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2010 Labour Party Shadow Cabinet election

Last Labour Party election to the Shadow Cabinet, occurring in 2010


Last Labour Party election to the Shadow Cabinet, occurring in 2010

The Commons members of the Parliamentary Labour Party (PLP) elected 19 members of the Shadow Cabinet from among their number in 2010. This follows the Labour Party's defeat at the 2010 general election, after which the party formed the Official Opposition in the United Kingdom.

A separate election for Opposition Chief Whip, an ex officio member of the Shadow Cabinet, happened at the same time. Rosie Winterton was unopposed in that election; she would serve for the remainder of the Parliament. The results of the Shadow Cabinet election were announced on 7 October 2010, hours after the balloting closed.

The PLP voted to abolish Shadow Cabinet elections at a meeting on 5 July 2011, before the National Executive Committee and the Party Conference followed suit. As a result, the 2010 Shadow Cabinet election was the last.

Background

Shadow Cabinet elections typically happened near the beginning of a session, but were delayed until after the leadership election, which ended with the announcement of Ed Miliband as winner on 25 September. Nominations were open from 26 to 29 September, and voting occurred from 4 to 7 October. The leader may choose to assign Shadow Cabinet portfolios to non-members, who are considered to "attend" Shadow Cabinet.

Rule changes

On 8 September 2010, the PLP voted to continue electing the Shadow Cabinet and made various changes to the rules for such elections:

  • Shadow Cabinet elections will be held every two years, rather than every year.
  • The Chief Whip will once again be separately elected, reversing a change made before the 1995 Shadow Cabinet election that allowed the Leader of the Labour Party to hand out the position as with any other Shadow Cabinet portfolio. Now, the Chief Whip will be elected by the PLP for the duration of a Parliament.
  • For a PLP member's ballot to be valid, it must contain votes for at least six women and six men, up from four.
  • The Shadow Cabinet will no longer be the Parliamentary Committee when the party is in opposition. Instead, the latter will be a backbench group just as when the party is in government.

Ex officio members

The following are also members of the Shadow Cabinet by virtue of the office listed:

  • Leader of the Labour Party (Ed Miliband)
  • Deputy Leader (Harriet Harman)
  • Opposition Chief Whip in the Commons (Rosie Winterton)
  • Leader of the Opposition in the House of Lords (Baroness Royall of Blaisdon)
  • Opposition Chief Whip in the Lords (Lord Bassam of Brighton)

Candidates

Shortly after the 2010 general election, Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling announced that he would not be a candidate in the elections, thus ending more than 20 years of frontbench service. In August, both Shadow Justice Secretary Jack Straw and Shadow Defence Secretary Bob Ainsworth announced their retirements from the frontbench. On 29 September, the day nominations closed, Shadow Foreign Secretary David Miliband announced he would step down from the Shadow Cabinet, having been defeated for the Labour leadership days earlier by his brother, Ed.

Forty-nine Labour MPs stood for election, and the results were as follows:

Colour
key
Retained in the Shadow Cabinet
Joined the Shadow Cabinet
Voted out of the Shadow Cabinet
RankCandidateConstituencyVotesSubsequent portfolio
1Normanton, Pontefract and Castleford232Shadow Foreign Secretary
2It is unclear from the sources (see note 2, below) whether Healey was a full Shadow Cabinet member before the election or merely in attendance, in which case he would be listed as joining rather than having been retained in the Shadow Cabinet.Wentworth and Dearne192Shadow Secretary of State for Health
3Morley and Outwood179Shadow Home Secretary
4†Leigh165Shadow Secretary of State for Education; Election Co-ordinator
4†Wallasey165Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury
6Kingston upon Hull West and Hessle163Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer
7†Paisley and Renfrewshire South160Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions
7†East Renfrewshire160Shadow Secretary of State for Defence
9Dulwich and West Norwood152Shadow Minister for the Olympics
10Don Valley139Shadow Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government
11Southampton Itchen129Shadow Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills
12†Leeds Central128Shadow Leader of the House of Commons
12†Khan was listed on the Labour Party's and Parliament's frontbench lists as attending Shadow Cabinet rather than as a full member. The Shadow Cabinet list at Labour's website, produced earlier than the others, makes no distinction between full members and attendees.Tooting128Shadow Secretary of State for Justice; Shadow Lord Chancellor
14Wakefield119Shadow Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
15Glasgow North117Shadow Secretary of State for Scotland
16Garston and Halewood107Shadow Secretary of State for Transport
17Hackney South and Shoreditch106Shadow Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change
18Bury South104Shadow Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport
19Birmingham Hodge Hill100Shadow Minister for the Cabinet Office
20Islington South and Finsbury99
21Peter Hain and Shaun Woodward were appointed to the Shadow Cabinet by Ed Miliband to serve as the Shadow Welsh and Northern Irish Secretaries, respectively.Neath97Shadow Secretary of State for Wales
22Slough88
23Worsley and Eccles South87
24Gedling85
25Wolverhampton South East84
26†Bishop Auckland80
26†Tottenham80
28East Ham79
29Rhondda77
30St Helens South and Whiston72Shadow Secretary of State for Northern Ireland
31Harrow West71
32North Durham68
33Cardiff West64
34City of Durham63
35Hackney North and Stoke Newington59
36Liverpool West Derby55
37Glasgow South54
38Exeter53
39Hartlepool43
40Brent North41
41Delyn38
42Wrexham34
43Caerphilly30
44Ogmore28
45Nottingham East26
46Stoke-on-Trent South15
47Ilford South12
48Cardiff South and Penarth11
49Falkirk10

;Notes :† Multiple candidates tied for position.

Chief Whip election

At the same time they elect members of the Shadow Cabinet, the Commons PLP will elect the Opposition Chief Whip. The incumbent Chief Whip, Nick Brown, announced on 29 September that he would not be a candidate, writing in a letter to the new leader, Ed Miliband, that though he had intended to stand for election to the post, he was acceding to Miliband's request that he stand down. According to the BBC, after the announcement, Jim Fitzpatrick, who had also intended to stand for the post, withdrew his candidacy, and Miliband asked Rosie Winterton to stand, and she did so unopposed.

References

References

  1. (20 February 2009). "Get ready for the return of shadow cabinet elections". The Spectator.
  2. (8 January 2010). "Shadow Cabinet elections–they haven't gone away you know". London Evening Standard.
  3. Neild, Barry. (6 July 2011). "Labour MPs vote to abolish shadow cabinet elections". The Guardian.
  4. (26 September 2011). "John Prescott calls for Labour shadow cabinet reshuffle". BBC News.
  5. Rose, Gareth. (18 May 2010). "Alistair Darling to quit as Labour front-bencher". The Scotsman.
  6. (8 September 2010). "Labour MPs to elect shadow cabinet". BBC News.
  7. (14 September 2010). "Shadow Cabinet bun fight begins". Labour Uncut.
  8. (8 September 2010). "Gender equality plan for shadow cabinet diluted by Labour MPs". Guardian.
  9. [http://labour-uncut.co.uk/2010/09/09/the-quiet-campaign-for-the-chief-whip/ The Quiet Campaign for Chief Whip]
  10. [http://labour-uncut.co.uk/2010/10/14/timetable-for-elections-to-the-plp-parliamentary-committee/ Timetable for elections to the PLP Parliamentary Committee]
  11. (29 September 2010). "David Miliband says he won't join brother Ed's team". BBC News.
  12. (29 September 2010). "Labour Chief Whip Nick Brown Agrees to Stand Aside". The Guardian.
  13. (29 September 2010). "Ed Miliband asks chief whip Nick Brown to step aside". BBC News.
  14. (29 September 2010). "49 MPs in race for frontbench post". UK Press Association.
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