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'It's not all doom and gloom'

  • Posted by Ben Davies
  • 02 May 2008

Labour MPs are curiously hard to find today not surprisingly after they've had such gloomy news but we managed to track down Ann Clwyd and Martin Salter

I've spent most of the morning ringing round Labour MPs trying to get their reactions. Strangely today they're rather hard to come by. But I caught up with Ann Clwyd by phone at Bristol airport to get her reaction to the results particularly the ones in Wales where her Cynon Valley constituency is.

She told me: "Don't worry, I’m not leaving the country permanently - I’m going to Rome for a family wedding." Asked what she thought about the surge in Conservative support, she added: "People have got short memories. I can’t believe that people in Wales want a Tory government after putting up with them for 18 years.

"There are ups and downs and we are on a down at the moment but we can can recover from this. I’ve been out on the streets during the campaign and I don’t think this is a permanent hiccup."

In Reading, Martin Salter MP was in bullish mood: "We did better under Gordon Brown here than we did under Tony Blair last year. In my constituency there were five seats ruthlessly targeted by the Tories and we won all of those. That was despite all the people they parachuted in - I've never seen so many ex-public school boys walking around council estates.

"David Cameron came to Reading and said it was his party's top target and they failed to secure it. We've held back the tide in the Thames Valley - we've retaken Slough. There were six Labour gains in Oxford. It's not all doom and gloom for Gordon."

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3 comments from readers

osborne
02 May 2008 at 15:56

I am sure Mr Gordon Brown will be heartened immensely knowing that the gates of Reading have stood firm against the blue hordes. PIty about the rest of the country.

TheElitesWin
03 May 2008 at 08:33

I just want this unelected parasite and his minions to go back to Scotland ands stay their.

Richard Michael
03 May 2008 at 11:40

310 seats.

That's kinda doomy and gloomy.

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About the writer

Ben Davies trained as a journalist after taking most of the 1990s off. Prior to joining the New Statesman he spent five years working as a politics reporter for the BBC News website. He lives in North London.

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