Embattled Blair Shuffles Cabinet
Blair, Criticized On Iraq, Changes Defense Leadership
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Play CBS Video Video Blair's Bittersweet Victory It was a mixed blessing for British Prime Minister Tony Blair. Though he won a historic third term, his party's majority shrunk greatly. CBS News' Richard Roth reports.
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Blair and his wife Cherie return to 10 Downing Street after the election (AP)
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Conservative opposition leader Michael Howard with his wife Sandra (AP)
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The British Broadcasting Corp. projected Labour would win 66 more seats than all the other parties combined. Sky News put the Labour majority at 64 seats. Results in 610 constituencies showed a turnout of more than 61 percent of the electorate, up 2 percent from 2001's record low.
Official results for the remaining seats were expected to trickle in through the weekend.
The margin of a Labour victory also could have consequences for Britain's "special relationship" with the United States. The battering Blair took over Iraq during the campaign suggested that any future British leader will probably be wary of backing Washington militarily in the face of hostile domestic opinion.
A politically weakened Blair, who has said he will not seek another term, also could find it difficult to persuade British voters to approve a proposed constitution for the European Union, which requires ratification by all member states.
Conservative leader Michael Howard, whose party has floundered in opposition since it was decisively ousted from government in 1997, was bolstered by an improved seat tally for the Conservatives.
Despite backing the war, Howard accused Blair of misrepresenting flimsy British intelligence on Iraqi weapons of mass destruction and lying about the legal case for war. He urged voters to "wipe the smirk" off Blair's face. Howard, however, congratulated Blair on his victory on Friday.
"We have sent a message to Mr. Blair, and in the next Parliament we will be able to form a stronger opposition," he said.
Blair was once regarded as Labour's most prized electoral asset. He banked on his trustworthiness and described himself as a "pretty straight guy" soon after winning power in 1997.
Labour's diminished majority is a stark indication of how far his popularity has crashed since the landslide victories of 1997 and 2001. Blair could now face difficulties controlling a disaffected rump of Labour lawmakers deeply disillusioned with his leadership, especially over Iraq, and the centrist flavor he has given the traditionally socialist party.
Blair's government only narrowly defeated revolts in the last parliament, including the crucial vote to go to war in Iraq, and legislation introducing tuition fees for university students, more private funding for state-run hospitals and tough anti-terrorism laws.
"If his majority falls below 60 then you are in an area where an organized minority would have a strong bargaining power," said Geoff Andrews, political analyst at the Open University.
Even with a reduced majority, it is a historic victory for Labour, which has never before won three straight terms. The party's strong economic record — Britain's growth is high and unemployment low compared with much of the rest of the European Union — appears to have outweighed the resentment over Iraq. Labour is also credited with improving public services such as health and education through investment.
"I promise that we will listen and we will learn so that we can serve our country and our communities even better in the years to come," said Brown.
Commentators suggested power would begin to seep away from Blair to Brown, whose strong stewardship of the British economy has made him a more popular and trustworthy figure.
"On these results I would have thought, not Gordon Brown himself but the Brown supporters will be wondering how quickly they can move Tony Blair out of Downing Street," said former Conservative minister Michael Portillo.
"The key factor in the campaign was that this time Tony Blair was not an electoral asset. He was becoming a liability."
©MMV CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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