Blog

  • CONSTITUENCY RESULT : Burton

    2019 GENERAL ELECTION

    CONSERVATIVE HOLD

    Kate Griffiths (Conservative Party) 29,560 60.7% +2.7%
    Louise Walker (Labour Party) 15,064 30.9% -6.9%
    Adam Wain (Liberal Democrats) 2,681 5.5% +3.0%
    Kate Copeland (Green Party) 1,433 2.9% +1.3%

    MAJORITY: 14,496 29.8% +9.6%

     

    2017 GENERAL ELECTION

    CONSERVATIVE HOLD

    Andrew Griffiths (Conservative Party) 28,936 58.0% +8.2%
    John McKiernan (Labour Party) 18,889 37.8% +10.3%
    Dominic Hardwick (Liberal Democrats) 1,262 2.5% -/+0.0%
    Simon Hales (Green Party) 824 1.7% -0.8%

    MAJORITY: 10,047 20.2% -2.6%

  • CONSTITUENCY RESULT : Bootle

    2019 GENERAL ELECTION

    LABOUR HOLD

    Peter Dowd (Labour Party) 39,066 79.4% -4.6%
    Tarsilo Onuluk (Conservative Party) 4,510 9.2% -2.9%
    Kim Knight (Brexit Party) 2,610 5.3% N/A
    Rebecca Hanson (Liberal Democrats) 1,822 3.7% +2.0%
    Mike Carter (Green Party) 1,166 2.4% +1.0%

    MAJORITY: 34,556 70.2% -1.2%

     

    2017 GENERAL ELECTION

    LABOUR HOLD

    Peter Dowd (Labour Party) 42,259 84.0% +9.6%
    Charles Fifield (Conservative Party) 6,059 12.0% +3.9%
    David Newman (Liberal Democrats) 837 1.7% -0.5%
    Alison Gibbon (Green Party) 709 1.4% -1.9%
    Kim Bryan (Socialist Labour) 424 0.8% N/A

    MAJORITY: 36,200 72.0% +8.4%

  • CONSTITUENCY RESULT : Bosworth

    2019 GENERAL ELECTION

    CONSERVATIVE HOLD

    Luke Evans (Conservative Party) 36,056 63.9% +7.2%
    Rick Middleton (Labour Party) 9,778 17.3% -6.7%
    Michael Mullaney (Liberal Democrats) 9,096 16.1% -1.2%
    Mick Gregg (Green Party) 1,502 2.7% +0.8%

    MAJORITY: 26,278 46.6% +14.0%

     

    2017 GENERAL ELECTION

    CONSERVATIVE HOLD

    David Tredinnick (Conservative Party) 31,864 56.7% +13.9%
    Chris Kealey (Labour Party) 13,513 24.1% +6.6%
    Michael Mullaney (Liberal Democrats) 9,744 17.3% -5.0%
    Mick Gregg (Green Party) 1,047 1.9% +1.9%

    MAJORITY: 18,351 32.6% +12.1%

  • Jeremy Corbyn – 2020 New Year’s Message

    Jeremy Corbyn – 2020 New Year’s Message

    Below is the text of the speech made by Jeremy Corbyn, the Leader of the Opposition, on 31 December 2019.

    2019 has been quite the year for our country and for our Labour movement. And now we are not just entering a new year, but a new decade. And the period ahead could not be more important. It will be crucial if we are to stop irreversible damage being caused by the climate crisis and the particular effects it has on people in the global south. If we are to stop the pain plaguing our country, food banks, poverty and people struggling to get by. If we are to protect our precious NHS.

    It won’t be easy. But we have built a movement. We are the resistance to Boris Johnson. We will be campaigning every day. We will be on the frontline, both in Parliament and on the streets. Protecting our public services. Protecting healthcare free at the point of use. Protecting our communities, in all their brilliant diversity. And standing up for internationalism, global solidarity and co-operation, and working with movements and parties seeking social justice and change all over the world.

    And make no mistake, our movement is very strong. We are half a million people and growing, we are in every region and nation of our country. We’re not backed by the press barons, by the billionaires or by the millionaires who work for the billionaires. We are backed by you. We are by the many, for the many. 2020 and the years ahead will be tough and no-one is saying otherwise. But, we’re up for the fight, to protect what we hold dear and to build to win and to transform. The fight continues. There is no other choice. So if you’re with us already, I can’t wait to meet the challenges ahead together, but if you’re not, join us, join Labour today.

  • Boris Johnson – 2020 New Year’s Message

    Boris Johnson – 2020 New Year’s Message

    Below is the text of the speech made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, on 31 December 2019.

    That distinctive sound you may have heard at midnight as the bongs of Big Ben faded away was not the popping of champagne corks or the crackle of fireworks from your neighbour’s garden.

    Rather it was the starting gun being fired on what promises to be a fantastic year and a remarkable decade for our United Kingdom.

    As we say goodbye to 2019 we can also turn the page on the division, rancour and uncertainty which has dominated public life and held us back for far too long. We can start a new chapter in the history of our country, in which we come together and move forward united, unleashing the enormous potential of the British people.

    Of course the first item on my agenda is to fulfil the will of the electorate and take us out of the European Union. This should have happened already, but we were thwarted by a Parliament determined to use every trick in the book to stop us leaving the EU.

    Now we have a new Parliament, elected by the people to deliver the people’s priorities, which will finally respect the referendum and deliver Brexit.

    So we’ll get Brexit done before the end of this month. That oven-ready deal I talked about so much during the election campaign has already had its plastic covering pierced and been placed in the microwave.

    We got down to work immediately after the election. The necessary legislation has already begun its passage through Parliament and, once MPs return to Westminster, we’ll waste no time in finishing the job. At long last we will take back control of our laws, borders, money and trade.

    Then we can finally spend 2020 getting on with delivering on the people’s priorities: boosting the NHS with the biggest cash injection in its history, renewing schools, backing scientists, building better infrastructure, controlling immigration, making our streets safer, cleaning up our environment, and making our Union stronger.

    The loudest message I heard during the election campaign is that people expect us – expect me – to protect and improve the NHS. The NHS is a wonderful British invention, there for us and our families when we are ill, whatever our background and regardless of ability to pay.

    So the NHS will always be my top priority. One our first actions will be to pass a bill enshrining in law a record funding settlement for the NHS, providing an extra £34 billion a year. We will undertake the largest hospital building programme in living memory, delivering 40 new hospitals and 20 upgrades. We’ll ensure there are 50,000 more nurses, 6,000 more GPs, and 50 million more GP surgery appointments.

    I also want to make this country the best place on earth when it comes to quality education and cutting-edge science. It’s great that we have started to climb back up the international school league tables – now let’s make it to the very top. We will support hardworking teachers by boosting per pupil funding in primary and secondary schools and we will transform this country’s approach to science and research, making the UK an engine for the ideas of the future.

    Our vision is clear: to unite and level up across the whole United Kingdom – spreading opportunity more fairly – with better infrastructure, superb education and high technology.

    We will do all of this while keeping your taxes low, freezing rates of income tax, VAT and National Insurance.

    It is thanks to you, the people, that we are on the path to a brighter future. It was your decisiveness at the ballot box, your determination to drive an electoral bulldozer through the deadlock and paralysis, that has unblocked parliament and delivered a people’s government dedicated to serving you.

    I know that many of you do not consider yourself natural Tories and may only have lent me your vote. I am humbled by your support and will work every day to keep it. I am also acutely aware that there are millions of people who did not vote for me and were disappointed by the result.

    If you are one of them, I want to reassure you that I will be a Prime Minister for everyone, not just those who voted for me. I know that you love this country no less, simply because you voted for another party or wanted to Remain. More than that, I want to work with you, as friends and equals, as we build the future this United Kingdom deserves.

    So let’s together make the 2020s a decade of prosperity and opportunity. State of the art healthcare. Great schools in every community. Our cities and towns more connected than ever before – not just in London and the South East but in the Midlands, the North and across the country. New trading relationships with nations around the world, generating jobs and growth. British scientists and engineers transforming the way we live – curing incurable diseases and making transport cleaner, greener and quieter.

    It’s a fantastically exciting agenda. Let’s get to work.

  • CONSTITUENCY RESULT : Bassetlaw

    2019 GENERAL ELECTION

    CONSERVATIVE GAIN FROM LABOUR

    Brendan Clarke-Smith (Conservative Party) 28,078 55.2% +11.9%
    Keir Morrison (Labour Party) 14,065 27.7% -24.9%
    Debbie Soloman (Brexit Party) 5,366 10.6% N/A
    Helen Tamblyn-Saville (Liberal Democrats) 3,332 6.6% +4.3%

    MAJORITY: 14,013 27.5%

     

    2017 GENERAL ELECTION

    LABOUR HOLD

    John Mann (Labour Party) 27,467 52.6% +3.9%
    Conservative Annette Simpson (Conservative Party) 22,615 43.3% +12.6%
    Liberal Democrats Leon Duveen (Liberal Democrats) 1,154 2.2% −0.5%
    Independent Nigel Turner (Independent) 1,014 1.9% N/A

    MAJORITY: 4,852 9.3% -8.6%

  • CONSTITUENCY RESULT : Barking

    2019 GENERAL ELECTION

    LABOUR HOLD

    Margaret Hodge (Labour Party) 27,219 61.2% -6.6%
    Tamkeen Shaikh (Conservative Party) 11,792 26.5% +4.0%
    Karen Batley (Brexit Party) 3,186 7.2% +7.2%
    Ann Haigh (Liberal Democrats) 1,482 3.3% +2.1%
    Shannon Butterfield (Green Party) 820 1.8% +0.3%

    MAJORITY: 15,427 34.7% -10.6%

     

    2017 GENERAL ELECTION

    LABOUR HOLD

    Margaret Hodge (Labour Party) 32,319 67.8% +10.1%
    Conservative Minesh Talati (Conservative Party) 10,711 22.5% +6.2%
    UKIP Roger Gravett (UKIP) 3,031 6.4% −15.8%
    Green Shannon Butterfield (Green Party) 724 1.5% −0.6%
    Liberal Democrats Pauline Pearce (Liberal Democrats) 599 1.3% +0.0%
    Independent Noel Falvey (Independent) 295 0.6% N/A

    MAJORITY: 21,608 45.3% +10.2%

  • CONSTITUENCY RESULT : Amber Valley

    2019 GENERAL ELECTION

    CONSERVATIVE HOLD

    Nigel Mills (Conservative Party) 29,085 63.8% +7.3%
    Labour Adam Thompson (Labour Party) 12,210 26.8% −11.6%
    Liberal Democrats Kate Smith (Liberal Democrats) 2,873 6.3% +3.9%
    Green Lian Pizzey (Green Party) 1,388 3.0% +1.6%

    MAJORITY: 16,886 37.0% +18.9%

     

    2017 GENERAL ELECTION

    CONSERVATIVE HOLD

    Nigel Mills (Conservative Party) 25,905 56.5% +12.6%
    James Dawson (Labour Party) 17,605 38.4% +3.6%
    Kate Smith (Liberal Democrats) 1,100 2.4% −0.6%
    Matt McGuinness (Green Party) 650 1.4% −1.0%
    Daniel Bamford (Independent) 551 1.2% N/A

    MAJORITY: 8,300 18.1% +8.9%

  • CONSTITUENCY RESULT : Ashford

    2019 GENERAL ELECTION

    CONSERVATIVE HOLD

    Damian Green (Conservative Party) 37,270 62.1% +2.1%
    Dara Farrell (Labour Party) 13,241 22.0% −7.7%
    Adrian Gee-Turner (Liberal Democrats) 6,048 10.1% +4.9%
    Mandy Rossi (Green Party) 2,638 4.4% +2.1%
    Susannah De Sanvil (Independent) 862 1.4% N/A

    MAJORITY: 24,029 40.1% +10.9%

     

    2017 GENERAL ELECTION

    CONSERVATIVE HOLD

    Damian Green (Conservative Party) 35,318 59.0% +6.5%
    Sally Gathern (Labour Party) 17,840 29.8% +11.4%
    Adrian Gee-Turner (Liberal Democrats) 3,101 5.2% −0.8%
    Gerald O’Brien (UKIP) 2,218 3.7% −15.1%
    Mandy Rossi (Green Party) 1,402 2.3% −2.0%

    MAJORITY: 17,478 29.2% -4.4%

  • CONSTITUENCY RESULT : Ashfield

    2019 GENERAL ELECTION

    CONSERVATIVE GAIN FROM LABOUR

    Lee Anderson (Conservative Party) 19,231 39.3% -2.4%
    Jason Zadrozny (Ashfield Independents) 13,498 27.6% +18.4%
    Natalie Fleet (Labour Party) 11,971 24.4% -18.1%
    Martin Daubney (Brexit Party) 2,501 5.1% N/A
    Rebecca Wain (Liberal Democrats) 1,105 2.3% +0.3%
    Rose Woods (Green Party) 674 1.4% +0.6%

    MAJORITY: 5,733 11.7%

     

    2017 GENERAL ELECTION

    LABOUR HOLD

    Gloria De Piero (Labour Party) 21,285 42.6% +1.6%
    Tony Harper (Conservative Party) 20,844 41.7% +19.3%
    Gail Turner (Ashfield Independents) 4,612 9.2% N/A
    Ray Young (UKIP) 1,885 3.8% -17.6%
    Bob Charlesworth (Liberal Democrats) 969 1.9% -12.9%
    Arran Rangi (Green Party) 398 0.8% N/A

    MAJORITY: 441 0.9% -17.7%