1993 Labour Party Shadow Cabinet election explained

Elections to the Labour Party's Shadow Cabinet took place in October 1993, at the beginning of the 1993/1994 session of parliament. Under the rules then in effect, the Commons members of the Parliamentary Labour Party elected 18 members of the Official Opposition Shadow Cabinet, who were then assigned portfolios by the leader. The Commons members of the PLP separately elected the Chief Whip, and the Labour peers elected the Leader of the Opposition in the House of Lords. In addition, the Leader of the Labour Party and Deputy Leader (John Smith and Margaret Beckett, respectively) were members by virtue of those offices. The 18 elected members of the Shadow Cabinet were the ones with the largest number of votes. Beginning with this election, MPs were required to vote for at least four women, but women were no longer guaranteed three places in the Shadow Cabinet.

Colour
key
bgcolor=ffdd88 Retained in the Shadow Cabinet
Joined the Shadow Cabinet
Voted out of the Shadow Cabinet
Rank
Candidate
Constituency
Votes
1 177
2† 163
2† 163
4 160
5 156
6 142
7 133
8 130
9 124
10 122
11† 121
11† 121
13 120
14 116
15† 110
15† 110
17† 107
17† 107
19† 104
19† 104
21 101
22 99
23 95
24 90
25 88
26 87
26 87
28 82
39 81
30 78
31 75
32 70
33 69
34 63
35 62
36 60
37 56
38 48
39 47
40 46
41† 40
41† 40
43 43
44 29
† Multiple candidates tied for position.

References