The Labour party has won over 400 seats (out of 650) in the 2024 UK General Elections, and Keir Starmer is expected to replace Rishi Sunak as Prime Minister. The Conservatives, in power for the last fourteen years, have suffered a rout, losing over two-thirds of their seats. The SNP has collapsed in Scotland, mostly to Labour, and the Liberal Democrats have gained over sixty seats.

  • emergencyfood@sh.itjust.worksOP
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    4 months ago

    Among smaller parties, the Liberal Democrats have gained over 60 seats, and Reform, the Greens and Plaid Cymru have also gained seats. Former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, now contesting as an independent, retained Islington North. Labour lost another three seats to independents who ran against its inaction on Palestine. The SNP and DUP suffered big losses, while Sinn Fein’s fortunes seem to have remained unchanged.

    • underscore_@sopuli.xyz
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      4 months ago

      Last I checked ~18:00BST

      Party     Seats    Votes       %
      Lab        412   9,725,117   33.8
      Con        121   6,824,610   23.7
      Reform       5   4,103,727   14.3
      Lib Dem     71   3,501,004   12.2
      Green        4   1,941,220    6.8
      Indep.       7     841,835    2.9

      I am personally glad that the next government is not going to be stuffed full with bigoted nationalists from Reform. I can’t help but marvel though at how wonky the system of voting is that let the Lib Dem’s get an order of magnitude more seats than Reform with 600k fewer votes. Reform got just under half Labour’s vote share and only slightly over 1% of their seats.

      • Darorad@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Yeah, starmer kicked him out for not being centrist enough, which is why he ran independent (and beat the labour candidate)

          • twinnie@feddit.uk
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            4 months ago

            Nobody voted for Corbyn, that’s why he isn’t the leader of the Labour Party anymore.

            • gnutrino@programming.dev
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              4 months ago

              To be fair, more people voted for Corbyn in 2017 and probably even in 2019 (still some votes to be counted at time of writing so that could change but it’ll be close either way) than voted Labour in this election (12.8 million 2017/10.2 million 2019 vs 9.7 million so far in 2024).

              It’s just an artifact of FPTP and to some extent overall turnout (which was very low this election) that the results in terms of seats look so different.