UK Election Blog
May 5, 2010
Posted: 902 GMT

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Filed under: Debates •Election


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May 3, 2010
Posted: 1620 GMT
Students in Brimingham brave the rain to watch the third UK election debate between leaders of the main political parties (Getty)
Students in Brimingham brave the rain to watch the third UK election debate between leaders of the main political parties (Getty)

London, England - "It was the Sun wot won it" claimed the bumptious newspaper in a famous headline the day after the 1992 UK election surprisingly returned Conservative Prime Minister John Major to power.

The newspaper's front-page banner headline on polling day itself featured Labour Leader Neil Kinnock's, his head surrounded by a lightbulb and urged: "If Kinnock wins today will the last person to leave Britain please turn out the lights."

If the shape of British politics changes on May 6, with a hung parliament leading to discussions about a coalition government, then somebody somewhere will write an article entitled "It was the TV debates wot dun it."

The four-and-a-half hours of detailed and sometimes passionate debate between Prime Minister Gordon Brown, Conservative leader David Cameron and his Liberal Democrat counterpart Nick Clegg have not only had a significant effect on the likely outcome of this contest - they have probably changed the whole shape of British politics.

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Filed under: Debates •Election •Social Media


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April 30, 2010
Posted: 1643 GMT
The third UK election debate provided much material for tabloid newspaper designers and copy editors.
The third UK election debate provided much material for tabloid newspaper designers and copy editors.

London, England – Gordon Brown looked like a mouldy cheese, David Cameron a fleshy buttock and Nick Clegg a scrambled egg. Britain's newspapers pulled no punches as they summed up the last of the country's pre-election leadership debates in typically ribald fashion.

With the partisan press in broad agreement with opinion polls that handed victory in the third televised encounter to Conservative leader Cameron, many dwelled on Prime Minister Brown's failure to revive his chances ahead of the May 6 vote.

And for some there was disappointment that more was not made of the now-notorious gaffe that saw Brown caught on tape calling a supporter of his Labour party - an elderly woman by the name of Gillian Duffy - "bigoted."

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Filed under: Debates •Election •Media


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Posted: 1030 GMT
UK Conservative Party leader David Cameron headed the opinion polls after Thursday’s debate (Getty).
UK Conservative Party leader David Cameron headed the opinion polls after Thursday’s debate (Getty).

London, England – British Prime Minister Gordon Brown fought to hold on to his job Thursday in a debate against the two men who hope to replace him, David Cameron of the Conservative Party and Nick Clegg of the Liberal Democrats.

But he lost the debate decisively, according to two snap polls.

Cameron came first in both polls, with Clegg second and Brown third.

But the debate performances do not seem to have changed voters' minds about whom to back, according to one poll.

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Filed under: Debates •Immigration •The Economy


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Posted: 1016 GMT

London, England – The third televised debate between Labour Party leader Gordon Brown, Conservative leader David Cameron and Nick Clegg, leader of the Liberal Democrats, took place Thursday in Birmingham, central England.

The theme of the 90-minute debate, which took place in front of a live audience, was the economy, although questions were taken on other issues such as immigration. Here’s a roundup of the video highlights:

Leaders debate the impact of spending cuts on the UK's economy

Brown: Both have got this wrong

David Cameron: Brown should be ashamed

The three leaders debate the impact of spending cuts

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Posted: 840 GMT

Filed under: Debates •General


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Posted: 154 GMT

Birmingham, England - The view from the media pen, now dubbed the spin room during debates, was that the ‘spinning’ from the party faithful started shockingly early. There was a full half-hour to go on the debate, and there were the party pundits, telling us their man won.

There is a fine art to ‘spinning’ and here’s how it goes. First, say your man won. Second, say why your man won. And finally, third, keep a straight, serious face even though you know you sound ridiculous saying your man won.

Why is that?

The truth is, as popular and widely watched as these debates were, they may not have been a game-changer for any one candidate. All parties agree that during the first debate Nick Clegg, the leader of the Liberal Democrat party, found his voice. And many British voters were listening for the first time.

But now, with almost everyone on this campaign looking weary and battered, the debates have been informative, but they have failed to really crown a winner in what is a nail-biter of a race.

We started the day wondering how Gordon Brown would atone for calling a pensioned grandmother a bigot. His line during the debate got a good laugh in the press room, ‘as you could see from yesterday, I don’t always get everything right’. But what has been so telling about this campaign has been that neither of his opponents mentioned the Brown gaffe. As many voters told us, they don’t expect any politician to rise above that kind of contempt. They want more from their politicians but have learned to expect less.

So it’s on to Wales and market day in the pouring rain, if the forecast is to be believed. We check out an old Labour heartland that still believes socialism is the way forward. And stay tuned, we’re told former Prime Minister Tony Blair joins the campaign on Friday. One week to go, countless tales to come.

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Posted: 146 GMT

Filed under: Debates •Election •General


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April 29, 2010
Posted: 1521 GMT

Editor's note: Watch the final leadership debate and post-debate analysis on CNN.com Live: 2030 - 2230 BST / 1530 - 1730 ET.

London, England (CNN) – Continued criticism over a campaign gaffe by British Prime Minister Gordon Brown threatened to take attention away from the third and final televised election debate Thursday night.

Though Brown apologized again Thursday, his campaigning was repeatedly interrupted by questions about what happened a day earlier, when he was caught calling a supporter of his own Labour Party "bigoted" for her views on immigration.

"I think people know that if you can make a mistake and you apologize, and you talk to the person who was concerned about it, that people understand that," Brown said Thursday morning when a reporter asked him about the remark. "But I think people also know that I'm talking about the big issues. I'm talking about not just immigration - I'm talking about the economy."

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April 28, 2010
Posted: 1509 GMT
UK Labour Party leader Gordon Brown meets with Gillian Duffy on the campaign trail in Rochdale, northern England (Getty).
UK Labour Party leader Gordon Brown meets with Gillian Duffy on the campaign trail in Rochdale, northern England (Getty).

London, England – The phrase "bigoted woman" is as likely to pop up in Thursday night's final debate as "no more boom and bust," "hard-working families" or "savage cuts," according to Ladbrokes, the UK bookies, after a media frenzy over a Gordon Brown gaffe Wednesday.

Brown was caught on microphone describing voter Gillian Duffy as a "bigoted woman" after she harangued him in Rochdale, northwest England, as he campaigned there. He later apologized profusely after saying sorry to Duffy in person.

But the damage appears to have been done.

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Filed under: Betting •Debates •Election


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The UK election race is over and we are no longer updating this blog or monitoring comments. Thanks to everyone who contributed.

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