Keyword: Coalition Government

Conservatives Win Diminished Expectations Election Email Print

It was an election that resulted in diminished numerical voter expectations on the part of all three leading parties, but the David Cameron led Conservatives ultimately finished on top.

The Tories anticipated winning a clear majority of parliamentary seats.  Instead they fell short by 20 seats, gaining 306.  The popular vote share of 36.1 percent was comparable to that achieved by Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair in his last of three national victories.

That early morning of 2005 Blair looked somber, like a losing candidate, while wife Cherie looked close to tears.  An immediate tug of war commenced in earnest thereafter to coax Blair to resign and give then Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown a chance to establish a positive record and image before facing Britain's voters.

Brown almost certainly knew from the outset that achieving another electoral victory for Labour would be difficult.  First of all, Blair sought to stay on longer than his party wanted him.  Increasingly broader hints turned to a gigantic shove at the Labour Party Conference at which Blair finally announced he would step down.

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