Labour comes humiliating fifth in Henley

Thursday 26th June 2008 at 23:00
Labour comes humiliating fifth in Henley

On the first anniversary of taking office, Gordon Brown has seen Labour beaten into fifth place in the Henley by-election.

Labour candidate Richard McKenzie lost his deposit as he trailed in behind the Greens and the British National Party.

As expected, the Conservatives comfortably held the seat with a majority of 10,116 over the Liberal Democrats, in a contest triggered by the departure of Boris Johnson to become London mayor.

While Labour had no hope whatsoever in winning in what is natural Tory territory, party strategists will be alarmed at the dramatic collapse in its vote after it finished third in the last general election.

The result follows Labour's catastrophic loss of the Crewe and Nantwich by-election and its dismal showing in the local council elections, and will only serve to deepen the mood of gloom in Downing Street.

Labour MP Martin Salter, who was put up to speak for the party after the count, said that they had been the victims of a classic third party "squeeze" although he admitted that he had not expected to do so badly.

"It is a grim result, our vote was squeezed just as every third party's vote is squeezed. I am very disappointed. We did hope to do better than that," he said.

"It is very difficult to divine a clear message for Gordon Brown in a seat in which we had no chance at all. It is one of the worst seats for Labour in the country." he said.

For the Conservatives, shadow work and pensions secretary Chris Grayling said that it and been a "very bad night" for both Labour and the Liberal Democrats, who had failed to make any inroads into their majority.

"We have done very well in holding this seat with a majority as big as we have. I feel really confident now that the party is moving forward," he said.

"This is the first time since 1984 that we have won a by-election convincingly against the Liberal Democrats and I think it shows that their legendary by-election campaign machine has run out of steam."

Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg said that the result showed that Brown's days in Downing Street were numbered.

"After one year in the job Gordon Brown cannot even get enough support to save his deposit," he said.

"Labour's days are well and truly over and it is the Liberal Democrats who are challenging the Conservatives in the south and Labour in the north."

The Conservative candidate John Howell took the seat with 19,796 votes to the Liberal Democrat candidate Stephen Kearney's 9,680.

Labour's Richard McKenzie could only poll 1,066 votes, behind the Green Party's Mark Stevenson on 1,321 and the BNP's Timothy Rait on 1,243.

Both the Tories and the Lib Dems saw their share of the vote rise slightly compared with the general election, while Labour's fell by more than 11 per cent.

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