47-563: Flook may refer to: People with the surname [ edit ] Adrian Flook (born 1963), British politician Chris Flook (born 1973), Bermudan swimmer D. Charles Flook (died 1945), American politician from Maryland John Gurley Flook (1839–1926), American politician Maria Flook , American writer Other uses [ edit ] Flook (app) , an iPhone application Flook (band) , an Anglo-Irish band Flook (comic strip) See also [ edit ] Parker v. Flook ,
94-553: A 1978 United States Supreme Court case Fluke (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Flook . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Flook&oldid=1254241784 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Disambiguation pages with surname-holder lists Hidden categories: Short description
141-576: A consultant for Financial Dynamics. At the 1997 general election , he stood unsuccessfully in the safe Labour Party constituency of Pontefract and Castleford . At the 2001 general election , he was elected as MP for Taunton , taking the traditionally Conservative seat that had been captured by the Liberal Democrat Jackie Ballard at the 1997 election. Flook's victory in Taunton was one of just nine total gains made by
188-526: A great level of experience and stability to a party that had ousted its former leader Iain Duncan Smith just 18 months prior. The Conservative campaign was managed by Australian strategist Lynton Crosby . The campaign focused on more traditional conservative issues like immigration, which created some controversy with the slogan "It's not racist to impose limits on immigration". They also criticised Labour's "dirty" hospitals and high crime levels, under
235-1021: A minority Labour or Conservative government. In Northern Ireland the Democratic Unionist Party sought to make further gains from the Ulster Unionist Party in unionist politics, and Sinn Féin hoped to overtake the Social Democratic and Labour Party in nationalist politics. (Sinn Féin MPs do not take their seats in the House of Commons —they follow a policy of abstentionism .) The pro- independence Scottish National Party and Plaid Cymru (Party of Wales) stood candidates in every constituency in Scotland and Wales respectively. Many seats were contested by other parties, including several parties without incumbents in
282-558: A net gain of just one seat, 2005 was the first general election since their famous 1983 landslide victory where the number of Conservative seats increased appreciably, although the Conservatives' vote share increased only slightly and this election did mark the third successive general election in which the Conservatives polled below 35%. In some areas the Conservative vote actually fell. The Conservatives claimed to have won
329-534: A strong stance against the Iraq War , particularly due to the absence of a second United Nations resolution, This anti-war position resonated with disenchanted Labour voters, leading to the Liberal Democrats achieving what was at that point their largest vote share in their history. Blair won a third term as prime minister, with Labour having 355 MPs, but with a popular vote share of just 35.2%. This
376-410: A third consecutive election, netting the most seats in its history until 2024 and the most of any of the connected British Liberal parties since 1929 . The Labour campaign emphasised a strong economy; however, Blair had suffered a decline in popularity, which was exacerbated by the controversial decision to send British troops to invade Iraq in 2003. Despite this, Labour mostly retained its leads over
423-451: Is a notional figure Tony Blair Labour Tony Blair Labour The 2005 United Kingdom general election was held on Thursday 5 May 2005, to elect 646 members to the House of Commons . The governing Labour Party led by the prime minister Tony Blair won its third consecutive victory, with Blair becoming the second Labour leader after Harold Wilson to form three majority governments. However, its majority fell to 66 seats;
470-454: Is based on the 2001 election results if they had been fought on these new 2005 boundaries. At 04:28 BST, it was announced that Labour had won Corby , giving them 324 seats in the House of Commons out of those then declared and an overall majority, Labour's total reaching 355 seats out of the 646 House of Commons seats. Labour received 35.3% of the popular vote , equating to approximately 22% of
517-504: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Adrian Flook Adrian John Flook (born 9 July 1963) is a British Conservative politician, and a former Member of Parliament (MP). Flook was educated at King Edward School , Bath and Mansfield College, Oxford where he studied (BA) Modern History. He was a stockbroker from 1985 to 1998, working first for UBS Warburg and then for Société Générale . From 1998 to 2002 he worked as
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#1732780021022564-565: The 1992 general election and having not taken a single seat off Labour in 1997 , they had held their gains off Labour from the 2001 general election and had actually made further gains from them. The Liberal Democrats also managed to take three seats from the Conservatives, one notable victory being that of Tim Farron over Tim Collins in Westmorland and Lonsdale , through the use of a "decapitation strategy", which targeted senior Tories. The Liberal Democrats increased their percentage of
611-543: The Conservatives in opinion polls on economic competence and leadership, and Conservative leaders Iain Duncan Smith (2001–2003) and Michael Howard (2003–2005) struggled to capitalise on Blair's unpopularity, with the party consistently trailing behind Labour in the polls throughout the 2001–2005 parliament. The Conservatives campaigned on policies such as immigration limits, improving poorly managed hospitals, and reducing high crime rates. The Liberal Democrats took
658-547: The Guinness Book of World Records as longest consecutive delivery of first results). The vote itself represented a swing (in a safe Labour seat, in a safe Labour region) of about 4% to the Conservatives and 4.5% to the Liberal Democrats, somewhat below the prediction of BBC/ITV exit polls published shortly after 2200 BST. Sunderland North was the next to declare, followed by Houghton and Washington East , both of whose Labour MPs retained their seats but with reductions in
705-686: The Official Opposition into government. The Liberal Democrats hoped to make gains from both main parties, but especially the Conservative Party, with a "decapitation" strategy targeting members of the Shadow Cabinet . The Lib Dems had also wished to become the governing party, or to make enough gains to become the Official Opposition, but more realistically hoped to play a major part in a parliament led by
752-463: The Select committee on Culture, Media and Sport. Flook worked for the public relations firm M: Communications, where he has performed pro bono work on behalf of the so-called NatWest Three . Currently, he works as a Consultant for C|T|F Partners. He is a national patron of domestic violence charity ManKind Initiative . He was then elected to Wandsworth Council for the ward of Wandsworth Common in
799-493: The dissolution of Parliament on 11 April by Queen Elizabeth II , at the request of the Prime Minister, Tony Blair. Following the death of Pope John Paul II on 2 April, it was announced that the calling of the election would be delayed until 5 April. Thanks to eight years of sustained economic growth Labour could point to a strong economy, with greater investment in public services such as education and health. This
846-512: The list of parties contesting the 2005 general election . All parties campaigned using such tools as party manifestos , party political broadcasts and touring the country in what are commonly referred to as battle buses . Local elections in parts of England and in Northern Ireland were held on the same day. The polls were open for fifteen hours, from 07:00 to 22:00 BST ( UTC+1 ). The election came just over three weeks after
893-663: The 2018 local election. Flook subsequently stood and lost in Wandle ward in the 2022 elections. He married Frangelica O'Shea in 2003. Their daughter, Clementine Alexia, was born in 2005. This article about a Conservative Member of the Parliament of the United Kingdom representing an English constituency and born in the 1960s is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . 2005 United Kingdom general election * Indicates boundary change – so this
940-450: The BBC and ITV agreed for the first time to pool their respective data, using results from Mori and NOP. More than 20,000 people were interviewed for the poll at 120 polling stations across the country. The predictions were very accurate—initial projections saw Labour returned to power with a majority of 66 (down from 160), and the final result (including South Staffordshire , where the election
987-470: The BBC and presented by Peter Snow , David Dimbleby , Tony King , Jeremy Paxman , and Andrew Marr . The governing Labour Party , led by Tony Blair , was looking to secure a third consecutive term in office and to retain a large majority. The Conservative Party was seeking to regain seats lost to both Labour and the Liberal Democrats since the 1992 general election , and move from being
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#17327800210221034-581: The Conservative Party at the 2001 General Election where, under William Hague's leadership, the Party made a net gain of just one seat in the House of Commons. The seat of Taunton was high on the Conservative Party's target list, receiving a visit from Hague himself on the first day of the campaign. Flook served only one term, losing his seat at the 2005 election to the Liberal Democrat Jeremy Browne . While in Parliament he served on
1081-612: The Conservative Party's four previous leaders ( Iain Duncan Smith , William Hague , John Major and Margaret Thatcher ), with the caption "Britain's working, don't let the Tories wreck it again." For the Liberal Democrats, this was the second and final election campaign fought by leader Charles Kennedy , who strongly opposed the Iraq War and personally offered a more down-to-earth approach to voters, which proved popular. There were some questions, however, over Kennedy's abilities when, at
1128-511: The Conservatives. The first Liberal Democrat seat to be declared was North East Fife , the constituency of Lib Dem deputy leader Sir Menzies Campbell which he had held since 1987 . The constituency of Crawley in West Sussex had the slimmest majority of any seat, with Labour's Laura Moffatt holding off the Conservatives' Henry Smith by 37 votes after three recounts. Following problems with exit polls in previous British elections,
1175-541: The House of Commons at this election included former SDLP leader John Hume , former Cabinet ministers Estelle Morris , Paul Boateng , Chris Smith , Gillian Shephard , Virginia Bottomley and Michael Portillo , the Father of the House of Commons Tam Dalyell , Tony Banks and Sir Teddy Taylor , while Stephen Twigg lost the Enfield Southgate constituency back to the Conservatives. A notable MP who joined
1222-626: The House of Commons at this election was future Labour leader and energy secretary Ed Miliband . Following the election, Michael Howard conceded defeat , resigned as Conservative leader and was succeeded by future prime minister David Cameron . Blair resigned as both prime minister and leader of the Labour Party in June 2007, and was replaced by Gordon Brown , the then Chancellor of the Exchequer . The election results were broadcast live on
1269-865: The House of Commons. Parties that were not represented at Westminster, but had seats in the devolved assemblies and/or the European Parliament , included the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland , the UK Independence Party , the Green Party of England and Wales , the Scottish Green Party , and the Scottish Socialist Party . The Health Concern party also stood again. A full list of parties which declared their intention to run can be found on
1316-555: The Lib Dems' vote share predicted by the exit poll was accurate (22.6% compared to the actual 22.0%), they did better in some Lib Dem-Labour marginals than predicted on the basis of the national share of the vote, and achieved a net gain of 11 seats. There were major boundary changes in Scotland, where the number of seats was reduced from 72 to 59. As a result of this each party lost some seats, and this notional election result below
1363-491: The Liberal Democrat manifesto launch, he was asked about local income tax, but appeared confused on the figures. Both the Liberal Democrats and the Conservatives were keen to tackle Labour's introduction of tuition fees , which both opposition parties opposed and promised to abolish. At the close of voting (2200 BST ) the ballot boxes were sealed and returned to the counting centres, where counting proceeded under
1410-538: The Liberal Democrats failed to match the higher national votes of the SDP–Liberal Alliance in the 1980s either in absolute or percentage terms. The total combined vote for Labour, the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats proved to be the lowest main three-party vote since 1922 . Popular vote The figure of 355 seats for Labour does not include the Speaker Michael Martin . See also
1457-655: The Liberal Democrats. In Northern Ireland the Ulster Unionists were all but wiped out, only keeping North Down , with leader David Trimble losing his seat in Upper Bann . For the first time the DUP became the biggest party in Northern Ireland. It was the first general election since 1929 in which no party received more than ten million votes. It was the most "three-cornered" election since 1923 , though
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1504-569: The Tories and the Liberal Democrats, Labour also lost Blaenau Gwent , its safest seat in Wales, to Independent Peter Law , and Bethnal Green and Bow to Respect candidate George Galloway . The Conservatives claimed that their increased number of seats showed disenchantment with the Labour government and was a precursor of a Conservative breakthrough at the next election. Following three consecutive elections of declining representation and then in 2001
1551-498: The electorate on a 61.3% turnout, up from 59.4% turnout in 2001. As expected, voter disenchantment led to an increase of support for many opposition parties, and caused many eligible to vote, not to turn out. Labour achieved a third successive term in office for the first time in their history, though with reduction of the Labour majority from 167 to 67 (as it was before the declaration of South Staffordshire ). As it became clear that Labour had won an overall majority, Michael Howard ,
1598-516: The general election in England, since they received more votes than Labour although Labour still won a majority of seats. The Liberal Democrats claimed that their continued gradual increase in seats and percentage vote showed they were in a position to make further gains from both parties. They pointed in particular to the fact that they were now in second place in roughly one hundred and ninety constituencies and that having had net losses to Labour in
1645-406: The incumbent majorities of up to 9%. The first Scottish seat to declare was Rutherglen and Hamilton West — another safe Labour seat, also a Labour hold, but with the majority reduced by 4%. The first seat to change hands was Putney , where Labour's majority of 2,771 fell to a strong Conservative challenge, with a total swing of about 5,000 (6.2%). This was also the first seat to be declared for
1692-548: The leader of the Conservative Party, announced his intention to retire from frontline politics. The final seat to declare was the delayed poll in South Staffordshire, at just after 1 a.m. on Friday 24 June. The election was followed by further criticism of the UK electoral system. Calls for reform came particularly from Lib Dem supporters, citing that they received only just over 10% of the overall seats with 22.1% of
1739-464: The majority it won four years earlier had been of 167 seats. The UK media interpreted the results as an indicator of a breakdown in trust in the government, and especially in Blair. This was the first time the Labour Party had won a third consecutive election, but would be the last election victory for Labour until 2024 . The Liberal Democrats , led by Charles Kennedy , increased its seat count for
1786-568: The popular vote increase by 3.7%, and won the most seats of any third party since 1923 , with 62 MPs. Anti-war activist and former Labour MP George Galloway was elected as the MP for Bethnal Green and Bow under the Respect – The Unity Coalition banner, unseating Oona King ; Richard Taylor was re-elected for Kidderminster Health Concern in Wyre Forest ; and independent candidate Peter Law
1833-494: The popular vote. The only parties to win a substantially higher percentage of seats than they achieved in votes were Labour, the Democratic Unionist Party, Sinn Féin, and Health Concern , which ran only one candidate. The results of the election give a Gallagher index of dis-proportionality of 16.76. The Labour government claimed that being returned to office for a third term for the first time ever showed
1880-518: The public approval of Labour 's governance and the continued unpopularity of the Conservatives. Nevertheless, Labour's vote declined to 35.3%, the lowest share of the popular vote to have formed a majority government in the history of the UK House of Commons. In many areas the collapse in the Labour vote resulted in a host of seats changing hands. Labour also failed to gain any new seats, almost unique in any election since 1945. As well as losing seats to
1927-472: The supervision of the returning officer who was obliged to declare the result as soon as it was known. As previously, there was serious competition amongst constituencies to be first to declare. Sunderland South repeated its performance in the last three elections and declared Labour incumbent Chris Mullin re-elected as MP with a majority of 11,059 at approximately 2245 BST (failing by two minutes to beat its previous best, but making it eligible for entry into
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1974-411: The umbrella of the slogan "Are you thinking what we're thinking?" However, Labour counter-attacked, by emphasising Howard's role in the unpopular Major Government of 1992–1997 , airing a party election broadcast attacking Howard, showing a montage of scenes from Howard's tenure as Home Secretary , including prison riots and home repossessions. It also launched a billboard campaign showing Howard, and
2021-579: The vote by 3.7%, the Conservatives by 0.6%, and Labour's dropped by 5.4%. The UK media interpreted the results as an indicator of a breakdown in trust in the government, and especially in Blair. Meanwhile, the Scottish National Party improved its position in Scotland, regaining the Western Isles and Dundee East from Labour, having lost both seats in 1987. In Wales Plaid Cymru failed to gain any seats and lost Ceredigion to
2068-506: Was elected in Blaenau Gwent . In Northern Ireland , the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP), the more moderate of the main unionist parties, which had dominated Northern Irish politics since the 1920s, was reduced from six MPs to one, with party leader David Trimble himself being unseated. The more hardline Democratic Unionist Party became the largest Northern Irish party, with nine MPs elected. Apart from Trimble, notable MPs leaving
2115-441: Was overshadowed, however, by the issue of the controversial 2003 invasion of Iraq , which met widespread public criticism at the time, and would dog Blair throughout the campaign. The Chancellor, Gordon Brown , played a prominent role in the election campaign, frequently appearing with Blair and ensuring that the economy would remain the central focus of Labour's message. Recently elected Conservative leader Michael Howard brought
2162-502: Was postponed due to the death of a candidate) was indeed a Labour majority of 66. The projected shares of the vote in Great Britain were Labour 35% (down 6% on 2001), Conservatives 33% (up 1%), Liberal Democrats 22% (up 4%) and other parties 8% (up 1%). The Conservatives were expected to make the biggest gains, however — 44 seats according to the exit poll — with the Liberal Democrats expected to take as few as two. While
2209-561: Was the smallest of any majority government in UK electoral history until Keir Starmer won an even lower share in 2024. In terms of votes, Labour was only narrowly ahead of the Conservatives, but the party still held a comfortable lead in terms of seats. The Conservatives returned 198 MPs, with 32 more seats than they had won at the previous general election, and won the popular vote in England , while still ending up with 91 fewer MPs in England than Labour. The Liberal Democrats saw their share of
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