In an E-mail from Sarah Teather, new MP for Brent east.
From BBC news:
Im so glad to have been involved in this. All our hard work has payed off, and we have given labour a blow in what will most likely be the last bye election before the general election.
The beggining of the end?
What a result!
In case you missed the full details, the result was:
Lib Dem: 8,158 (39%, up 29%)
Labour: 7,040 (34%, down 29%)
Tories: 3,368 (16%, down 2%)
Others: 2,286 (11%)
Lib Dem majority: 1,118
Swing from Labour to Liberal Democrat 29%
Swing from Conservative to Liberal Democrat 15%
It was a fantastic achievement - and one that I genuinely believe could presage
a major change in politics.
The tide is turning in our direction and against Labour.
In case you missed the full details, the result was:
Lib Dem: 8,158 (39%, up 29%)
Labour: 7,040 (34%, down 29%)
Tories: 3,368 (16%, down 2%)
Others: 2,286 (11%)
Lib Dem majority: 1,118
Swing from Labour to Liberal Democrat 29%
Swing from Conservative to Liberal Democrat 15%
It was a fantastic achievement - and one that I genuinely believe could presage
a major change in politics.
The tide is turning in our direction and against Labour.
Labour reels from by-election defeat
"The biggest hammer blow of Tony Blair's political career" is how the Sun sees the Liberal Democrats' victory in the by-election at Brent East.
The Independent describes the result as a humiliating defeat for the government.
The paper claims the outcome was based on "hostility to the government's record on schools, health, crime and the war in Iraq".
The Daily Telegraph echoes this, saying the result is an indication that the government has lost popularity because of the recriminations over the Iraq war and growing infighting over public service reforms.
The Times puts it more simply - "voters in Brent East", it says, "decided to give Tony Blair a bloody nose".
"The biggest hammer blow of Tony Blair's political career" is how the Sun sees the Liberal Democrats' victory in the by-election at Brent East.
The Independent describes the result as a humiliating defeat for the government.
The paper claims the outcome was based on "hostility to the government's record on schools, health, crime and the war in Iraq".
The Daily Telegraph echoes this, saying the result is an indication that the government has lost popularity because of the recriminations over the Iraq war and growing infighting over public service reforms.
The Times puts it more simply - "voters in Brent East", it says, "decided to give Tony Blair a bloody nose".
The beggining of the end?
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