Falkirk West By-election 2000


saltire shield'Labour's Eric Joyce has won the by-election for the Westminster seat of Falkirk West, but with a hugely reduced majority. The Scottish National Party candidate David Kerr was second and secured a swing of 16% in favour of the nationalists, with the Conservative candidate Craig Stevenson in third place.'
BBC Scotland News, 22 nd December 2000
Lion Rampant

Labour wins in Falkirk West

From BBC Scotland news 22 nd December 2000

Labour's Eric Joyce has won the by-election for the Westminster seat of Falkirk West, but with a hugely reduced majority.

The Scottish National Party candidate David Kerr was second and secured a swing of 16% in favour of the nationalist, with the Conservative candidate Craig Stevenson in third place.

The Scottish Socialist Party candidate Iain Hunter beat the Liberal Democats' Hugh O'Donnell into fifth place.

The turnout of 19,504 - about 36% of the electorate - was the lowest in a Scottish poll since the war. The previous low was recorded in the Glasgow Anniesland by-elections last month.

Falkirk West
Lab: 8,492 (43.54%)
SNP: 7,787 (39.93%)
Tory: 1,621 (8.31%)
SSP: 989 (5.07%)
Lib Dems: 615 (3.15%)
Former army major Mr Joyce secured the seat left vacant by Dennis Canavan with a much reduced majority on the 1997 general election result. The majority on that occasion was 13,783.

Mr Joyce gained 8,492 votes, his nearest rival, Mr Kerr, polled 7,787 votes and Mr Stevenson secured 1,621.

The socialists' Iain Hunter, meanwhile, polled 989 votes and Mr O'Donnell's total was 615. He lost his deposit.

The by-election was caused by the resignation of former Labour MP Dennis Canavan who soundly defeated the party's candidate in last year's Scottish Parliament elections when he stood as an independent.

He decided last month to vacate his Westminster seat.

Party activists in Falkirk faced a hard struggle to pull out supporters whose thoughts appeared to be more focused on Christmas and Hogmanay.

Mr Joyce said after the count that the result had proved those who believed that Labour would be beaten were wrong.

He said: "We have disappointed them - those pundits and pollsters who thought that this would be a disastrous by-election.

"The nationalists have been judged irrelevant in Falkirk West.

'Social justice'

"They have been cast aside by the people of Falkirk in favour of making this country better."

However, Mr Kerr said the result showed the SNP was making progress on the road to independence.

He said: "This country needs social justice and that can only be achieved through independence.

"The key message is that the SNP support is up and New Labour's is down."

- Dec 22


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