Anti-Feminist Philip Davies Won Shipley And Everyone Is Disappointed at the election results

The mix-up caused a Twitter storm.
|

Feminists and local campaigners have been left “devastated” after Tory politician Philip Davies was reelected as MP in Shipley - despite earlier reports he had been beaten by Labour. 

Hundreds of people took to Twitter early this morning to celebrate the defeat of the ardent anti-feminist, but were left deflated when it was revealed he had in fact won with a majority of almost 5,000. 

“Absolutely devastated to see that Philip Davies has (somehow, bafflingly) been re-elected,” one man wrote on Twitter.  

Open Image Modal
Philip Davies was thought to have lost his Shipley seat to the Labour Party
PA Wire/PA Images

Davies was last year accused of trying to “talk out” a domestic violence bill in Parliament, speaking for an hour and 20 minutes about how the bid protect women from abuse was “sexist against men”, “political correctness”, and “virtue signalling”.   

He also once famously said that “feminist zealots really do want women to have their cake and eat it” while speaking at an anti-feminism conference. 

Predictably, news that Davies had lost his job caused a Twitter storm: 

Some called the news that the Tory MP had in fact been reelected “the worst news of the night”:  

Sophie Walker, leader of the Women’s Equality Party, also ran for the Shipley constituency to challenge Davies.

Her party gained 1,040 votes.

Walker said: “Our relentlessly positive campaign showed what ordinary people can do to inspire new hope from politics.

“The Women’s Equality Party has shown beyond doubt that we can build the kind of campaign that gets out the progressive vote.

“As the UK heads towards a hung Parliament and the possibility of yet another election, the need for alliances and the collaborative politics WE embody is crystal clear.”

A shock exit poll predicted that the Conservative Party would fail to win a majority, taking just 314 seats despite wildly positive early campaign predictions by pollsters. 

Ultimately the Conservative party chose to join forces with the DUP to create a government