Conservative Party (UK) leadership election, 1997

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Conservative Party (UK) leadership election

← 1995 10 June 1997 (1997-06-10) - 19 June 1997 (1997-06-19) 2001 →
  150x150px Kenneth Clarke John Redwood.jpg
Candidate William Hague Kenneth Clarke John Redwood
Party Conservative Conservative Conservative
Third Ballot 90, 55.2% 72, 44.2% Eliminated
Second Ballot 62, 37.8% 64, 39.0% 38, 23.2%
First Ballot 41, 25.0% 49, 29.9% 27, 16.5%

  Peter Lilley Michael Howard
Candidate Peter Lilley Michael Howard
Party Conservative Conservative
Third Ballot Eliminated Eliminated
Second Ballot Eliminated Eliminated
First Ballot 24, 14.6% 23, 14.0%

Leader before election

John Major

Elected Leader

William Hague

A leadership election was triggered in the British Conservative Party when John Major resigned on 2 May 1997, following his party's defeat at the 1997 general election (which ended 18 years of Conservative government of the UK).[1] Major had been Conservative leader and Prime Minister since 1990.[1]

Candidates

Announced

File:Kenneth-clarke-hi-res.jpg
Kenneth Clarke led the first two rounds of balloting, but lost in the final run-off against William Hague.

The following candidates announced their intention to stand:

Announced but withdrew

  • Stephen Dorrell - withdrew in favour of Clarke before the ballot.[1] Dorrell had the support of 8 or 9 MPs, some of whom did not transfer their support to Clarke due to his pro-European opinions.[2]

Declined Candidates

  • Michael Heseltine - had been widely expected to contest the leadership but declined to following health concerns. Heseltine supported Kenneth Clarke during the contest.[3]

Not an MP at the time

In the months before the general election a number of other prominent Conservatives were talked about as potential leaders; however, several failed to hold their seats in the general election including the following:

In addition, many had speculated about Chris Patten returning to Westminster (he had lost his seat in the 1992 election) and becoming leader; however, the contest took place before Patten's term of office as Governor of Hong Kong ended.

Results

William Hague won the 1997 Conservative Party leadership election.
First Ballot: 10 June 1997
Candidate Votes %
Kenneth Clarke 49 29.9
William Hague 41 25.0
John Redwood 27 16.5
Peter Lilley 24 14.6
Michael Howard 23 14.0
Turnout 164 100
Michael Howard eliminated.

Howard had been regarded as a serious contender but had been damaged by the criticisms of Ann Widdecombe (who had served under him at the Home Office) that he had "something of the night about him"[4] and by the decision of William Hague, who had originally agreed to support Howard and become Deputy Leader, to stand in his own right.[1]

Second round

Peter Lilley withdrew. He and Howard gave their backing to William Hague.[1][5]

Second Ballot: 17 June 1997
Candidate Votes %
Kenneth Clarke 64 39.0
William Hague 62 37.8
John Redwood 38 23.2
Turnout 164 100
John Redwood eliminated

Final Round

For the final round, Redwood gave his backing to Clarke, an unusual development in that Redwood (eurosceptic) and Clarke (europhile) held opposite views on the main issue of dispute amongst Conservatives.[6] In return for the endorsement, it was generally understood that Clarke would name Redwood Shadow Chancellor.[1] This pact backfired, however, and the agreement was seen as so cynical that it drew comparison to the Nazi-Soviet Pact of the late 1930s.[6] It prompted former Conservative Prime Minister Baroness Thatcher to publicly endorse Hague.[6] In the event, most of Redwood's supporters switched to Hague rather than to Clarke.

Third Ballot: 19 June 1997
Candidate Votes %
William Hague 90 55.2
Kenneth Clarke 72 44.2
Abstentions 1 0.6
Turnout 163 99.4
William Hague elected leader of the Conservative Party

Julian Lewis announced that he was the only MP who did not vote.

Aftermath

Under William Hague's leadership, the party would fail to make any significant advance at the 2001 general election, and he was succeeded by Iain Duncan Smith.

In 1998 the system of leadership elections was altered to the present form, where MPs choose a short-list of two candidates, who are then presented to the mass membership to choose. An incumbent leader can still be ousted by a no-confidence vote of Conservative MPs, as was done to Iain Duncan Smith in 2003. A leader could therefore (in principle) be ousted by MPs despite still enjoying the support of the mass membership.

References

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