![]() | 'The Glasgow vote was the highest with 38.42% of the registered electorate turning out. The Preston turnout was 29.7%; in West Bromwich West it was even lower at 27.6%.' BBC News, 24 th November 2000. | ![]() |
West Bromwich West |
Labour: 9,640 (51.06%)
Conservative: 6,408 (33.94%)
Lib Dem:1,791 (9.49%)
BNP: 794 (4.21%)
UKIP: 246 (1.30%)
Lab maj: 3,232 (17.12%)
Turn-out: 27.6%
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Labour also retained the Scottish Parliament seat up for grabs in Glasgow Anniesland.
Trade and Industry Secretary Stephen Byers said it was a good night for the government but confessed to "concern" at the low turn-out that marked all four contests.
The Glasgow vote was the highest with 38.42% of the registered electorate turning out. The Preston turnout was 29.7%; in West Bromwich West it was even lower at 27.6%.
But the Conservatives hailed what they described as a significant swing in their favour in seats in Labour's heartland.
'Steady progress' - Hague
Tory leader William Hague said: "It's the Conservatives who increased their share of the vote across the constituencies, particularly the two in England."
"That is steady progress on top of what we have achieved in elections earlier in the year and that is encouraging to us," he said.
"We have to work still harder for the general election - but it shows it is going in the right direction."
Preston |
Labour: 9,765 (45.71%)
Conservative: 5,339 (24.99%)
Lib Dem: 3,454 (16.17%)
Lancs Socialist: 1,210 (5.66%)
UKIP: 458 (2.14%)
Green: 441 (2.06%)
Preston All: 416 (1.95%)
BNP: 229 (1.07%)
BBCAP: 51 (0.24%)
Lab maj. 4,426 (20.72%)
Turn-out: 29.4%
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"What we are seeing is a Conservative approach which basically wants to turn people off of politics so they don't bother to vote, that's really the strategy," he said.
'Back-door' strategy
Downing Street later repeated the claim, saying Prime Minister Tony Blair believed the Tories had a "back-door strategy" to create low turn-outs through encouraging cynicism about politics
Mr Blair's spokesman said all politicians had a responsibility to stress the importance of voting.
The spokesman added that a mooted television debate between Mr Blair and Mr Hague might encourage a greater turn-out
Glasgow Anniesland - Westminster |
Labour: 10,539 (52.14%)
SNP: 4,202 (20.79%)
Conservative: 2,188 (10.83%)
Lib Dem: 1,630 (8.06%)
Scottish Socialists: 1,441 (7.13%)
Family Action Movement 212 (1.05%)
Lab maj. 6,337 (31.35%)
Turn-out: 38.4%
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He insisted that "this bodes well for Liberal Democrats' prospects in the general election".
The "super-Thursday" contest was seen as the last major electoral test of Mr Blair's government before an expected general election in May.
The victors
In Preston, Lancashire, there was a 9% net swing away from Labour, but the benefit was shared by Tories and Lib Dems, as both parties improved their showings compared with the 1997 election.
The seat fell vacant after the death in September of veteran Labour left-winger Audrey Wise.
The new MP, Blair loyalist Mark Hendrick - a former MEP for the area - also gives the Commons an addition to the disproportionately small number of MPs from the ethnic minorities.
Glasgow Anniesland - Scot Parl result |
Labour: 9,838 (48.65%)
SNP: 4,462 (22.07%)
Tory: 2,148 (10.62%)
Scottish Socialists: 1,429 (7.07%)
Lib Dem: 1,384 (6.84%)
Scottish Greens: 662 (3.27%)
Socialist Labour: 298 (1.47%)
Lab. maj. 5,376 (26.59%)
Turn-out: 38.4%
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Splits in the Labour camp were caused by opposition to the choice of Mr Hendrick to fight the seat instead of Audrey Wise's daughter, former GLC stalwart Valerie.
Though previously a safe Labour seat, the West Bromwich West poll was the first time the constituency had seen a genuine contest since 1992.
As is the tradition with the speaker's seat, the main political parties did not contest it at the last general election. This time, though, Labour's Adrian Bailey won.
In the late Donald Dewar's former seat of Glasgow Anniesland, the swing was around 6% from Labour to the Scottish National Party in both the Westminster and Holyrood polls.
John Robertson, chief of the local Anniesland Labour Party, won the Commons seat; Glasgow city councillor Bill Butler the Scottish Parliament seat.
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