LONDON — Britain's upcoming general election is widely expected to lead to a change of government for the first time in 14 years. Many analysts believe it will be one of the country's most consequential elections since the end of World War II.
Ahead of the July 4 vote, The Associated Press takes a look back at other landmark U.K. elections since the war.
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In 1997, the Labour Party had been out of power for longer than it has been now — 18 years compared to the current 14.
When it lost the 1992 election to John Major's Conservatives, many questioned whether it would ever be able to win power again.
So it was quite a turnaround when Labour, under the leadership of the youthful Tony Blair, won the May 1, 1997 general election by a landslide. ''New Labour, New Britain'' was the party's slogan, and ''Things can only get better'' by D-ream was its theme song.
Under Blair, Labour won a majority of 179 seats, even bigger than the party's victory over Winston Churchill's Conservatives soon after the defeat of Nazi Germany in 1945. The Conservatives ended up with just 165 of the 650 seats in the House of Commons, their worst result since 1906.
One factor for the Tories' defeat was the economic crisis of Sept. 1992, when the British pound was ignominiously ejected from a European exchange rate system. It was difficult to dislodge widespread misgivings that the government was losing control of the economy.