1992 United Kingdom general election

(Redirected from 1992 general election (UK))

The 1992 United Kingdom general election was held on Thursday 9 April 1992, to elect 651 members to the House of Commons. The governing Conservative Party led by the prime minister John Major won a fourth consecutive election victory, with a majority of 21. This would be the last time that the Conservatives would win an overall majority at a general election until 2015 and the last general election to be held on a day which did not coincide with any local elections until 2017. This election result took many by surprise, as opinion polling leading up to the election day had shown a narrow but consistent lead for the Labour Party under leader Neil Kinnock during a period of recession and declining living standards.[1]

1992 United Kingdom general election

← 1987 9 April 1992 1997 →

All 651 seats in the House of Commons
326 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Turnout77.7% (Increase2.4 pp)
  First party Second party Third party
 
Major PM full (cropped).jpg
Official portrait of Neil Kinnock, Member of the EC (cropped).jpg
ASHDOWN Paddy.jpg
Leader John Major Neil Kinnock Paddy Ashdown
Party Conservative Labour Liberal Democrats
Leader since 27 November 1990 2 October 1983 16 July 1988
Leader's seat Huntingdon Islwyn Yeovil
Last election 376 seats, 42.2% 229 seats, 30.8% 22 seats, 22.6%[a]
Seats won 336 271 20
Seat change Decrease40 Increase42 Decrease2
Popular vote 14,094,116 11,557,062 6,027,038
Percentage 41.9% 34.4% 17.8%
Swing Decrease0.3% Increase3.6% Decrease4.8%

Colours denote the winning party, as shown in the main table of results

Composition of the House of Commons after the election

Prime Minister before election

John Major
Conservative

Prime Minister after election

John Major
Conservative

Ring charts of the election results showing popular vote against seats won, coloured in party colours
Seats won in the election (outer ring) against number of votes (inner ring)

John Major had won the leadership election in November 1990 following the resignation of Margaret Thatcher. During his first term leading up to the 1992 election he oversaw the British involvement in the Gulf War, introduced legislation to replace the unpopular Community Charge with Council Tax, and signed the Maastricht Treaty. Britain was sliding into its second recession in a decade at the time of Major's appointment.

Opinion polls in the run-up to the election had suggested that it would end in a hung parliament or a narrow Labour majority. The fact that it produced a Conservative majority meant that it was one of the most dramatic and memorable elections in the UK since the end of the Second World War.[2] The Conservative Party received what remains the largest number of votes at a United Kingdom general election in British history, breaking the previous record set by the Labour Party in 1951.[3]

Former Conservative leader and Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, former Labour Party leader Michael Foot, former SDP leader David Owen, three former Chancellors of the Exchequer, Denis Healey, Geoffrey Howe and Nigel Lawson, former Home Secretary Merlyn Rees, Francis Maude, Norman Tebbit, Rosie Barnes, Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams and Speaker of the House of Commons Bernard Weatherill left the House of Commons after this election, though Maude and Adams returned at the next election. Future Conservative leader Iain Duncan Smith was elected to parliament in this election.

Overview

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The Conservatives had been re-elected in a landslide at the 1987 general election under the leadership of Margaret Thatcher, who had led the party back into power in 1979 and won a landslide majority in 1983, but her popularity and that of her government sharply declined due to internal divisions in the party and the unpopular Community Charge (also known as the 'poll tax'), as well as the fact that Britain was sliding into recession in the run-up to her resignation in November 1990.

Labour began to lead the Conservatives in the opinion polls by as much as 20 percentage points. Thatcher resigned following the party leadership ballot in November 1990, initiated by Michael Heseltine, and was replaced by her Chancellor of the Exchequer John Major. This was well received by the public; Labour lost some momentum as it reduced the impact of their calls for "Time for a Change".[4]

On 16 January 1991, Operation Desert Storm began the Gulf War, the Major ministry's first foreign affairs crisis. The quick and successful outcome on the conflict led to a boost in opinion polls for Major, in spite of the deepening recession and rising unemployment. Another boost in the polls for Major was his announcement that the unpopular community charge (poll tax) would be replaced with the Council Tax. The Labour opposition made repeated calls for a general election to be held during 1991, but Major resisted these calls.

As 1992 dawned, the recession had still not ended, unemployment now topped 2.5 million and the election loomed, with most opinion polls suggested that the election would produce a hung parliament or a narrow Labour majority, although the lead in the polls had shifted between Tory and Labour on several occasions since November 1990.

Parliament was due to expire no later than 16 June 1992. Major called the election on 11 March, as was widely expected, the day after Chancellor of the Exchequer Norman Lamont had delivered the Budget. The Conservatives maintained strong support in many newspapers, especially The Sun, which ran a series of anti-Labour articles that culminated on election day with a front-page headline which urged "the last person to leave Britain" to "turn out the lights" if Labour won the election.[5]

Campaign

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The 50th Parliament of the United Kingdom sat for the last time on Monday 16 March, being dissolved on the same day.[6]

Under the leadership of Neil Kinnock, the Labour Party had undergone further developments and alterations since its 1987 general election defeat. Labour entered the campaign confident, with most opinion polls showing a slight Labour lead that if maintained suggested a hung parliament, with no single party having an overall majority.

The parties campaigned on the familiar grounds of taxation and health care. Major became known for delivering his speeches while standing on an upturned soapbox during public meetings. Immigration was also an issue, with Home Secretary Kenneth Baker making a controversial speech stating that, under Labour, the floodgates would be opened for immigrants from developing countries. Some speculated that this was a bid by the Conservatives to shore up its support amongst its white working-class supporters.[who?] The Conservatives also pounded the Labour Party over the issue of taxation, producing a memorable poster entitled "Labour's Double-Whammy", showing a boxer wearing gloves marked "tax rises" and "inflation".

An early setback for Labour came in the form of the "War of Jennifer's Ear" controversy, which questioned the truthfulness of a Labour party election broadcast concerning National Health Service (NHS) waiting lists.

Labour seemingly recovered from the NHS controversy, and opinion polls on 1 April (dubbed "Red Wednesday") showed a clear Labour lead. But the lead fell considerably in the following day's polls. Observers blamed the decline on the Labour Party's triumphalist "Sheffield Rally", an enthusiastic American-style political convention at the Sheffield Arena, where Neil Kinnock famously cried out "We're all right!" three times.[7] However, some analysts and participants in the campaign believed it actually had little effect, with the event only receiving widespread attention after the election.[8]

This was the first general election for the newly formed Liberal Democrats, a party formed by the formal merger of the SDP–Liberal Alliance following the 1987 general election. Its formation had not been without its problems, but under the strong leadership of Paddy Ashdown, who proved to be a likeable and candid figure, the party went into the election ready to win votes and seats. They focused on education throughout the campaign, as well as a promise on reforming the voting system.[9]

The weather was largely dull for most of the campaign, but sunny conditions on 9 April may have been a factor in the high turnout.[10][11][12]

Minor parties

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In Scotland, the Scottish National Party (SNP) hoped for a major electoral breakthrough in 1992 and had run a hard independence campaign with "Free by '93" as their slogan, urging voters to back a party which would deliver Scottish independence from the United Kingdom. Although the party increased its total vote by 50% compared to 1987, they only held onto the three seats they had won at the previous election. They lost Glasgow Govan, which their deputy leader Jim Sillars had taken from Labour in a by-election in 1988. Sillars quit active politics after the general election with a parting shot at the Scottish electorate as being "ninety-minute patriots", referring to their support of the Scotland football team only during match time.[13]

The election also saw a small change in Northern Ireland: the Conservatives organised and stood candidates in the constituent country for the first time since the Ulster Unionist Party had broken with them in 1972 over the Sunningdale Agreement. Although they won no seats, their best result was Laurence Kennedy achieving over 14,000 votes to run second to James Kilfedder in North Down.

Retirees

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Former prime minister Margaret Thatcher stepped down at the general election, as did former cabinet minister Norman Tebbit, Labour veteran Denis Healey, former Conservative chancellor Nigel Lawson, Geoffrey Howe, former Labour leader Michael Foot, former SDP leader David Owen, Merlyn Rees, then-Speaker Bernard Weatherill, former Conservative Party chairman Cecil Parkinson, John Wakeham, Nicholas Ridley and Peter Morrison. Alan Clark also retired from Parliament, though he returned in 1997 as MP for Kensington and Chelsea, only to die two years later.

Endorsements

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The following newspapers endorsed political parties running in the election in the following ways:[14]

Newspaper Party/ies endorsed Circulation (in millions)
The Sun Conservative Party 3.6
Daily Mirror Labour Party 2.9
Daily Mail Conservative Party 1.7
Daily Express Conservative Party 1.5
Daily Telegraph Conservative Party 1.0
The Guardian Labour Party 0.4
Liberal Democrats
The Independent None 0.4
The Times Conservative Party 0.4

In a move later described in The Observer as appalling to its City readership,[15] the Financial Times endorsed the Labour Party in this general election.

Opinion polling

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Opinion polling for the 1992 UK General Election, with a 7-poll moving average.
  Labour

Almost every poll leading up to polling day predicted either a hung parliament with Labour the largest party, or a small Labour majority of around 19 to 23. Polls on the last few days before the country voted predicted a very slim Labour majority.[16] Of the 50 opinion polls published during the election campaign period, 38 suggested Labour had a narrow but clear lead.[17] After the polls closed, the BBC and ITV exit polls still predicted that there would be a hung parliament and "that the Conservatives would only just get more seats than Labour".[18]

With opinion polls at the end of the campaign showing Labour and the Conservatives neck and neck, the actual election result was a surprise to many in the media and in polling organisations. The apparent failure of the opinion polls to come close to predicting the actual result led to an inquiry by the Market Research Society, and would eventually result in the creation of the British Polling Council a decade later. Following the election, most opinion polling companies changed their methodology in the belief that a 'Shy Tory factor' affected the polling.

Results

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Labour Leader Neil Kinnock conceding defeat
 
Results map

The election turnout of 77.67%[19] was the highest in 18 years. There was an overall Labour swing of 2.2%, which widened the gap between Labour and the Liberal Democrats. Although the percentage of Conservative votes was only 0.3% down on 1987, the Conservative overall majority in the House of Commons was reduced from 102 to 21. This number was reduced progressively during the course of Major's term in office due to defections of MPs to other parties, by-election defeats, and for a time in 1994–95 the suspension of the Conservative whip for some MPs who voted against the government on its European policy—by 1996, the Conservative majority had been reduced to just 1 seat, and they were in a minority going into 1997 until the 1997 general election. The Conservatives in 1992 received 14,093,007 votes,[19] the highest total of votes for any political party in any UK general election, beating the previous largest total vote of 13.98 million achieved by Labour in 1951 (although this was from a smaller electorate and represented a higher vote share). Nine government ministers lost their seats in 1992, including party chairman Chris Patten.

The Sun's analysis of the election results was headlined "It's The Sun Wot Won It", though in his testimony to the April 2012 Leveson Inquiry, Rupert Murdoch claimed that the "infamous" headline was "both tasteless and wrong".[20] Tony Blair also accepted this theory of Labour's defeat and put considerable effort into securing The Sun's support for New Labour, both as Leader of the Opposition before the 1997 general election and as Prime Minister afterwards.

Steve Richards notes that one theory for Labour's defeat relates to Kinnock seeming triumphalist, "overconfident and cocky" at a major Labour Party election rally in Sheffield. At the time of the event polls suggested Labour was well ahead of the Conservatives. Richards argues the rally "acquired a mythological status as fatal event" after Labour's defeat, but considers this theory to be "a red herring". He notes that prior to the result of the election becoming known, "there was no suggestion that Kinnock had made a terrible blunder" at the event. Indeed, Richards notes that the BBC's political editor John Cole had indicated he had been impressed in his live reporting of the rally which Cole compared with similar events held by President Kennedy. Richards concluded that the party would have lost the election even if there had been no Sheffield Rally.[21]

This election continued the Conservatives' decline in Northern England, with Labour regaining many seats they had not held since 1979. The Conservatives also began to lose support in the Midlands, but achieved a slight increase in their vote in Scotland, where they had a net gain of one seat. Labour and Plaid Cymru strengthened in Wales, with Conservative support declining. However, in the South East, South West, London and Eastern England the Conservative vote held up, leading to few losses there: many considered Basildon to be indicative of a nouveau riche working-class element, referred to as Essex man, voting strongly Conservative. This election is the most recent in which the Conservatives won more seats than Labour in Greater London, at 48 to 35;[19] in the 1997 election, the Conservatives would win only 11.[22]

For the Liberal Democrats their first election campaign was a reasonable success; the party had worked itself up from a "low base" during its troubled creation and come out relatively unscathed.[23]

It was Labour's second general election defeat under leader Neil Kinnock and deputy leader Roy Hattersley. Both resigned soon after the election, and were succeeded by John Smith and Margaret Beckett respectively.

Sitting MPs Dave Nellist, Terry Fields, Ron Brown, John Hughes and Syd Bidwell, who had been expelled or deselected by the Labour Party and stood as independents, were all defeated, although in Nellist's case only very narrowly. Tommy Sheridan, fighting the election from prison, polled 19% in Glasgow Pollok.

 
UK general election 1992[19]
Candidates Votes
Party Leader Stood Elected Gained Unseated Net % of total % No. Net %
  Conservative John Major 645 336 3 44 −41 51.69 41.9 14,094,116 −0.3
  Labour Neil Kinnock 634 271 43 1 +42 41.62 34.4 11,557,062 +3.6
  Liberal Democrats Paddy Ashdown 632 20 4 6 −2 3.07 17.8 6,027,038 −4.8
  SNP Alex Salmond 72 3       0.46 1.9 629,552 +0.6
  UUP James Molyneaux 13 9       1.38 0.8 270,749 0.0
  SDLP John Hume 13 4 1   +1 0.61 0.5 184,445 0.0
  Green Jean Lambert and Richard Lawson 253 0       0.0 0.5 170,047 +0.2
  Plaid Cymru Dafydd Wigley 38 4 1   +1 0.61 0.5 156,796 +0.1
  DUP Ian Paisley 7 3       0.46 0.3 103,039 0.0
  Sinn Féin Gerry Adams 14 0   1 −1 0.0 0.2 78,291 −0.1
  Alliance John Alderdice 16 0       0.0 0.2 68,695 0.0
  Liberal Michael Meadowcroft 73 0       0.0 0.2 64,744  
  Natural Law Geoffrey Clements 309 0       0.0 0.2 62,888  
  Ind. Social Democrat N/A 2 0       0.0 0.1 28,599  
  Independent N/A 6 0       0.0 0.1 22,844  
  UPUP James Kilfedder 1 1       0.15 0.1 19,305 0.0
  Ind. Conservative N/A 12 0       0.0 0.1 11,356  
  Monster Raving Loony Screaming Lord Sutch 25 0       0.0 0.1 7,929 +0.1
  Independent N/A 23 0       0.0 0.1 7,631  
  BNP John Tyndall 13 0       0.0 0.1 7,631  
  SDP John Bates 8 0       0.0 0.1 6,649  
  Scottish Militant Labour Tommy Sheridan 1 0       0.0 0.1 6,287  
  National Front John McAuley 14 0       0.0 0.1 4,816  
  True Labour Sydney Bidwell 1 0       0.0 0.1 4,665  
  Anti-Federalist Alan Sked 17 0       0.0 0.1 4,383  
  Workers' Party Marian Donnelly 8 0       0.0 0.1 4,359 0.0
  Official Conservative Hove Party Nigel Furness 1 0       0.0 0.0 2,658  
  Loony Green Stuart Hughes 5 0       0.0 0.0 2,538  
  Ind. Unionist N/A 1 0       0.0 0.0 2,256  
  New Agenda Proinsias De Rossa 2 0       0.0 0.0 2,133  
  Independent Progressive Socialist N/A 1 0       0.0 0.0 1,094  
  Islamic Party David Pidcock 4 0       0.0 0.0 1,085  
  Revolutionary Communist Frank Furedi 8 0       0.0 0.0 745  
  Independent Nationalist N/A 1 0       0.0 0.0 649  
  Communist (PCC) Jack Conrad 4 0       0.0 0.0 603  

All parties with more than 500 votes shown. Plaid Cymru result includes votes for Green/Plaid Cymru Alliance.

Government's new majority 21
Total votes cast[19] 33,614,074
Turnout 77.7%
Popular vote
Conservative
41.9%
Labour
34.4%
Liberal Democrat
17.8%
Scottish National
1.9%
Ulster Unionist
0.8%
Others
2.9%
Parliamentary seats
Conservative
51.6%
Labour
41.6%
Liberal Democrat
3.1%
Ulster Unionist
1.4%
Others
2.3%
 
The disproportionality of the house of parliament in the 1992 election was 13.59 according to the Gallagher Index, mainly between the Liberal Democrats and the Conservatives.

Incumbents defeated

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Party Name Constituency Office held while in power Year elected Defeated by Party
Conservative Party Humfrey Malins Croydon North West 1983 Malcolm Wicks Labour Party
Michael Knowles Nottingham East 1983 John Heppell Labour Party
Martin Brandon-Bravo Nottingham South 1983 Alan Simpson Labour Party
Andy Stewart Sherwood Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Leader of the House of Commons 1983 Paddy Tipping Labour Party
Tim Janman Thurrock 1987 Andrew MacKinlay Labour Party
Michael Irvine Ipswich 1987 Jamie Cann Labour Party
Colin Moynihan Lewisham East Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Energy 1983 Bridget Prentice Labour Party
Sir William Shelton Streatham 1970 Keith Hill Labour Party
Patrick Ground QC Feltham and Heston 1983 Alan Keen Labour Party
Sir Neil Thorne Ilford South 1979 Mike Gapes Labour Party
Hugo Summerson Walthamstow 1987 Neil Gerrard Labour Party
Michael Fallon Darlington Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Education 1983 Alan Milburn Labour Party
Chris Butler Warrington South 1987 Mike Hall Labour Party
Cecil Franks Barrow and Furness 1983 John Hutton Labour Party
Tony Favell Stockport 1983 Ann Coffey Labour Party
Ken Hargreaves Hyndburn 1983 Greg Pope Labour Party
John Lee Pendle 1979 Gordon Prentice Labour Party
Ken Hind Lancashire West Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland 1983 Colin Pickthall Labour Party
Sir David Trippier Rossendale and Darwen 1979 Janet Anderson Labour Party
The Right Honourable
Lynda Chalker
Wallasey Minister for Overseas Development & Africa 1974 Angela Eagle Labour Party
Christopher Chope Southampton Itchen Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Transport 1983 John Denham Labour Party
The Right Honourable
Chris Patten
Bath Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster & Chairman of the Conservative Party 1979 Don Foster Liberal Democrats
Jonathan Sayeed Bristol East Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Paymaster General 1983 Jean Cortson Labour Party
Rob Hayward Kingswood 1983 Roger Berry Labour Party
Sir Gerry Neale North Cornwall 1979 Paul Tyler Liberal Democrats
Tony Speller North Devon 1979 Nick Harvey Liberal Democrats
Lewis Stevens Nuneaton 1983 Bill Olner Labour Party
The Right Honourable
Francis Maude
North Warwickshire Financial Secretary to the Treasury 1983 Mike O'Brien Labour Party
Roger King Birmingham Northfield 1983 Richard Burden Labour Party
Anthony Beaumont-Dark Birmingham Selly Oak 1979 Lynne Jones Labour Party
David Gilroy Bevan Birmingham Yardley 1979 Estelle Morris Labour Party
Maureen Hicks Wolverhampton North East Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Minister of State for the Foreign and Commonwealth Office 1987 Ken Purchase Labour Party
Ian Grist Cardiff Central 1974 Jon Owen Jones Labour Party
John Maples Lewisham West Economic Secretary to the Treasury 1983 Jim Dowd Labour Party
Gerald Bowden Dulwich 1983 Tessa Jowell Labour Party
Gerald Howarth Cannock and Burntwood 1983 Tony Wright Labour Party
Conal Gregory York 1983 Hugh Bayley Labour Party
Nicholas Bennett Pembrokeshire Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Wales 1983 Nick Ainger Labour Party
Labour Party Frank Doran Aberdeen South 1987 Raymond Robertson Conservative Party
John Smith Vale of Glamorgan 1989 Walter Sweeney Conservative Party
Huw Edwards Monmouth 1991 Roger Kenneth Evans Conservative Party
Ashok Kumar Langbaurgh 1991 Michael Bates Conservative Party
Sylvia Heal Mid Staffordshire 1990 Michael Fabricant Conservative Party
Liberal Democrats Michael Carr Ribble Valley 1991 Nigel Evans Conservative Party
Ronnie Fearn Southport 1987 Matthew Banks Conservative Party
David Bellotti Eastbourne 1990 Nigel Waterson Conservative Party
Nicol Stephen Kincardine and Deeside 1991 George Kynoch Conservative Party
Richard Livsey Brecon and Radnorshire 1985 Jonathan Evans Conservative Party
Geraint Howells Ceredigion and Pembroke North 1974 Cynog Dafis Plaid Cymru
Social Democratic Party Rosie Barnes Greenwich 1987 Nick Raynsford Labour Party
John Cartwright[24] Woolwich 1974 John Austin Labour Party
Scottish National Party Jim Sillars Glasgow Govan Depute Leader of the Scottish National Party 1988 Ian Davidson Labour Party
Dick Douglas[25] Dunfermline West (contested Glasgow Garscadden) 1979 Donald Dewar Labour Party
Independent John Browne Winchester 1979 Gerry Malone Conservative Party
Dave Nellist[26] Coventry South East 1983 Jim Cunningham Labour Party
John Hughes[26] Coventry North East 1987 Bob Ainsworth Labour Party
Terry Fields[26] Liverpool Broadgreen 1983 Jane Kennedy Labour Party
Syd Bidwell[27] Ealing Southall 1966 Piara Khabra Labour Party
Ron Brown[26] Edinburgh Leith 1979 Malcolm Chisholm Labour Party
Sinn Féin Gerry Adams Belfast West President of Sinn Féin 1983 Joe Hendron Social Democratic and Labour Party

Television coverage

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The BBC ran coverage from 21:55 till 06:00, and from 09:30 till 16:00 on Friday 10 April.[28][29] Unlike most prior British elections, the BBC's coverage started five minutes before the polls closed and the result of the exit poll was announced live, accompanied by footage of Big Ben striking, at 10pm. This method of revealing the exit poll has been repeated in all subsequent BBC election night broadcasts.

Coverage was, according to the Radio Times, supposed to end at 04:00 on Friday morning, but was extended.[30]

The BBC began construction of the Election 92 studio in October 1990, completing it in February 1991, due to speculation that an early election may be called in 1991. Rehearsals were held in the event of a Conservative and Labour victory.[31]

Although the election was not part of the storyline, there was much background chanting and campaigning in the BBC television soap opera EastEnders.[32]

On ITV, ITN produced their election night coverage from their studios in London, with Jon Snow anchoring the coverage from 22:00 until 06:00. They continued their daytime coverage on Friday 10 April from 09:25 until 15:25. Breakfast coverage of the election results were provided by TV-am, the ITV breakfast franchise, from 06:00 until 09:25, who were producing their third and final general election special.[33]

See also

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Manifestos

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Notes

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  1. ^ As SDP–Liberal Alliance; two of these refused to join the Liberal Democrats and remained in the continuing SDP
  1. ^ Brown, Faye (19 February 2024). "Neil Kinnock: Labour leader who lost 'unlosable' election predicts Starmer will end up in No 10". Sky News. Retrieved 5 July 2024.
  2. ^ "1992: Tories win again against odds". BBC News. 5 April 2005. Archived from the original on 22 April 2009. Retrieved 22 October 2013.
  3. ^ "Election Statistics: UK 1918–2017". House of Commons Library. 23 April 2017. p. 12. Archived from the original on 14 August 2017. Retrieved 14 August 2017.
  4. ^ "Poll tracker: Interactive guide to the opinion polls". BBC News. 29 September 2009. Archived from the original on 29 July 2017. Retrieved 26 February 2014.
  5. ^ Douglas, Torin (14 September 2004). "Forty years of The Sun". BBC News. Archived from the original on 12 September 2007. Retrieved 22 October 2013.
  6. ^ "Charities Bill [H.L.]". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). 16 March 1992. Archived from the original on 31 July 2017. Retrieved 30 July 2017.
  7. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "UK General Election 1992 – Neil "We're Alright" Kinnock at the 1992 Sheffield Rally". YouTube. 30 October 2009. Retrieved 15 May 2019.
  8. ^ Westlake, Martin (2001). Kinnock: The Biography (3rd ed.). London: Little, Brown Book Group. pp. 560–564. ISBN 0-3168-4871-9.
  9. ^ "1992 Personalities". BBC News. Archived from the original on 23 October 2013. Retrieved 22 October 2013.
  10. ^ "Monthly Weather Report: March 1992" (PDF). Met Office. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 November 2017. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
  11. ^ "Monthly Weather Report: April 1992" (PDF). Met Office. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 November 2017. Retrieved 3 June 2021.
  12. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: ratpackmanreturns (28 December 2007). "BBC1 Election Day 1992 coverage" – via YouTube.
  13. ^ Peterkin, Tom (28 April 2003). "Swinney should stop his sneering at 'second best'". The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 4 December 2008. Retrieved 30 July 2009.
  14. ^ 'Newspaper support in UK general elections Archived 1 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine' (2010) on The Guardian
  15. ^ Robinson, James (30 March 2008). "FT's ebullient leader revels in the power of newsprint". The Observer. Archived from the original on 28 March 2020. Retrieved 28 March 2020.
  16. ^ "How did Labour lose in '92?: The most authoritative study of the last general election is published tomorrow. Here, its authors present their conclusions and explode the myths about the greatest upset since 1945". The Independent. 29 May 1994. Archived from the original on 1 May 2022. Retrieved 24 March 2016.
  17. ^ Cowling, David (18 February 2015). "How political polling shapes public opinion". BBC News. Archived from the original on 20 April 2020. Retrieved 15 May 2019.
  18. ^ Firth, D., Exit polling explained Archived 9 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine, University of Warwick, Statistics Department.
  19. ^ a b c d e "General Election Results 9 April 1992" (PDF). parliament.uk. Archived (PDF) from the original on 13 October 2010. Retrieved 14 June 2011.
  20. ^ Dowell, Ben (25 April 2012). "Rupert Murdoch: 'Sun wot won it' headline was tasteless and wrong". The Guardian. London: Guardian Newspapers. Archived from the original on 23 October 2013. Retrieved 27 April 2012.
  21. ^ Richards, Steve (2021). The Prime Ministers We Never Had; Success and Failure from Butler to Corbyn. London: Atlantic Books. pp. 157–158. ISBN 978-1-83895-241-9.
  22. ^ Rallings, Colin; Thrasher, Michael. "General Election Results, 1 May 1997" (PDF). UK Parliament Information Office. Archived (PDF) from the original on 4 December 2016. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
  23. ^ "1992 Results". BBC News. Archived from the original on 23 October 2013. Retrieved 22 October 2013.
  24. ^ Former Labour MP, joined SDP.
  25. ^ Former Labour MP, joined SNP. Contested sitting MP's seat.
  26. ^ a b c d Former Labour MP, expelled from party.
  27. ^ Former Labour MP, de-selected by party.
  28. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Here Is The News (9 April 2017). "BBC: Election 92 (Part 1)" – via YouTube.
  29. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: Here Is The News (9 April 2017). "BBC: Election 92 (Part 2)" – via YouTube.
  30. ^ "BBC One London – 9 April 1992 – BBC Genome". genome.ch.bbc.co.uk. Archived from the original on 23 March 2020. Retrieved 22 May 2019.
  31. ^ "British Elections | C-SPAN.org". www.c-span.org. Archived from the original on 9 April 2021. Retrieved 24 February 2021.
  32. ^ "Home · BoB". learningonscreen.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 15 January 2020. Retrieved 24 February 2021.
  33. ^ "TV Thursday 9 April". Radio Times. 4–10 April 1992. p. 66. Archived from the original on 28 April 2022. Retrieved 28 April 2022 – via pbs.twimg.com.

Further reading

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  • Butler, David E., et al. The British General Election of 1992 (1992), the standard scholarly study
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