Prior to the 1966 general election, Labour had performed poorly in local elections in 1965, and
lost a by-election, cutting their majority to just two. Shortly after the local elections, the leader of the Conservative Party
Alec Douglas-Home was replaced by
Edward Heath in the
1965 leadership election. Despite setbacks and a small majority, Labour believed it had an advantage due to the disorientation from the change of leadership at the Conservative Party, the improvement of economic conditions under its brief government, and a victory at the
1966 Kingston upon Hull North by-election. The Conservatives had not had much time to prepare their campaign, although it was more professional than previously. There had been little time for Heath to become well known among the British public, having led the party for just eight months before the election. For the
Liberal Party, money was an issue: two elections in the space of just two years had left the party in a tight financial position and had to field fewer candidates. Labour ran its campaign with the slogan "You know Labour government works" and avoided commenting on controversial issues such as
European integration,
trade unions, and
nationalisation. and again in 2016 to mark the 50th anniversary of the election.
Alastair Burnet hosted
ITN's coverage. Although the BBC's telecast was in black and white, a couple of colour television cameras were placed in the BBC election studio at Television Centre to allow
CBS's
Charles Collingwood and
NBC's
David Brinkley to file live reports from that studio by satellite and in colour for their respective networks' evening news programmes (which were transmitted at 11:30 pm British time, 6:30 pm
Eastern Standard Time). ==Timeline==