Text Only
Search

 
Britain's Labour Party Suffers Heavy Losses in Local Elections


05 May 2007
Rivers report (Real) - Download 216k audio clip
Listen to Rivers report (Real) audio clip

In Britain, results from local elections Thursday show that Prime Minister Tony Blair's Labour Party has suffered big losses, especially in Scotland.  Tom Rivers reports from London that with Mr. Blair likely to leave office soon, the election is grim news for the Labour Party and the person who will take over after Mr. Blair. 

Britain's Labour Party suffers heavy losses especially in Scotland
Britain's Labour Party suffers heavy losses especially in Scotland
Next week, Prime Minister Tony Blair says he will announce his departure date from 10 Downing Street.  From the results of local elections, the person who succeeds Mr. Blair will be leading a greatly reduced Labour Party.

In England, Wales and Scotland, Labour has lost 500 local seats.  Labour's losses in Scotland were particularly devastating.

For the first time in more than 50 years, Labour party dominance has gone. The big winner is the pro-independence Scottish National Party.

The SNP claimed 47 seats in the Scottish parliament to Labour's 46.

Informal discussions between the SNP and the Liberal Democrats are already under way to form a coalition government in the Scottish parliament.

But as SNP leader Alex Salmond told his colleagues, that will not be easy.

"Most of us have grasped the fact that you have to build a coalition in the Scots parliament and that is going to take some time, some effort," he said.

The Scottish parliament has full control of some areas, like education policy, but not all. Defense policy, for instance, is still determined by the British parliament in London.

The SNP, however, has been pushing for a referendum on complete independence that it hopes to put before the country in three years.

But that is something their potential coalition partners, the Scottish Liberal Democrats, do not agree with. Nichol Stephens is their leader.

"The Liberal Democrat position is absolutely clear on this issue," he noted.  "We do not support independence.  We want to see more powers for the Scottish parliament, but not independence and not a referendum on independence."

Viewed more broadly, the results throughout England, Wales and Scotland signal a tough time for Labour, and Tony Blair's apparent successor, Finance Minister Gordon Brown.

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Related Stories
Britain Holds Local Elections Seen as Verdict on Blair
Local British Election Losses Hit PM Blair's Labor Party
 
  Top Story
Honduras Refuses Plane with Ousted President Zelaya

  More Stories
Ethnic Violence in China' Xinjiang Region, 140 Dead
Obama En Route to Russia Summit  Audio Clip Available
Top Iran Religious Body Criticizes Election Results
Two British Soldiers Killed in Afghanistan
Netanyahu Calls for 'Two States for Two Peoples';  Audio Clip Available
Ghana Prepares for Obama Visit  Video clip available
Pakistani Airstrikes Kill 6 Militants in North Waziristan
Biden Celebrates US Independence Day with Troops in Iraq
Nigeria's Oil Communities Blame Oil Industry for Misery
Olympic Stars Phelps and Torres to Headline US National Swimming Championships