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Newham Independents Party Mehmood Mirza 1 0 New 0.0 7,180 0.02 New Heritage Party: David Kurten: 41 0 New 0.0 6,597 0.02 New UK Independence Party: Nick Tenconi (interim) 24 0 0 0 0.0 6,530 0.02 0.1 Liberal Party: Steve Radford 12 0 0 0 0.0 6,375 0.02 Ashfield Independents: Jason Zadrozny: 1 0 0 0 0.0 6,276 0.02 Monster Raving Loony: Howling ...
Both Reform UK and the Green Party also gained from the Conservatives. Liz Truss lost her own seat of South West Norfolk to Labour. [ 6 ] The only Conservative gain in England was Leicester East , where a split Labour vote between the official labour candidate and former Labour MPs Claudia Webbe and Keith Vaz depressed the Labour vote.
In the United Kingdom's 2024 general election, 650 members of Parliament were elected to the country's House of Commons – one for each parliamentary constituency. [1] The UK Parliament consists of the elected House of Commons, the House of Lords, and the Sovereign. [2] The new Parliament first met on 9 July 2024. [3]
In Northern Ireland, which has a distinct set of political parties, [9] Sinn Féin retained its seven seats and therefore became the largest party; this was the first election in which an Irish nationalist party won the most seats in Northern Ireland. The Democratic Unionist Party won five seats, a reduction from eight at the 2019 general election.
This table relates to the composition of the House of Commons after the 2024 UK general election and summarises the changes in party affiliation that took place during the 2024–present Parliament. Affiliation
Won new seat Torbay: Steve Darling: Defeated incumbent, Kevin Foster: Tunbridge Wells: Mike Martin: Previous incumbent, Greg Clark, did not stand Twickenham: Munira Wilson: Seat held Wells and Mendip Hills: Tessa Munt: Won new seat West Dorset: Edward Morello: Defeated incumbent, Chris Loder: Westmorland and Lonsdale: Tim Farron: Seat held ...
This is a list of parliamentary by-elections in the United Kingdom since 2010, with the names of the incumbent and victor and their respective parties. Where seats changed political party at the election, the result is highlighted: blue for a Conservative gain, red for a Labour gain, orange for a Liberal Democrat gain, purple for a UKIP gain and other colours for any other gains.
For the 2019 general election, the Brexit Party (the former name of Reform UK) did not stand candidates in seats where the Conservative party won in 2017. [114] Leader Richard Tice ruled out a similar arrangement for this election, [ 115 ] and stated his party's intention to stand in 630 seats.