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Liberal Democrats leadership election, 1999

Liberal Democrats leadership election, 1999

1988 ←
→ 2006

  Charles kennedy feb 2009.jpg Simon Hughes MP Liverpool cropped.jpg Malcolm Bruce, September 2009 cropped.jpg
Candidate Charles Kennedy Simon Hughes Malcolm Bruce
1st Pref. 22,724 16,233 4,643
Percentage 44.6% 31.8% 9.1%
Final Pref. 28,425 21,833 Eliminated
Percentage 56.6% 43.4% Eliminated

  David Rendel - Newbury declaration.jpg
Candidate Jackie Ballard David Rendel
1st Pref. 3,978 3,428
Percentage 7.8% 6.7%
Final Pref. Eliminated Eliminated
Percentage Eliminated Eliminated

Leader before election

Paddy Ashdown

Elected Leader

Charles Kennedy


Paddy Ashdown

Charles Kennedy

The 1999 Liberal Democrats leadership election was called following the resignation of Paddy Ashdown as leader. There were five candidates and all members of the party were balloted using the Alternative Vote preference system. The election was won by Charles Kennedy, who served as leader until his resignation in 2006.

The chief issue in the election was whether the party should continue its partial collaboration with the Labour Party, which had seen Ashdown and other senior Liberal Democrats appointed to a joint Cabinet committee on electoral reform. Most of the candidates were to various degrees sceptical about this approach, with Simon Hughes the most hostile and Charles Kennedy the strongest defender of Ashdown. The campaign was almost entirely free of bitterness and outspoken comments. Kennedy was generally favoured by the press because of his name recognition, which derived from his frequent appearances on light-hearted panel games on television.

Supporters included:

Supporters included:

Supporters included:

Supporters included:

Supporters included:


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Wikipedia

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