Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
As largely expected, the Brexit Party failed to win any seats in the general election. [7] Among its results the best were in Barnsley Central, where Victoria Felton came second with 30.4% of the vote; [8] Hartlepool, where party chairman Richard Tice came third with 25.8% of the vote; [9] and Hull West and Hessle, where businesswoman and media ...
Timeline of Jamaican history ... 2025 Jamaican general election [2] Holidays. Source: [3] 1 January – New Year's Day; 5 March – Ash Wednesday; 18 April – Good ...
The two parties were founded in 1938 and 1943 and first contested the 1944 election. Though the years are fixed due to the five-year term of the prime minister, the date of the election is traditionally announced by the ruling party one month in advance.
Marginal seats by party (with winning parties and margins from the 2016 Jamaican general election) Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) People's National Party (PNP) Marginal 1 Saint Mary South Eastern [a 1] 0.02% 1 Saint Catherine North Eastern: 0.53% 2 Saint James Southern: 0.24% 2 Saint Andrew Eastern: 0.62% 3 Saint Ann North Western: 1.18% 3
2024 Jamaican local elections – 47.8 51.8: 0.6 – 4: 24 November – 7 December 2023 RJR Gleaner Group/Don Anderson poll [13] 1,015 22 25: 18 35 3: 17 – 26 February 2023 RJR Gleaner Group/Don Anderson poll [14] 1,002 27.9 28.1: 19 25 0.2: 13 September 2022 RJR Gleaner Group/Don Anderson poll [15] - 31: 18 17 34 13: 22 September 2021
Nigel Farage, the “architect” of Brexit and a perennially disruptive force in British politics, has announced his intention to stand as a candidate for the hard-right Reform UK party in the ...
At the last general election in 2019, Farage's party decided not to contest seats held by the Conservatives, then led by Boris Johnson, to avoid splitting the pro-Brexit vote.
In the ensuing re-election, Holness won, and he was sworn in a second time as MP in July 1998. [ 13 ] After his election, Morris Cargill commented: "I am glad that Andrew Holness won, not out of any narrow political bias, but because it would be good for the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) to have a new young man in its ranks."