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This is a list of members of the House of Commons of the United Kingdom who were elected as independents or as a member of a minor political party.. Excluded are the speaker, who traditionally stands for re-election without party affiliation, and MPs who were elected representing a major party but then defected or had the whip removed during a parliamentary term.
List of Canadian minor party and independent politicians elected House of Commons 2 / 338 This is a list of members of the House of Commons of Canada who were elected as an independent or as a member of a minor political party. Excluded are MPs who were elected from a major party but then defected during a parliamentary term. Federal elections 1867–1916 Election Member of Parliament ...
MPs who had the party whip suspended are included in this category, even if they were subsequently readmitted to the parliamentary party. Subcategories This category has the following 4 subcategories, out of 4 total.
Upon its formation, the Independent Alliance became the joint fifth-largest grouping in the House of Commons, ahead of the Green Party of England and Wales and Plaid Cymru with four MPs each, and tied with Reform UK and the Democratic Unionist Party with five MPs each. [1] [2] [3]
List of minor party and independent MPs elected in the United Kingdom; N. List of National Labour MPs; List of National Liberal Party (UK, 1931) MPs;
This is a list of members of Parliament (MPs) elected to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom by English constituencies for the Fifty-Eighth Parliament of the United Kingdom (2019–2024). It includes both MPs elected at the 2019 general election, held on 12 December 2019, and those subsequently elected in by-elections.
121 Conservative Party members of Parliament (MPs) out of the 650 constituencies were elected to the House of Commons at the 4 July 2024 general election, [1] the lowest number in its history. [2] Party leader Kemi Badenoch is shown in bold.
It is relatively common for MPs to cross the floor and join another party, sometimes with a period as an independent. MPs representing three distinct parties in the House of Commons are much less common. Richard Acland – Liberals (1935 to 1942), Common Wealth Party (1942 to 1945), Labour (1947 to 1955)