The '
Cheadle by-election', in
Greater Manchester,
England, was caused by the death of
Patsy Calton, the
Liberal Democrat Member of Parliament (MP) for
Cheadle on
May 29,
2005. The election was held on
July 14,
2005.
The Liberal Democrat candidate succeeding Calton was
Stockport council leader Mark Hunter. The
Conservative candidate was
Stephen Day (who held the seat from
1987 to
2001, and lost to Calton in the
2005 general election). In his victory speech, Hunter described the campaign of the Conservatives as 'nasty' and 'misleading'.
The campaign was marred by accusations of dirty tricks and ruthless
negative campaigning, principally aimed at the Conservative campaign. Both the Liberal Democrats and a local newspaper threatened legal action over inaccuracies and defamation in Conservative campaign leaflets. The most significant example was a Conservative leaflet that superimposed a headline about Hunter's voting record on crime with a headline from a local newspaper about a rape, prompting the Liberal Democrats to threaten legal action. With only 4.6% of the vote the
Labour Party candidate, Martin Miller, lost his deposit; Labour did not fight an energetic campaign in a seat that was a Liberal Democrat/Conservative marginal.
With the exception of the
1997 Winchester by-election, where the General Election result was annulled, it was the first seat to be defended in a by-election by the Liberal Democrats since their formation in
1988. Their predecessor parties last defended a seat in a by-election at
Truro in 1987.
Results
See also
★
List of United Kingdom by-elections
External links
★
British Parliamentary By Elections: Campaign literature from the by-election
★
Lib Dems win Cheadle - BBC News
★
Lib Dems name Cheadle candidate - BBC News
★
Lib Dems reveal by-election date
★
UKIP to miss Cheadle by-election