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  1. The parties with the greatest numbers of votes in the 2019 general election are listed here. Other parties are listed in the "Others" column. "Green" in these tables refers to combined totals for the green parties in the United Kingdom , namely the Green Party of England and Wales , the Scottish Greens , and, for polls of the entire UK, the Green Party Northern Ireland .

  2. Summary of results. The 2019 General Election resulted in a Conservative victory. The party won 365 seats, 48 more than in 2017, and 43.6% of the vote, up from 42.3% in 2017. The Labour Party won 202 seats and 32.1% of the vote, down from 262 seats and 40.0% of the vote in 2017. The Liberal Democrats won 11 seats, one fewer than in 2017, and 11 ...

  3. 22 de may. de 2024 · High. 2019 results. Prediction for 632 constituencies of Britain (ie, excluding Northern Ireland) based on 10,000 simulations in which a general election is held “tomorrow”. Seat totals for ...

  4. Nine out of 10 polls just before election day have been within that range of the eventual national vote shares in the 2010 to 2019 general elections. The gap has been smaller for other parties ...

  5. This election saw the Liberal Democrats vote fall from 23% to 8% and MPs elected from 57 to 8. In terms of the popular vote, they were replaced as the third party by the UK Independence Party, who achieved 13%, although they won only 1 seat. The Green Party also achieved their best ever result with 4% of the popular vote.

  6. The last UK general election took place in December 2019, when the Conservatives won 365 seats, resulting in a parliamentary majority. The next general election will take place on 4 July 2024. Bookmark this page for easy access to all our impartial research on elections, campaigning, voting, results, demographics and more.

  7. The prime minister has called an election for Thursday 4 July 2024. Rishi Sunak braves the Downing Street rain to announce the date of the next general election to the public. On 22 May 2024, Rishi Sunak announced he had requested permission from the King to dissolve parliament and called a general election to be held on 4 July.