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1992 Labour Party leadership election

1992 Labour Party leadership election
← 1988 18 July 1992 (1992-07-18) 1994 →
 
Candidate John Smith Bryan Gould
Overall result 91.0% 9.0%
Affiliated unions 96.3% 3.7%
Party members 98.0% 2.0%
Labour MPs 77.1% 22.9%

Leader before election

Neil Kinnock

Elected Leader

John Smith

The 1992 Labour Party leadership election followed the Labour Party's failure to win the 1992 general election and the subsequent resignation of party leader Neil Kinnock.

There were only two candidates in the election, with John Smith always the clear favourite to win.[1] The ballot took place on 18 July 1992 at the Labour Party conference. Affiliated organisations had 40% of the vote, while Constituency Labour Parties and the Parliamentary Labour Party had 30% each in the electoral college. Gordon Brown and Robin Cook were both seen as potential candidates, but did not stand.

John Smith was elected in a landslide victory with 91% of the vote. This was the last Labour Party leadership election which used the trade union block vote; the system was reformed under Smith's leadership to a one member, one vote system which was in place for the 1994 leadership election held two years later when Smith died suddenly of a heart attack.

The contest took place simultaneously with the 1992 Labour Party deputy leadership election.

  1. ^ "A Plea for Bloodshed". The Economist. 18 April 1992. p. 64.

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Élection à la direction du Parti travailliste britannique de 1992 French 1992年イギリス労働党党首選挙 Japanese

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