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Elections 2008

Is this what a police state looks like?

Claire Provost, reporting on a demonstration outside City Hall on the night of the London mayoral count, finds herself put in a pen in by police. A case of democracy in action?

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Life after Ken

Terrible results are capped off by Boris Johnson taking the mayoralty of London and with just a couple of years to the next election where does Labour go from here?

It's probably not going to be a John F Kennedy 'remember where you were?' moment but the day Boris Johnson ousted Ken Livingstone and became the first Tory mayor of London is extremely significant.

David Cameron's Conservatives now have something high profile to run. They've got a fair amount of time on their hands so they can concentrate a lot of effort - and people - on the job.

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Allegiances are fluid after a decade of Labour

Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg hails his party's performance in the 1 May elections when they pushed Labour into third place

This year’s elections were a real success for the Liberal Democrats. We beat Labour into third place for only the second time in our history. Not all the results are in yet – but it’s almost certain we’ll have won more councillors and control of more councils. And that’s even though we’re fighting the same set of seats as we did in 2004, at the height of public anger about [...]

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On course for a Green MP...

The Green Party's Caroline Lucas responds to their performance in the 1 May local elections

Any election count is a rollercoaster ride, and this one has been no different. But as the final results come in, the Greens are five seats up, and have gained enough firsts and new records in Norwich to make Charles Clarke extremely nervous.

Norwich City Council is the first in the country to have a Green opposition, with parliamentary candidate Adrian Ramsay leading the second-biggest group on the council, two [...]

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Covering the coverage

Our Best of the Politics blog blogger Paul Evans looks at the way the web affected coverage of the local and London mayoral elections

Labour pains

Cliches about the Beatles and miniskirts were being wheeled out, as Labour suffered its worst hammering at the polls since the 1960s - slipping to third place nationally, on just 24% of the vote. The Tories surged to 44%, while the Lib Dems experienced neither great gains or losses. Some blogs, including Guido Fawkes decided to host Live Chats, while the BBC co-opted citizen journalists [...]

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Alun Michael: a concession was painted as a climbdown

Former Welsh Secretary and first minister Alun Michael says the 10p tax issue played very badly with voters and in the end concessions from Gordon Brown came too late

Labour's Alun Michael says the 10p tax debacle was a big issue on the doorstep in the run up to the 1 May elections and by the time concessions came from Number 10 people felt it was too little, too late.

Michael, who represents Cardiff South and Penarth, said the prime minister's reaction to concerns that the abolition of the tax band would hit the poorest in our society was [...]

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Smith: London could fall to Boris

The Home Secretary Jacqui Smith tells newstatesman.com she fears Boris Johnson could be the next mayor of London

Home Secretary Jacqui Smith has told newstatesman.com she believes Boris Johnson looks likely to succeed Ken Livingstone as the next mayor of London.

Counting is underway in the battle to decide who will govern the UK capital - one of the most prominent jobs in UK politics - with the result due to be announced later on Friday 2 May.

Over the phone from her Redditch constituency, where the Tories [...]

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'It's not all doom and gloom'

Labour MPs are curiously hard to find today not surprisingly after they've had such gloomy news but we managed to track down Ann Clwyd and Martin Salter

I've spent most of the morning ringing round Labour MPs trying to get their reactions. Strangely today they're rather hard to come by. But I caught up with Ann Clwyd by phone at Bristol airport to get her reaction to the results particularly the ones in Wales where her Cynon Valley constituency is.

She told me: "Don't worry, I’m not leaving the country permanently - I’m going to Rome for [...]

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No good news for Labour in Liverpool

Lib Dem Warren Bradley, who snatched victory from the jaws of defeat in Liverpool after securing the surprise support of an ex-Labour councillor who'd turned independent, argues his party deprived Labour of its number one target on 1 May

It was disappointing night for Labour. They had made Liverpool their number one target in the country but they failed to gain the City Council. Labour had hoped that taking Liverpool would be the one good news story on May 2nd against a background of losses across the UK and Wales.

The Liberal Democrats held onto Liverpool against a background of 12 months of bad news stories. Poor financial settlements [...]

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Were You Up For Webcameron?

It's even worse than the worst Labour imagined. Martin Bright warns that if the Tories are smug about these results imagine how they will be after they win a general election

I was sitting on a panel in the Sky News studios at 2.30am this morning when something horrible flashed up on the giant screen in front of us. Not the tally of lost seats or the projections of what the night's results would mean if reproduced at a general election - though these were bad enough.

No. It was the sight of the Tory leader and Francis Maude enjoying [...]

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Tories now the favourites

Fabian Society general secretary Sunder Katwala argues Gordon Brown and his cabinet need set out a distinctively Labour agenda because at the next election, they will have to make the case

At least Labour has got the first thing right – not trying to talk up the result. The mood in the Labour Party has been very choppy after the 10p tax row. These results should persuade MPs that they can not afford the indulgence of a headless chicken tailspin.

Everybody knows there will be no change of leadership. Nobody serious wants to reopen the question, and the party’s big hitters [...]

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Labour's worst results in 40 years

Labour is badly hit in local elections in England and Wales pushed into third place by Tories and Lib Dems

Labour is in “listening and learning” mode after suffering what are widely predicted to be its worst election results in 40 years - beaten by Tories and Lib Dems into third place.

Across England and Wales the Tories made gains hitting hard into areas traditionally seen as Labour’s heartlands.

Labour deputy leader Harriet Harman got the dubious honour of trekking around the studios on Friday morning as the party licked [...]

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Elections 2008

Contributors

Claire Provost

Ben Davies

Ben Davies

Ben Davies trained as a journalist after taking most of the 1990s off. Prior to joining the New Statesman he spent five years working as a politics reporter for the BBC News website. He lives in North London.

Warren Bradley

Nick Clegg

Nick Clegg

Nick Clegg is leader of the Liberal Democrats and MP for Sheffield Hallam. Clegg initially trained as a journalist before working as a development and trade expert in the EU. He was elected as MEP for the East Midlands in 1999, stood down in 2004, lectured at Sheffield and Cambridge universities, and was elected to the UK parliament in 2005.

Sunder Katwala

Paul Evans

Paul Evans

Paul Evans is a freelance journalist, and formerly worked for an MP. He lives in London, but maintains his Somerset roots by drinking cider.

Martin Bright

Martin Bright

Martin Bright began his journalistic career writing in very simple English for a magazine aimed at French school children. This experience has informed his style ever since. He worked for the BBC World Service, and The Guardian before joining the Observer as Education Correspondent. He went on to become Home Affairs Editor before becoming the New Statesman's political editor in 2005.

Caroline Lucas

Caroline Lucas

Caroline Lucas is Green Party MEP for the South East England, and is running to be the first Green Party leader. She is also their parliamentary candidate for Brighton Pavilion.

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Recent Posts

Is this what a police state looks like?

  • By Claire Provost
  • 03 May 2008

Life after Ken

  • By Ben Davies
  • 03 May 2008

Allegiances are fluid after a decade of Labour

  • By Nick Clegg
  • 02 May 2008

On course for a Green MP...

  • By Caroline Lucas
  • 02 May 2008

Covering the coverage

  • By Paul Evans
  • 02 May 2008

Alun Michael: a concession was painted as a climbdown

  • By Ben Davies
  • 02 May 2008

Smith: London could fall to Boris

  • By Ben Davies
  • 02 May 2008