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This distinction is made in the tables below in the area column, where "GB" means Great Britain (England, Scotland and Wales), and "UK" means the entire United Kingdom. Plaid Cymru only stand candidates in Wales and the Scottish National Party only stand candidates in Scotland. Due to rounding total figures might not add up to 100%.
Seats needing smallest swing to be won by Green Party of England and Wales [18] Rank Constituency Winning party 2019 Swing required Winning party 2024 1 Bristol Central [note 5] Labour Party: 16.23% Green Party of England and Wales: 2 Isle of Wight West [note 5] Conservative Party: 19.30% Labour Party: 6 Frome and East Somerset [note 5 ...
This distinction is made in the tables below in the area column, where "GB" means Great Britain (England, Scotland and Wales), and "UK" means the entire United Kingdom. Plaid Cymru only stand candidates in Wales and the Scottish National Party (SNP) only stand candidates in Scotland.
Labour would win 28 seats in Scotland, jumping from the single constituency returned in 2019, according to the projection. SNP could slip to 19 seats after next election, poll suggests Skip to ...
The MRP poll of 47,751 adults between June 19 and July 2 suggests the Conservatives could win just 102 seats. YouGov poll forecasts no Tory seats in Wales and swathes of northern England Skip to ...
The seats are ranked in order of vulnerability, based on the size of the swing needed for the challenging party to gain, starting with the smallest: – Wimbledon: 0.7 percentage point swing ...
SNP Spokesperson for Environment, Farming, Agriculture and Rural Affairs: 2019: 2019 Frank McNally: Labour: Deidre Brock [182] Edinburgh North and Leith: SNP Spokesperson for Business: 2015: 2015 Tracy Gilbert: Labour: Alan Brown [183] Kilmarnock and Loudoun: SNP Spokesperson for Energy Security and Net Zero (2022–2023) 2015: 2015 Lillian ...
The Green Party of England and Wales also won a record number of seats alongside a number of independent MPs. [3] The Scottish National Party (SNP) lost around three quarters of its seats. [4] Labour returned to being the largest party in Scotland and remained so in Wales. The Conservatives won no seats in Wales and only one seat in North East ...