Davis's resignation announcement came on 12 June 2008, a day after the passing of the initial vote on detention. Davis gave a post-resignation press conference outside parliament, having been refused the opportunity to do so in the House of Commons by the Speaker. His resignation speech came on the back of a similar newspaper column written by previous Conservative Prime Minister
John Major a week earlier. Davis would be the official Conservative candidate. Critics initially described Davis's decision as an emotional and
knee-jerk reaction, however Davis later stated that the idea to resign if the vote was passed came as early as the previous weekend, On suggestions that the Labour Party might not field a candidate because of the nature of the campaign, the safeness of the seat, and the previous bad result for Labour in the
2008 Crewe and Nantwich by-election, Davis stated that "we will have the campaign anyway, and find people to argue on both sides of the debate". MacKenzie did not end up running. On 16 June, an official campaign website, www.daviddavisforfreedom.com, and a
YouTube channel daviddavisforfreedom were launched. Davis formally stood down as an MP on 18 June 2008, by accepting the position of
Steward and Bailiff of the Three Hundreds of Chiltern, which he immediately renounced in order to be able to stand for the by-election; this is the traditional method of
resigning from Parliament, since MPs are not permitted to hold most positions in the gift of the Crown without approval from their constituencies. Immediately after the announcement, Labour announced they would not field a candidate. Davis received 17,113 votes, with the closest challenge coming from the
Green Party and
English Democrats with 1,758 and 1,714 votes respectively. All other candidates lost their deposit due to polling less than 5% of the vote. In his acceptance speech after the by-election, Davis stated that "today is not the end of this campaign", pledging to continue campaigning against 42-day detention, ID cards and governmental invasion of privacy. Davis returned to Parliament as a
backbencher, with no immediate likelihood of a return to the Shadow Cabinet. ==Reaction==