Labour Party Bashed In U.K. Elections
Pro-Independence Party Wins In Scotland; U.K.-Wide Defeats Seen As Rebuke For Blair's Pro-War Stance
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Prime Minister Tony Blair tried to put a positive spin on his Labour Party's election losses saying, "You always take a hit in the midterm, but these results provide a perfectly good springboard to go on and win the next national election." (AP Photo/Stefan Rousseau)
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Fast Facts
United Kingdom
Learn about the people, economy and history.
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Photo Essay
Tony Blair
A look at Britain's outgoing prime minister over his 10 years in office.
Most notably, the pro-independence Scottish National Party won the most seats in elections to the Scottish Parliament, beating the Labour Party in a closely fought race.
In elections marred by technical and other problems, the SNP took 47 of 129 seats, compared to 46 seats for Labour. The Conservative Party finished third, with 17 seats, while the Liberal Democrats won 16 seats.
The close result will mean that no one party will be able to govern alone in the parliament. Labour has governed Scotland in the past together in a coalition with Britain's third main party, the Liberal Democrats.
Scotland has been part of the United Kingdom for 300 years, but has its own legal system, and since 1998, it also has an independent parliament in Edinburgh which handles Scotland-only issues. It also sends representatives to the U.K. central government in London.
SNP leader Alex Salmond, who himself won a tough battle in the constituency of Gordon, in northeast Scotland, could now be Scotland's First Minister, or national leader.
"I think there is a new dawn breaking, not just in the northeast of Scotland but across our country," Salmond said after he won his seat in the Parliament. "I think there is a perspective opening up in Scottish politics which is going to transcend our experience."
Blair said the results were not as bad as predicted.
"Everyone said we were going to get hammered, it was going to be a rout, and it's not turned out like that," he said. "The fact is we have come from 10 points behind in Scotland to neck and neck."
But there were problems in counting votes, ranging from fog in the remote Western Isles — a helicopter due to carry ballot boxes to a counting hall was grounded — to engine failure in a boat ferrying votes from the Scottish isle of Arran.
Officials were investigating technical problems with the computers that counted electronic votes, and there were delays in getting postal votes to people's homes. Newspapers branded the election "a fiasco and a shambles" after it was beset with technical problems as an estimated 100,000 ballot papers — five percent of the turnout — were spoiled.
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.



I was laughing as I watched the 'GOP hopefuls' on parade the other night... There won't be another Republicon president for forty years.
Watch and learn from the Brits.
Posted by notblue at 05:30 PM : May 04, 2007
You god da*m crooks are trying to ruin the democrats, you won't give them anytime to legislate.
Now they got three more republican crooks to investigate, please give them time to do their job.
Posted by rhs648 at 09:05 PM : May 04, 2007
Only through a republican ******* eyes.
Posted by rharrin1
Time they have. They just lack the ability.
Posted by rhs648
Compared to what?
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by bm6005
May 5, 2007 7:55 PM PDT
- Time they have. They just lack the ability.
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Reply to this comment
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See all 12 CommentsPosted by rhs648
Ability and GW Bush. An oxyMORON if ever!!!