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The 2024 United Kingdom general election was held on 4 July 2024. This list shows the most marginal seats, ie those needing the smallest swing to be won by each of the political parties, according to notional results from the previous election in 2019, as applied to the 2024 constituency boundaries.
Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (2022) 2017: 2017 Luke Myer: Labour: Theo Clarke [35] Stafford: 2019: 2010 Leigh Ingham: Labour: Brendan Clarke-Smith [36] Bassetlaw: Deputy Chairman of the Conservative Party (2023–2024) 2019: 2019 Jo White: Labour: Chris Clarkson [37] Stratford-on-Avon [n 7] 2019: 2019 Manuela ...
The election was the first general election victory for Labour since 2005, and ended the Conservatives' 14-year tenure as the primary governing party. Labour achieved a 174-seat simple majority, and a total of 411 seats, a single-party figure surpassed in modern times only by Stanley Baldwin and the Conservatives in 1924 and by Tony Blair and ...
Britain's opposition Labour Party is on track to win the most seats in the party's history at a July 4 election, according to a YouGov poll published on Wednesday. The multilevel regression and ...
The Labour Party won the majority of seats in England for the first time since 2005, with a net gain of 166 seats for a total of 348. Labour won the most seats in every region of England for the first time, Labour also won the most votes in all but two regions, coming second behind the Conservatives in South East England and third behind the ...
2024 was a historic year for Labour. Under Sir Keir Starmer the party came to power in July for the first time in over a decade, winning with a massive number of seats. It was a short election ...
Keir Starmer is the United Kingdom’s new prime minister after sweeping away a 14-year era of Conservative rule by leading his center-left Labour party to a massive landslide election victory.
17 May 2024 Labour: Ben Hartley Altrincham and Sale West: Personal reasons. [204] 23 May 2024 Workers Party of Britain: Wayne Adlem Bournemouth East: Time issues. [205] 25 May 2024 Labour: Alexandra Aldridge-Gibbons Henley and Thame: Personal reasons. [206] 28 May 2024 Labour: Alex Aitken Birmingham Northfield: Personal reasons. [207] 29 May ...