPDUP
LudlowConservative16,9905,78518,620871Liberal Democrats
NewarkLabour20,98316,9105,970Conservative
Norfolk NorthConservative23,4957,49023,978649Liberal Democrats
Norfolk North WestLabour24,84621,3614,292704Conservative
North DownUK UnionistUUP
RomfordLabour18,93112,9542,869Conservative
RomseyConservative20,3863,98622,756Liberal Democrats
StrangfordUUPDUP
TattonIndependent19,86011,2497,685Conservative
TauntonLiberal Democrats23,0338,25422,7981,140Conservative
TeignbridgeConservative23,3327,36626,343Liberal Democrats
Tyrone WestUUPSinn Féin
UpminsterLabour15,41014,1693,1831,089Conservative
Wyre ForestLabour9,35010,85728,487Health Concern
Ynys MonPlaid Cymru7,65311,9062,77211,106Labour

MPs who lost their seats

[edit]
PartyNameConstituencyOffice held whilst in powerYear electedDefeated byParty
Labour PartyAlan WilliamsCarmarthen East and Dinefwr1987Adam PricePlaid Cymru
Christine ButlerCastle Point1997Dr. Bob SpinkConservative Party
Fiona JonesNewark1997Colonel
Patrick Mercer
Conservative Party
George TurnerNorfolk North West1997Henry BellinghamConservative Party
Eileen GordonRomford1997Andrew RosindellConservative Party
Keith DarvillUpminster1997Angela WatkinsonConservative Party
David LockWyre Forest1997Dr. Richard TaylorIndependent Kidderminster Hospital and Health Concern
Conservative PartyStephen DayCheadle1987Patsy CaltonLiberal Democrats
Christopher FraserMid Dorset and North Poole1997Annette BrookeLiberal Democrats
Ian BruceDorset South1987Jim KnightLabour Party
Nick St AubynGuildford1997Sue DoughtyLiberal Democrats
The Hon.
David Prior
Norfolk North1997Norman LambLiberal Democrats
Patrick NichollsTeignbridge1983Richard Younger-RossLiberal Democrats
Liberal DemocratsDr. Peter BrandIsle of Wight1997Andrew TurnerConservative Party
Jackie BallardTaunton1997Adrian FlookConservative Party
Ulster Unionist PartyWillie RossEast Londonderry1974Gregory CampbellDemocratic Unionist Party
Cecil WalkerNorth Belfast1983Nigel DoddsDemocratic Unionist Party
William ThompsonWest Tyrone1997Pat DohertySinn Féin
Democratic Unionist PartyWilliam McCreaAntrim South2000David BurnsideUlster Unionist Party
UK Unionist PartyRobert McCartneyNorth Down1995Lady HermonUlster Unionist Party
IndependentMartin BellTatton contestingBrentwood and Ongar1997Eric PicklesConservative Party

Voter demographics

[edit]

MORI interviewed 18,657 adults in Great Britain after the election which suggested the following demographic breakdown:[27]

The 2001 UK general election vote in Great Britain (in per cent)
Social GroupLabConLib DemOthersLeadTurnout
Total4233196959
Gender
Men42321881061
Women4233196958
Age
18–2441272481439
25–3451241962746
35–4445281981759
45–544132207965
55–643739177269
65+3940174170
Social class
AB3039256968
C13836206260
C249291572056
DE55241383153
Work status
Full time43302071357
Part time43292171456
Not working4136185563
Unemployed542311123144
Self-employed32391811760
Housing tenure
Owner32431961168
Mortgage42312071159
Council/HA60181484252
Private rent40282571246
Men by age
18–243829267943
25–3452241952847
35–5443291991464
55+3939166Tie73
Men by social class
AB3138256768
C139361411362
C249281492156
DE55231483256
Women by age
18–2445242382136
25–3449251972446
35–5443312061260
55+3840184267
Women by social class
AB28412651368
C13737206Tie59
C248301751856
DE56251363150
Readership
Daily Express33431951063
Daily Mail24551743165
Daily Mirror71111355862
Daily Record59810233657
TheDaily Telegraph16651454971
Financial Times30482111864
The Guardian5263481868
The Independent3812446669
Daily Star56211763548
The Sun52291182350
The Times28402661266
No daily paper45272261856
Evening Standard42292181351
Sunday Readership
News of the World55271262852
Sunday Express29472041867
Sunday Mail531413203359
Sunday Mirror7216935662
The Sunday Post432218172164
The Sunday Telegraph17631374671
The Mail on Sunday25531752865
The Observer5343491971
Sunday People65191334660
The Sunday Times29402471167
Independent on Sunday47103761070
No Sunday paper42302261255
The disproportionality of the house of parliament in the 2001 election was 18.03 according to theGallagher Index, mainly between Labour and the Liberal Democrats.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Does not include the Speaker,Michael Martin, who was included in the Labour totals by some media outlets
  2. ^ Includes 30Co-operative Party candidates, as part of theLabour-Co-op alliance
  3. ^ Includes 30Co-operative Party MPs, as part of theLabour-Co-op alliance
  4. ^ Includes +2Co-operative Party MPs, as part of theLabour-Co-op alliance
  5. ^ Includes 4.6% for theCo-operative Party, as part of theLabour-Co-op alliance
  6. ^ Includes 2.3% for theCo-operative Party, as part of theLabour-Co-op alliance
  7. ^ Includes 601,197 for theCo-operative Party, as part of theLabour-Co-op alliance
  8. ^ Includes +0.2% for theCo-operative Party, as part of theLabour-Co-op alliance

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Turnout 'at 80-year low'".BBC. 8 June 2001. Retrieved7 December 2022.
  2. ^Parkinson, Justin (3 August 2010)."The rise and fall of New Labour".BBC News. Retrieved12 May 2015.
  3. ^Audickas, Lukas; Cracknell, Richard (13 December 2018)."UK Election Statistics: 1918–2018: 100 Years of Elections"(PDF). Briefing Paper Number CBP7529.House of Commons Library. p. 25.Archived(PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. Retrieved1 April 2019.
  4. ^"BBC Vote 2001 Coverage".YouTube. 16 March 2019.Archived from the original on 23 November 2021.
  5. ^Overs, Jeff (1 June 2001)."General Election 2001 postal vote ballot paper voting slip". BBC News & Current Affairs. 466659381. Retrieved1 April 2019 – via Getty Images.
  6. ^"Tories 'to cut fuel duty'".BBC News. 10 May 2001. Retrieved26 October 2015.
  7. ^"2001: Labour claims second term".BBC News. 5 April 2005. Retrieved26 May 2010.
  8. ^"Blair confirms election delay".BBC News. 2 April 2001. Retrieved2 December 2024.
  9. ^ab"June election called".BBC News. 8 May 2001. Retrieved2 December 2024.
  10. ^Harrop, Martin (2001)."An Apathetic Landslide: The British Election of 2001".Government and Opposition.36 (3). Cambridge University Press:295–313.doi:10.1111/1477-7053.00067.JSTOR 44484398.
  11. ^"'Get out and vote. Or they get in.' – Election 2001".The Guardian. London. Archived fromthe original on 20 April 2017.
  12. ^"Sun newspaper front page".Archived from the original on 3 June 2021.
  13. ^"Sun prints Tories' obituary".BBC News Online. London. 7 October 1998. Retrieved1 April 2019.
  14. ^McElvoy, Anne (7 October 1998)."Hague's parrot is not dead, he's just resting – with the odd squawk".The Independent. London.Archived from the original on 1 May 2022. Retrieved1 April 2019.
  15. ^"Memorable Conservative, Labour and Liberal Democrat posters from previous election campaigns".The Daily Telegraph. 12 April 2010.
  16. ^"2001: Labour claims second term".BBC News. 5 April 2005.
  17. ^Duncan Watts (2006).British Government and Politics: A Comparative Guide. Edinburgh University.ISBN 978-0-7486-2323-5.
  18. ^"BBC NEWS – VOTE2001 – Ambush upset Blair's day". 16 May 2001.
  19. ^"BBC NEWS – VOTE2001 – Cancer patient's partner confronts Blair". 17 May 2001.
  20. ^"2001: Prescott punches protester".BBC On This Day. 16 May 2001. Retrieved6 May 2021.
  21. ^"The politics of UK newspapers". 30 September 2009 – via news.bbc.co.uk.
  22. ^abChu, Ben (7 June 2001). "Final verdicts of the editorials".The Independent. p. 19.
  23. ^abStoddard, Katy (4 May 2010)."Newspaper support in UK general elections".The Guardian.Archived from the original on 12 November 2023.
  24. ^"The poll that never was".BBC News. 11 June 2001.
  25. ^"Labour romps home again".BBC News. 8 June 2001.
  26. ^Morgan, Bryn (18 June 2001)."General Election Results, 7 June 2001 [Revised Edition]"(PDF). Research Paper 01/54.House of Commons Library. p. 11. Retrieved1 April 2019.
  27. ^"How Britain Voted in 2001".Ipsos. 20 July 2001.

Bibliography

[edit]

External links

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