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2015 United Kingdom general election

The 2015 United Kingdom general election was held on Thursday 7 May 2015 to elect 650 Members of Parliament (or MPs) to the House of Commons. It was the only general election held under the rules of the Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011. Local elections took place in most areas on the same day.

2015 United Kingdom general election

← 2010 7 May 2015 2017 →

All 650 seats in the House of Commons
326 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Registered46,354,197
Turnout66.4%[1] (1.3%)
  First party Second party
 
Leader David Cameron Ed Miliband
Party Conservative Labour
Leader since 6 December 2005 25 September 2010
Leader's seat Witney Doncaster North
Last election 306 seats, 36.1% 258 seats, 29.0%
Seats won 330* 232
Seat change 24 26
Popular vote 11,299,609 9,347,273
Percentage 36.8% 30.4%
Swing 0.7 pp 1.4 pp

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Nicola Sturgeon Nick Clegg
Party SNP Liberal Democrats
Leader since 14 November 2014 18 December 2007
Leader's seat Did not stand[n 1] Sheffield Hallam
Last election 6 seats, 1.7% 57 seats, 23.0%
Seats won 56 8
Seat change 50 49
Popular vote 1,454,436 2,415,916
Percentage 4.7% 7.9%
Swing 3.1 pp 15.1 pp

Colours denote the winning party, as shown in the main table of results.
* Figure does not include the Speaker of the House of Commons John Bercow, who was included in the Conservative seat total by some media outlets.

Composition of the House of Commons after the election

Prime Minister before election

David Cameron
Conservative

Prime Minister after election

David Cameron
Conservative

Opinion polls and political commentators had predicted that the results of the election would cause a second consecutive hung parliament whose composition would be similar to the previous Parliament, which was in effect from the previous national election in 2010. Opinion polls turned out to have underestimated the Conservatives, however, as they won 330 of the 650 seats and 36.9% of the votes, giving them a majority of ten seats (not including the Speaker, who cannot vote or debate and must remain impartial). This won them the right to govern the country alone and the right for their leader, David Cameron, to continue as Prime Minister.

The Labour Party, led by Ed Miliband, saw a small increase in its share of the vote to 30.4% but won 26 fewer seats than in 2010. This gave them 232 MPs. This was the fewest seats the party won since the 1987 general election, when it had 229 MPs returned. Many senior Labour MPs, such as Ed Balls, Douglas Alexander and Jim Murphy, lost their seats.

The Scottish National Party won a landslide victory in Scotland, mainly at the expense of Labour, who had held a majority of Scottish seats in the House of Commons at every general election since 1964. The SNP won 56 of the 59 Scottish seats and became the third-largest party in the House of Commons.

The Liberal Democrats, led by outgoing Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, had their worst result since their formation in 1988, losing 49 of their 57 seats, with Cabinet ministers Vince Cable, Ed Davey and Danny Alexander all losing their seats. The UK Independence Party came third in terms of votes with 12.6% but won only a single seat, with party leader Nigel Farage failing to win his seat of South Thanet. The Green Party won its highest ever vote share of 3.8% and retained their only seat.[2] In Northern Ireland, the Ulster Unionist Party returned to the Commons with two seats after their five-year long absence, and the Alliance Party lost its only seat despite an increase in their vote share. Following the election, Ed Miliband resigned as leader of the Labour Party and Nick Clegg resigned as leader of the Liberal Democrats.

The election is considered to have begun a political realignment in the UK, marking the end of the traditional three-party domination of the Conservatives, Labour and the Liberal Democrats seen throughout the 20th century. The Scottish National Party began its domination of Scottish politics. It also saw the last public appearance of Charles Kennedy, the former Leader of the Liberal Democrats, before his death on 1 June 2015.

Notable MPs who retired at this election included former Prime Minister Gordon Brown, former Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling, former Leader of the Conservative Party William Hague and former Leader of the Liberal Democrats Menzies Campbell. Notable newcomers to the House of Commons include: future Leader of the SNP in the House of Commons Ian Blackford, future Deputy Leader of the Labour Party Angela Rayner, future Leader of the Labour Party Sir Keir Starmer and future UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak. Another future UK Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, who had previously left Parliament in 2008 so he could serve as the Mayor of London, returned to Parliament as the MP for Uxbridge and South Ruislip.

Election process edit

The Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011 led to the dissolution of the 55th Parliament on 30 March 2015 and the scheduling of the election on 7 May.[3] There were local elections on the same day in all of England, with the exception of Greater London. No elections were scheduled to take place in Scotland, Wales or Northern Ireland.

All British, Irish and Commonwealth citizens over the age of 18 residing in the UK that weren't in prison, a mental hospital or on the run from law enforcement on the date of the election were permitted to vote. In British general elections, voting takes place in all constituencies in the United Kingdom to elect members of parliament (or MPs) to the House of Commons, the lower house of Parliament in the UK. Each constituency elects one MP to the House of Commons using the first-past-the-post voting system. If one party obtains a majority (326) of the 650 seats, then that party is entitled to form the Government. If no party has a majority, then there is what is known as a hung parliament. In this case, the options for forming the Government are either a minority government (where one party governs alone despite not having the majority of the seats) or a coalition government (where one party governs alongside party in order to get a majority of seats).[4]

Although the Conservative Party planned for the number of constituencies to be reduced from 650 to 600, through the Sixth Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies under the Parliamentary Voting System and Constituencies Act 2011, the review of constituencies and reduction in seats was delayed by the Electoral Registration and Administration Act 2013.[5][6][7][8] The next boundary review was set to take place in 2018; and so the 2015 general election was contested using the same constituencies and boundaries as in 2010. Of the 650 constituencies, 533 were in England, 59 were in Scotland, 40 were in Wales and 18 were in Northern Ireland.

In addition, the 2011 Act mandated a referendum in 2011 on changing from the first-past-the-post voting system to an alternative vote system for general elections. The Conservative–Liberal Democrat coalition government agreed to holding a referendum.[9] The referendum was held in May 2011 and resulted in the retention of the existing voting system. Before the previous general election the Liberal Democrats had pledged to change the voting system, and the Labour Party had pledged to hold a referendum on any such change.[10] The Conservatives, however, promised to keep the first-past-the-post system, but to reduce the number of constituencies to 600. Liberal Democrats' plan was to reduce the number of MPs to 500, and for them to be elected using a proportional vote system.[11][12]

The Government increased the amount of money that parties and candidates were allowed to spend on campaigning during the election by 23%; a move decided against the advice of the Electoral Commission.[13] The election saw the first cap on spending by parties in individual constituencies during the 100 days before Parliament's dissolution on 30 March: £30,700, plus a per-voter allowance of 9p in county constituencies and 6p in borough seats. An additional voter allowance of more than £8,700 is available after the dissolution of Parliament. In total, parties spent £31.1m in the 2010 general election, of which the Conservative Party spent 53%, the Labour Party spent 25% and the Liberal Democrats 15%.[14] This was also the first UK general election to use individual rather than household voter registration.

Date of the election edit

 
A church used as a polling station in Bath on 7 May 2015

An election is called following the dissolution of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. The 2015 general election was the first to be held under the provisions of the Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011. Prior to this, the power to dissolve Parliament was a royal prerogative, exercised by the sovereign on the advice of the prime minister. Under the provisions of the Septennial Act 1716, as amended by the Parliament Act 1911, an election had to be announced on or before the fifth anniversary of the beginning of the previous parliament, barring exceptional circumstances. No sovereign had refused a request for dissolution since the beginning of the 20th century, and the practice had evolved that a prime minister would typically call a general election to be held at a tactically convenient time within the final two years of a Parliament's lifespan, to maximise the chance of an electoral victory for his or her party.[15]

Prior to the 2010 general election, the Labour Party and the Liberal Democrats pledged to introduce fixed-term elections.[10] As part of the Conservative–Liberal Democrat coalition agreement, the Cameron ministry agreed to support legislation for fixed-term Parliaments, with the date of the next general election being 7 May 2015.[16] This resulted in the Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011, which removed the prime minister's power to advise the monarch to call an early election. The Act only permits an early dissolution if Parliament votes for one by a two-thirds supermajority, or if a majority of MPs pass a vote of no confidence and no new government is subsequently formed within 14 days.[17] However, the prime minister had the power, by order made by Statutory Instrument under section 1(5) of the Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011, to fix the polling day to be up to two months later than 7 May 2015. Such a Statutory Instrument must be approved by each House of Parliament. Under section 14 of the Electoral Registration and Administration Act 2013, the Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011 was amended to extend the period between the dissolution of Parliament and the following general election polling day from 17 to 25 working days. This had the effect of moving forward the date of the dissolution of the Parliament to 30 March 2015.[3]

Timetable edit

The key dates were:

Monday 30 March Dissolution of Parliament and the start of campaigning.
Saturday 2 May Deadline to file nomination papers, to register to vote, and to request a postal vote.[18]
Thursday 7 May Date of the election.
Friday 8 May The Conservative Party wins the election with a majority of 10 seats.
Monday 18 May New Parliament meets for the first time to elect a Speaker.
Wednesday 27 May 2015 State Opening of Parliament.

MPs not standing for re-election edit

While at the previous election there had been a record 148 MPs not standing for re-election,[19] the 2015 election saw 90 MPs standing down.[20] Out of these MPs, 38 were Conservatives, 37 were Labour, 10 were Liberal Democrats, 3 were Independents, 1 was Sinn Féin and 1 was Plaid Cymru. The highest-profile members of parliament leaving were: Gordon Brown, the former Prime Minister, and William Hague, the former Leader of the Conservative Party and Leader of the Opposition.[21] Alongside Brown and Hague, 17 former cabinet ministers stood down at the election, including Stephen Dorrell, Jack Straw, Alistair Darling, David Blunkett, Sir Malcolm Rifkind and Dame Tessa Jowell.[21] The highest profile Liberal Democrat to stand down was their former leader Sir Menzies Campbell, while the longest-serving MP, Sir Peter Tapsell, also retired, having served as an MP continuously since 1966, or for 49 years.[21]

Contesting political parties and candidates edit

 
A sign in Woking showing opening hours of polling stations, including the advice that people queuing outside polling stations at 10.00 pm "will be entitled to apply for a ballot paper"

Overview edit

On 9 April 2015, the deadline for standing for the general election, there were 464 political parties registered with the Electoral Commission. Candidates who did not belong to a party were either labelled as an Independent or not labelled at all.

The Conservative Party and the Labour Party had been the two biggest parties since 1922, and had supplied all the UK's prime ministers since 1935. Opininion polls had predicted that the two parties would receive a combined total of anywhere between 65% and 75% of votes, and would receive anywhere between 80% and 85% of the seats;[22][23] and that, as such, the leader of one of the two parties would become the Prime Minister after the election. The Liberal Democrats had been the third largest party in the UK for many years; but as described by various political commentators, other parties had risen relative to the Liberal Democrats since the 2010 election.[24][25] In order to emphasise this, The Economist stated that "the familiar three-party system of the Tories, Labour, and the Lib Dems appears to be breaking down with the rise of UKIP, the Greens and the SNP." Ofcom ruled that the major parties in Great Britain were the Conservatives, Labour, the Liberal Democrats and UKIP, the SNP a major party in Scotland, and Plaid Cymru a major party in Wales.[26] The BBC's guidelines were similar but removed UKIP from their list of major parties, and instead stated that UKIP should be given "appropriate levels of coverage in output to which the largest parties contribute and, on some occasions, similar levels of coverage".[27][28] Seven parties (Conservative, Labour, Liberal Democrat, UKIP, SNP, PC and Green) participated in the election leadership debates.[29] Northern Ireland's political parties were not included in any debates, despite the DUP, a party based in Northern Ireland, being the fourth largest party in the UK going into the election.

National edit

 
The Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron stood for a second term in office.
 
Ed Miliband was leader of the opposition and leader of the Labour Party after winning a leadership election against his brother David Miliband.
 
Nick Clegg and the Liberal Democrats showed a great fall in the polls after entering a coalition government with the Conservatives.
 
UK Independence Party leader Nigel Farage stood in the South Thanet constituency.
 
Nicola Sturgeon was the fifth First Minister of Scotland and the leader of the Scottish National Party, in office since 2014. She is the first woman to hold either position.
 
Natalie Bennett, leader of the Green Party of England and Wales. She contested Holborn and St Pancras.

Several parties operate in specific regions only. The main national parties, standing in most seats across all of the country, are listed below in order of the number of seats that they contested:

  • Conservative Party: The Conservative Party was the senior party in the 2010-15 coalition government, having won the most seats (306) at the 2010 election. The party stood in 647 seats (every seat except for two in Northern Ireland and the Speaker's seat).
  • Labour Party: Labour had been in power from 1997 to 2010. The party was Her Majesty's Most Loyal Opposition after the 2010 election, having won 258 seats. It stood in 631 constituencies,[n 2] missing only the Speaker's seat, and all seats in Northern Ireland.
  • Liberal Democrats: The Liberal Democrats were the junior member of the 2010–15 coalition government, having won 57 seats. They contested 631 seats, and like Labour, only not contesting the Speaker's seat and all seats in Northern Ireland.
  • UK Independence Party (or UKIP): UKIP won the fourth-most votes at the 2010 election, but failed to win any seats. They went into the election with two seats; due to winning two by-elections. They also won the most votes of any British party at the 2014 European election. It contested 624 seats across the United Kingdom.[n 3]
  • Green Party: The Green Party went into the election with only one seat. However, they won the fourth-most votes in the 2014 European election. In 2010, Caroline Lucas became the party's first ever MP. In this election they received 3.8% of the vote. This made them the sixth largest party in terms of how many people voted for them. They stood in 573 seats.

Minor parties edit

Dozens of minor parties stood in this election. The Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition of Parties stood 135 candidates and was the only minor party to have more than forty candidates.[30] The Respect Party, who came into the election with one MP who was elected at the 2012 Bradford West by-election, stood four candidates. The British National Party, who finished fifth with 1.9% of the vote and stood 338 candidates at the 2010 general election, stood only eight candidates this year following a collapse in their support.[31] 753 other candidates stood at the general election, including Independents and candidates from other parties.[31]

Northern Ireland edit

The main parties in Northern Ireland in order of their number of seats were:

  • Democratic Unionist Party (DUP): the DUP won eight seats in 2010, making it the largest party in Northern Ireland and the fourth biggest in the UK. The party also won the 2011 Northern Ireland Assembly election, and came in second out of the Northern Irish parties at the 2014 European election. It contested 16 of the 18 Northern Irish constituencies, having entered into an electoral pact to abstain from the two other seats with the Ulster Unionist Party.
  • Sinn Féin: Sinn Féin won the most votes in Northern Ireland in 2010, but came second in the number of seats, winning five. They came second at the 2011 Northern Ireland Assembly election and they came in first out of the Northern Irish parties in the 2014 European election. In the House of Commons Sinn Féin are abstentionists, and so they have never taken up the seats that they have won there. The party also operates in Ireland, where it does take seats in parliament. It stood in all 18 Northern Irish constituencies.
  • Social Democratic and Labour Party (or the SDLP): The SDLP third in terms of both votes and seats in the 2010 general election and 2011 Northern Ireland Assembly election, and fourth in the 2014 European election. Going into this election, the party had three MPs. The SDLP has a relationship with the Labour Party, with the SDLP's MPs generally following the Labour whip. In the case of a hung parliament, the party would have entered into a confidence-and-supply-agreement with the party.[32] They contested all 18 Northern Irish constituencies at the election.
  • Ulster Unionist Party (or the UUP): in 2010 the UUP entered into an electoral alliance with the Conservative Party, and finished fourth in terms of votes in Northern Ireland, but won no seats. The party has one MEP, having placed third in the 2014 European elections. They came fourth in the 2011 Northern Ireland Assembly election. The UUP contested 15 of the 18 Northern Irish seats; the party did not run in two seats because of its electoral pact with the DUP, and also did not nominate a candidate against former party member, Sylvia Hermon.[33]
  • Alliance Party of Northern Ireland: The Alliance Party had one MP going into this election, Naomi Long, who had been elected for the first time in 2010. They came fifth in the 2010 election by vote share. They have a relationship with the Liberal Democrats. However, the Alliance's one MP elected in 2010 sat on the opposition benches in the Commons and not with the Liberal Democrats on the government benches. The party contested all 18 Northern Irish constituencies in 2015.

Smaller parties in Northern Ireland included the Traditional Unionist Voice, who won no seats at this election but had one member of the Northern Ireland Assembly, the Conservatives and UKIP (both are major parties in the rest of the UK, but are minor parties here).[34]

Scotland edit

  • Scottish National Party (or the SNP): The SNP only contested seats in Scotland and stood in all 59 Scottish constituencies. The party received the second-most votes in Scotland and the sixth-most overall in 2010, winning six seats. It won the 2011 election to the Scottish Parliament and had a surge of support since the Scottish independence referendum in September 2014, in which it was the main political party behind the losing Yes campaign.[35] Most projections suggested that it would be the third-largest party overall after the 2015 election, in terms of seats won, overtaking the Liberal Democrats.[23]

Smaller parties in Scotland include the Scottish Libertarian Party, but none of the smaller parties make much of an impact in general elections in Scotland.

Wales edit

Wales has a number of smaller parties which, again, do not tend to make much impact in the general elections. In 2015, the Labour Party continued to dominate Welsh politics at the general elections.

Pacts and possible coalitions edit

Coalitions have been rare in the United Kingdom, because the first-past-the-post system has usually led to one party winning an overall majority in the Commons. However, with the outgoing Government being a coalition and with opinion polls not showing a large or consistent lead for any one party, there was much discussion about possible post-election coalitions or other arrangements, such as confidence and supply agreements.[36]

Some UK political parties that only stand in part of the country have reciprocal relationships with parties standing in other parts of the country. These include:

  • Labour (in Great Britain) and SDLP (in Northern Ireland)
  • Liberal Democrats (in Great Britain) and Alliance (in Northern Ireland)
  • SNP (in Scotland) and Plaid Cymru (in Wales)
    • Plaid Cymru also recommended supporters in England to vote Green,[37] while the SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon said she would vote for Plaid Cymru were she in Wales, and Green were she in England.[38] However, Sturgeon also said that, if their candidate was the most progressive, she would vote for Labour were she in England.[39]
  • Green Party of England and Wales (in England and Wales), Scottish Greens (in Scotland) and the Green Party in Northern Ireland (in Northern Ireland)

On 17 March 2015 the Democratic Unionist Party and the Ulster Unionist Party agreed an election pact, whereby the DUP would not stand candidates in Fermanagh and South Tyrone (where Michelle Gildernew, the Sinn Féin candidate, won by only four votes in 2010) and in Newry and Armagh. In return the UUP would stand aside in Belfast East and Belfast North. The SDLP rejected a similar pact suggested by Sinn Féin to try to ensure that an agreed nationalist would win that constituency.[40][41][42] The DUP also called on voters in Scotland to support whichever pro-Union candidate was best placed to beat the SNP.[43]

Candidates edit

The deadline for parties and individuals to file candidate nomination papers to the acting returning officer (and the deadline for candidates to withdraw) was 4 p.m. on 9 April 2015.[44][45][46][47] The total number of candidates was 3,971; the second-highest number in history, slightly down from the record 4,150 candidates at the last election in 2010.[31][48]

There were a record number of female candidates standing in terms of both absolute numbers and percentage of candidates: 1,020 (26.1%) in 2015, up from 854 (21.1%) in 2010.[31][48] The proportion of female candidates for major parties ranged from 41% of Alliance Party candidates to 12% of UKIP candidates.[49] According to UCL's Parliamentary Candidates UK project[50] the major parties had the following percentages of black and ethnic minority candidates: the Conservatives 11%, the Liberal Democrats 10%, Labour 9%, UKIP 6%, the Greens 4%.[51] The average age of the candidates for the seven major parties was 45.[50]

The youngest candidates were all aged 18: Solomon Curtis (Labour, Wealden); Niamh McCarthy (Independent, Liverpool Wavertree); Michael Burrows (UKIP, Inverclyde); Declan Lloyd (Labour, South East Cornwall); and Laura-Jane Rossington (Communist Party, Plymouth Sutton and Devonport).[52][53][54] The oldest candidate was Doris Osen, 84, of the Elderly Persons' Independent Party (EPIC), who was standing in Ilford North.[53] Other candidates aged over 80 included three long-serving Labour MPs standing for re-election: Sir Gerald Kaufman (aged 84; Manchester Gorton), Dennis Skinner (aged 83; Bolsover) and David Winnick (aged 81; Walsall North).

A number of candidates—including two for Labour[55][56] and two for UKIP[57][58] – were suspended from their respective parties after nominations were closed. Independent candidate Ronnie Carroll died after nominations were closed.[59]

Campaign edit

By party edit

Conservative edit

In late 2014, the year before the election, the Conservatives decided to target Lib Dem seats as well as defending their own seats and targeting Conservative-Labour marginals, which ultimately contributed towards their victory.[60] In 2015 David Cameron launched the Conservative formal campaign in Chippenham on 30 March.[61] Throughout the campaign the Conservatives played on fears of a Labour-SNP coalition following the Scottish independence referendum the year before.[62]

Labour edit

The Labour campaign was launched on 27 March at Olympic Park in London.[63][64] Ed Miliband's EdStone was a major feature of the campaign which was covered by the media.[65] Deputy Leader of the Labour Party Harriet Harman embarked on a pink bus tour as part of her Woman to Woman campaign.[66]

Issues edit

Constitutional affairs edit

The Conservative manifesto committed to "a straight in-out referendum on our membership of the European Union by the end of 2017".[67] Labour did not support this, but did commit to an EU membership referendum if any further powers were transferred to the European Union.[68] The Lib Dems also supported the Labour position, but explicitly supported the UK's continuing membership of the EU.

The election was the first following the 2014 Scottish independence referendum. None of the three major party manifestos supported a second referendum and the Conservative manifesto stated that "the question of Scotland's place in the United Kingdom is now settled". In the run-up to the election, David Cameron coined the phrase "Carlisle principle" for the idea that checks and balances are required to ensure that devolution to Scotland has no adverse effects on other parts of the United Kingdom.[69][70] The phrase references a fear that Carlisle, being the English town closest to the Scottish border, could be affected economically by preferential tax rates in Scotland.

Government finance edit

The deficit, who was responsible for it and plans to deal with it were a major theme of the campaign. While some smaller parties opposed austerity,[71] the Conservatives, Labour, Liberal Democrats, UKIP and the Greens all supported some further cuts, albeit to different extents.

Conservative campaigning sought to blame the deficit on the previous Labour government. Labour, in return, sought to establish their fiscal responsibility. With the Conservatives also making several spending commitments (e.g. on the NHS), commentators talked of the two main parties' "political crossdressing", each trying to campaign on the other's traditional territory.[72]

Possibility of a hung Parliament edit

Hung Parliaments have been unusual in post-War British political history, but with the outgoing Government a coalition and opinion polls not showing a large or consistent lead for any one party, it was widely expected and predicted throughout the election campaign that no party would gain an overall majority, which could have led to a new coalition or other arrangements such as confidence and supply agreements.[73][74] This was also associated with a rise in multi-party politics, with increased support for UKIP, the SNP and the Greens.

The question of what the different parties would do in the event of a hung result dominated much of the campaign. Smaller parties focused on the power this would bring them in negotiations; Labour and the Conservatives both insisted that they were working towards winning a majority government, while they were also reported to be preparing for the possibility of a second election in the year.[75] In practice, Labour were prepared to make a "broad" offer to the Liberal Democrats in the event of a hung Parliament.[76] Most predictions saw Labour as having more potential support in Parliament than the Conservatives, with several parties, notably the SNP, having committed to keeping out a Conservative government.[77][78] The Conservatives described a potential Labour-led hung parliament as a "coalition of chaos", and David Cameron described (in a tweet) the electoral choice as one between "stable and strong government with me, or chaos with Ed Miliband".[79][80] The political turmoil in Britain in the wake of the 2015 election has since made the tweet "infamous".[80]

Conservative campaigning sought to highlight what they described as the dangers of a minority Labour administration supported by the SNP. This proved effective at dominating the agenda of the campaign[76] and at motivating voters to support them.[81][82][83][84] The Conservative victory was "widely put down to the success of the anti-Labour/SNP warnings", according to a BBC article[85] and others.[86] Labour, in reaction, produced ever stronger denials that they would co-operate with the SNP after the election.[76] The Conservatives and Lib Dems both also rejected the idea of a coalition with the SNP.[87][88][89] This was particularly notable for Labour, to whom the SNP had previously offered support: their manifesto stated that "the SNP will never put the Tories into power. Instead, if there is an anti-Tory majority after the election, we will offer to work with other parties to keep the Tories out".[90][91] SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon later confirmed in the Scottish leaders' debate on STV that she was prepared to "help make Ed Miliband prime minister".[92] However, on 26 April, Miliband ruled out a confidence and supply arrangement with the SNP too.[93] Miliband's comments suggested to many that he was working towards forming a minority government.[94][95]

The Liberal Democrats said that they would talk first to whichever party won the most seats.[96] They later campaigned on being a stabilising influence should either the Conservatives or Labour fall short of a majority, with the slogan "We will bring a heart to a Conservative Government and a brain to a Labour one".[97]

Both Labour and the Liberal Democrats ruled out coalitions with UKIP.[98] Ruth Davidson, leader of the Scottish Conservatives, asked about a deal with UKIP in the Scottish leaders' debate, replied: "No deals with UKIP." She continued that her preference and the Prime Minister's preference in a hung Parliament was for a minority Conservative government.[99] UKIP said they could have supported a minority Conservative government through a confidence and supply arrangement in return for a referendum on EU membership before Christmas 2015.[100] They also spoke of the DUP joining UKIP in this arrangement.[101] UKIP and DUP said they would work together in Parliament.[102] The DUP welcomed the possibility of a hung Parliament and the influence that this would bring them.[75] The party's deputy leader, Nigel Dodds, said the party could work with the Conservatives or Labour, but that the party is "not interested in a full-blown coalition government".[103] Their leader, Peter Robinson, said that the DUP would talk first to whichever party wins the most seats.[104] The DUP said they wanted, for their support, a commitment to 2% defence spending, a referendum on EU membership, and a reversal of the under-occupation penalty. They opposed the SNP being involved in government.[105][106] The UUP also indicated that they would not work with the SNP if it wanted another independence referendum in Scotland.[107]

The Green Party of England & Wales, Plaid Cymru and the Scottish National Party all ruled out working with the Conservatives, and agreed to work together "wherever possible" to counter austerity.[108][109][71] Each would also make it a condition of any agreement with Labour that Trident nuclear weapons was not replaced; the Green Party of England and Wales stated that "austerity is a red line".[110] Both Plaid Cymru and the Green Party stated a preference for a confidence and supply arrangement with Labour, rather than a coalition.[110][111] The leader of the SDLP, Alasdair McDonnell, said: "We will be the left-of-centre backbone of a Labour administration" and that "the SDLP will categorically refuse to support David Cameron and the Conservative Party".[112] Sinn Féin reiterated their abstentionist stance.[75] In the event the Conservatives did secure an overall majority, rendering much of the speculation and positioning moot.

Television debates edit

Cameron's speech at Bloomberg in 2013, his promise to hold a referendum on leaving the EU helped him to win a majority at the 2015 election but would eventually lead to his resignation little more than a year later.

The first series of televised leaders' debates in the United Kingdom was held in the previous election. Following much debate and various proposals,[113][114] a seven-way debate with the leaders of Labour, the Conservatives, Liberal Democrats, UKIP, Greens, SNP and Plaid Cymru was held.[115] with a series of other debates involving some of the parties.

The campaign was notable for a reduction in the number of party posters on roadside hoardings. It was suggested that 2015 saw "the death of the campaign poster".[116]

Endorsements edit

Various newspapers, organisations and individuals endorsed parties or individual candidates for the election. For example, the main national newspapers gave the following endorsements:

National daily newspapers edit

Newspaper Main endorsement Secondary endorsement(s) Notes Link
Daily Express UK Independence Party Conservative Party Endorsed the UK Independence Party. [1]
Daily Mail Conservative Party UK Independence Party Supported a Conservative government. Encouraged anti-Labour tactical voting. [2]
Liberal Democrats
Daily Mirror Labour Party Liberal Democrats Endorsed a Labour government. Supported tactically voting LibDem against the Conservatives in marginal seats. [3] [4]
Daily Telegraph Conservative Party None [5]
Financial Times Conservative Party Liberal Democrats Endorsed a Conservative-led coalition. [6]
The Guardian Labour Party Green parties in the United Kingdom Endorsed the Labour Party. Also supported Green and Liberal Democrat candidates where they were the main opposition to the Conservatives. [7]
Liberal Democrats
The Independent Liberal Democrats Conservative Party Endorsed a second term of the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition. [8] [9]
Metro None
The Sun Conservative Party Liberal Democrats Supported voting for the Liberal Democrats in 14 Labour/LibDem marginals. [10]
The Times Conservative Party Liberal Democrats Endorsed a second term of Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition. [11]

National Sunday newspapers edit

Media coverage edit

Despite speculation that the 2015 general election would be the 'social media election', traditional media, particularly broadcast media, remained more influential than new digital platforms.[117][118][119] A majority of the public (62%) reported that TV coverage had been most influential for informing them during the election period, especially televised debates between politicians.[120] Newspapers were next most influential, with the Daily Mail influencing people's opinions most (30%), followed by The Guardian (21%) and The Times (20%).[120] Online, major media outlets—like BBC News, newspaper websites, and Sky News—were most influential.[120] Social media was regarded less influential than radio and conversations with friends and family.[120]

During the campaign, TV news coverage was dominated by horse race journalism, focusing on the how close Labour and the Conservatives (supposedly) were according to the polls, and speculation on possible coalition outcomes.[121] This 'meta-coverage' was seen to squeeze out other content, namely policy.[121][122][123] Policy received less than half of election news airtime across all five main TV broadcasters (BBC, ITV, Channel 4, Channel 5, and Sky) during the first five weeks of the campaign.[121] When policy was addressed, the news agenda in both broadcast and print media followed the lead of the Conservative campaign,[122][124][125][126] focusing on the economy, tax, and constitutional matters (e.g., the possibility of a Labour-SNP coalition government),[126][124] with the economy dominating the news every week of the campaign.[125] On TV, these topics made up 43% of all election news coverage;[126] within the papers, nearly a third (31%) of all election-related articles were on the economy alone.[127] Within reporting and comment about the economy, newspapers prioritised Conservative party angles (i.e., spending cuts (1,351 articles), economic growth (921 articles), reducing the deficit (675 articles)) over Labour's (i.e., Zero-hour contracts (445 articles), mansion tax (339 articles), non-domicile status (322 articles)).[127] Less attention was given to policy areas that might have been problematic for the Conservatives, like the NHS or housing (policy topics favoured by Labour)[126] or immigration (favoured by UKIP).[124]

Reflecting on analysis carried out during the election campaign period, David Deacon of Loughborough University's Communication Research Centre said there was "aggressive partisanship [in] many section of the national press" which could be seen especially in the "Tory press".[122] Similarly, Steve Barnett, Professor of Communications at the University of Westminster, said that, while partisanship has always been part of British newspaper campaigning, in this election it was "more relentless and more one-sided" in favour of the Conservatives and against Labour and the other parties.[119] According to Bart Cammaerts of the Media and Communications Department at the London School of Economics, during the campaign "almost all newspapers were extremely pro-Conservative and rabidly anti-Labour".[128] 57.5% of the daily newspapers backed the Conservatives, 11.7% Labour, 4.9% UKIP, and 1.4% backed a continuation of the incumbent Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government;[129] 66% of Sunday national newspapers backed the Conservatives.[130] Of newspaper front-page lead stories, the Conservatives received 80 positive splashes and 26 negative; Labour received 30 positive against 69 negative.[125] Print media was hostile towards Labour at levels "not seen since the 1992 General Election",[124][128][131][132] when Neil Kinnock was "attacked hard and hit below the belt repeatedly".[128] Roy Greenslade described the newspaper coverage of Labour as "relentless ridicule".[133] Of the leader columns in The Sun 95% were anti-Labour.[132] The SNP also received substantial negative press in English newspapers: of the 59 leader columns about the SNP during the election, one was positive.[125] The Daily Mail ran a headline suggesting SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon was "the most dangerous woman in Britain"[124][134] and, at other times, called her a "glamorous power-dressing imperatrix" and said that she "would make Hillary Clinton look human".[127] While the Scottish edition of The Sun encouraged people north of the border to vote for the SNP, the English edition encouraged people to vote for the Conservatives in order to "stop the SNP running the country".[135] The negative coverage of the SNP increased towards the end of the election campaign.[118] While TV news airtime given to quotations from politicians was more balanced between the two larger parties (Con.: 30.14%; Lab.: 27.98%), more column space in newspapers was dedicated to quotes from Conservative politicians (44.45% versus 29.01% for Labour)[118]—according to analysts, the Conservatives "benefitted from a Tory supporting press in away the other leaders did not".[118] At times, the Conservatives worked closely with newspapers to co-ordinate their news coverage.[127] For example, The Daily Telegraph printed a letter purportedly sent directly to the paper from 5,000 small business owners; the letter had been organised by the Conservatives and prepared at Conservative Campaign Headquarters.[127]

According to researchers at Cardiff University and Loughborough University, TV news agendas focused on Conservative campaign issues partly because of editorial choices to report on news originally broken in the rightwing press but not that broken in the leftwing press.[126][122][121] Researchers also found that most airtime was given to politicians from the Conservative party—especially in Channel 4's and Channel 5's news coverage, where they received more than a third of speaking time.[121][136] Only ITV gave more airtime to Labour spokespeople (26.9% compared with 25.1% for the Conservatives).[136] Airtime given to the two main political leaders, Cameron (22.4%) and Miliband (20.9%), was more balanced than that given to their parties.[136]

Smaller parties—especially the SNP[136]—received unprecedented levels of media coverage because of speculation about a minority or coalition government.[124][126] The five most prominent politicians were David Cameron (Con) (15% of TV and press appearances), Ed Miliband (Lab) (14.7%), Nick Clegg (Lib Dem) (6.5%), Nicola Sturgeon (SNP) (5.7%), and Nigel Farage (UKIP) (5.5%).[124][126] However, according to analysts from Loughborough University Communication Research Centre, "the big winners of the media coverage were the Conservatives. They gained the most quotation time, the most strident press support, and coverage focused on their favoured issues (the economy and taxation, rather than say the NHS)".[118]

Other than politicians, 'business sources' were the most frequently quoted in the media. On the other hand, trade unions representatives, for example, received very little coverage, with business representatives receiving seven times more coverage than unions.[122] Tony Blair was also in the top ten most prominent politicians (=9), warning people about the threat of the UK leaving the EU.[124]

Opinion polling edit

 
  Conservative
  Labour
  Liberal Democrats
  UKIP
  Greens

Throughout the 55th parliament of the United Kingdom, first and second place in the polls without exception alternated between the Conservatives and Labour. Labour took a lead in the polls in the second half of 2010, driven in part by a collapse in Liberal Democrat support.[137] This lead rose to approximately 10 points over the Conservative Party during 2012, whose ratings dipped alongside an increase in UKIP support.[138] UKIP passed the Liberal Democrats as the third-most popular party at the start of 2013. Following this, Labour's lead over the Conservatives began to fall as UKIP gained support from it as well,[139] and by the end of the year Labour were polling at 39%, compared to 33% for the Conservative Party and 11% for UKIP.[139]

UKIP received 26.6% of the vote at the European elections in 2014, and though their support in the polls for Westminster never reached this level, it did rise up to over 15% through that year.[140] 2014 was also marked by the Scottish independence referendum. Despite the 'No' vote winning, support for the Scottish National Party rose quickly after the referendum, and had reached 43% in Scotland by the end of the year, up 23 points from the 2010 general election, largely at the expense of Labour (−16 points in Scotland) and the Liberal Democrats (−13 points).[141] In Wales, where polls were less frequent, the 2012–2014 period saw a smaller decline in Labour's lead over the second-placed Conservative Party, from 28 points to 17.[142] These votes went mainly to UKIP (+8 points) and Plaid Cymru (+2 points). The rise of UKIP and SNP, alongside the smaller increases for Plaid Cymru and the Green Party (from around 2% to 6%)[140] saw the combined support of the Conservative and Labour party fall to a record low of around 65%.[143] Within this the decline came predominantly from Labour, whose lead fell to under 2 points by the end of 2014.[140] Meanwhile, the Liberal Democrat vote, which had held at about 10% since late 2010, declined further to about 8%.[140]

Early 2015 saw the Labour lead continue to fall, disappearing by the start of March.[144] Polling during the election campaign itself remained relatively static, with the Labour and Conservative parties both polling between 33 and 34% and neither able to establish a consistent lead.[145] Support for the Green Party and UKIP showed slight drops of around 1–2 points each, while Liberal Democrat support rose up to around 9%.[146] In Scotland, support for the SNP continued to grow with polling figures in late March reaching 54%, with the Labour vote continuing to decline accordingly,[147] while Labour retained their (reduced) lead in Wales, polling at 39% by the end of the campaign, to 26% for the Conservatives, 13% for Plaid Cymru, 12% for UKIP and 6% for the Liberal Democrats.[142] The final polls showed a mixture of Conservative leads, Labour leads and ties with both between 31 and 36%, UKIP on 11–16%, the Lib Dems on 8–10%, the Greens on 4–6%, and the SNP on 4–5% of the national vote.[148]

In addition to the national polls, Lord Ashcroft funded from May 2014 a series of polls in marginal constituencies, and constituencies where minor parties were expected to be significant challengers. Among other results, Lord Ashcroft's polls suggested that the growth in SNP support would translate into more than 50 seats;[149] that there was little overall pattern in Labour and Conservative Party marginals;[150] that the Green Party MP Caroline Lucas would retain her seat;[151] that both Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg and UKIP leader Nigel Farage would face very close races to be elected in their own constituencies;[152] and that Liberal Democrat MPs would enjoy an incumbency effect that would lose fewer MPs than their national polling implied.[153] As with other smaller parties, their proportion of MPs remained likely to be considerably lower than that of total, national votes cast. Several polling companies included Ashcroft's polls in their election predictions, though several of the political parties disputed his findings.[154]

Predictions one month before the vote edit

The first-past-the-post system used in UK general elections means that the number of seats won is not closely related to vote share.[155] Thus, several approaches were used to convert polling data and other information into seat predictions. The table below lists some of the predictions. ElectionForecast was used by Newsnight and FiveThirtyEight. May2015.com is a project run by the New Statesman magazine.[156]

Seat predictions draw from nationwide polling, polling in the constituent nations of Britain and may additionally incorporate constituency level polling, particularly the Ashcroft polls. Approaches may or may not use uniform national swing (UNS). Approaches may just use current polling, i.e. a "nowcast" (e.g. Electoral Calculus, May2015.com and The Guardian), or add in a predictive element about how polling shifts based on historical data (e.g. ElectionForecast and Elections Etc.).[157] An alternative approach is to use the wisdom of the crowd and base a prediction on betting activity: the Spreadex and Sporting Index columns below cover bets on the number of seats each party will win with the midpoint between asking and selling price, while FirstPastThePost.net aggregates the betting predictions in each individual constituency. Some predictions cover Northern Ireland, with its distinct political culture, while others do not. Parties are sorted by current number of seats in the House of Commons:

Party ElectionForecast[157]
(Newsnight Index)
as of 9 April 2015
Electoral Calculus[158]

as of 12 April 2015

Elections Etc.[159]

as of 3 April 2015

The Guardian[160]
as of 12 April 2015
May2015.com[161]
as of 12 April 2015
Spreadex[162]

as of 15 April 2015

Sporting Index[163]
as of 12 April 2015
First Past the Post[164]

as of 12 April 2015

Conservatives 284 278 289 281 284.5 267 283
Labour 274 284 266 271 277 273.5 272 279
Liberal Democrats 28 17 22 29 26 24.5 25 28
DUP 8 Included under Other GB forecast only Included under Other Included under Other No market No market 8.7
SNP 41 48 49 50 54 43.5 42 38
UKIP 1 2 5 4 3 4.5 6 7
SDLP 3 Included under Other GB forecast only Included under Other Included under Other No market No market 2.7
Plaid Cymru 2 3 3 3 3 3.8 3.3 3
Greens 1 1 1 1 1 1.25 1.25 1
Other 8 18 (including 18 NI seats) GB forecast only, but
above may not sum to 632
due to rounding
18

(including 18 NI seats)

19

(including 18 NI
seats & Respect 1)

No Market No market

Respect 0.5
UUP 0.9
Speaker 1
Sinn Féin 4.5
Independent Unionist 1

Overall result (probability) Hung parliament (93%) Hung parliament (60%) Hung parliament (80%) Hung parliament Hung parliament Hung Parliament Hung parliament Hung parliament

Other predictions were published.[165] An election forecasting conference on 27 March 2015 yielded 11 forecasts of the result in Great Britain (including some included in the table above).[166] Averaging the conference predictions gives Labour 283 seats, Conservatives 279, Liberal Democrats 23, UKIP 3, SNP 41, Plaid Cymru 3 and Greens 1.[167] In that situation, no two parties (excluding a Lab-Con coalition) would have been able to form a majority without the support of a third. On 27 April, Rory Scott of the bookmaker Paddy Power predicted Conservatives 284, Labour 272, SNP 50, UKIP 3, and Greens 1.[168] LucidTalk for the Belfast Telegraph predicted for Northern Ireland: DUP 9, Sinn Féin 5, SDLP 3, Sylvia Hermon 1, with the only seat change being the DUP gaining Belfast East from Alliance.[169][170]

Final predictions before the vote edit

Percentage shares of votes, as predicted in the first week of May:

Party BMG[171] TNS-BNRB[172] Opinium[173] ICM[148] YouGov[174] Ipsos MORI[175] Ashcroft[176] Comres[177] Panelbase[178] Populus[179] Survation[180] Average
Conservative 33.7 33 35 34 34 36 33 35 31 33 31.4 33.6
Labour 33.7 32 34 35 34 35 33 34 33 33 31.4 33.5
UKIP 12 14 12 11 12 11 11 12 16 14 15.7 12.7
Liberal Democrats 10 8 8 9 10 8 10 9 8 10 9.6 10.0
Green 4 6 6 4 4 5 6 4 5 5 4.8 4.5
SNP 4 4 4 5 5 PC 5 5 5 5 4 4.7 4.6
Other 2.6 2 1 2 1 0.5 3 2 2 2 1.9 1.8
Lead Tie Con +1 Con +1 Lab +1 Tie Con +1 Tie Con +1 Lab +2 Tie Tie Tie
PC Includes Plaid Cymru

Seats predicted on 7 May:

Party ElectionForecast[157][181]
(Newsnight Index)
Electoral Calculus[158]
Elections Etc.[182]
The Guardian[183]
May2015.com[161]
Spreadex[184] Sporting Index[163]
First Past the Post[164]
Mean
Conservatives 278 280 285 273 288 286 279
Labour 267 274 262 273 268 266 269 270 269.0
SNP 53 52 53 52 56 48 46 49 51.6
Liberal Democrats 27 21 25 27 28 25.5 26.5 25 25.6
DUP 8 Included under Other GB forecast only Included under Other Included under Other No market No market 8.7
UKIP 1 1 3 3 2 3.25 3.3 4 2.5
SDLP 3 Included under Other GB forecast only Included under Other Included under Other No market No market 2.7
Plaid Cymru 4 3 3 3 3 3.8 3.35 3.1 3.2
Greens 1 1 1 1 1 1.75 1.15 0.7 1.0
Other Sinn Féin 5
UUP 1
Sylvia Hermon 1
Speaker 1
18 (including 18 NI seats) 1, although its GB forecast only,
18 NI seats
18 (including 18 NI seats) 19 (including 18 NI seats
& Respect 1)
No market No market Sinn Féin 4.7
Hermon 1
Speaker 1
UUP 1
Respect 0.6
Overall result (probability) Hung parliament (100%[citation needed]) Hung parliament (92%) Hung parliament (91%) Hung parliament Hung parliament Hung parliament Hung parliament Hung parliament Hung parliament

Exit poll edit

An exit poll, collected by Ipsos MORI and GfK on behalf of the BBC, ITN and Sky News, was published at 10 pm at the end of voting. It interviewed around 22,000 people across a sample of 133 constituencies:[185]

Parties Seats Change
Conservative Party 316   10
Labour Party 239   19
Scottish National Party 58   52
Liberal Democrats 10   47
UK Independence Party 2   2
Green Party 2   1
Others 23 N/A
Conservatives 10 short of majority

This predicted the Conservatives to be 10 seats short of an absolute majority, although with the 5 predicted Sinn Féin MPs not taking their seats, it was likely to be enough to govern. (In the event, Michelle Gildernew lost her seat, reducing the number of Sinn Féin MPs to 4.)[186]

The exit poll was markedly different from the pre-election opinion polls,[187] which had been fairly consistent; this led many pundits and MPs to speculate that the exit poll was inaccurate, and that the final result would have the two main parties closer to each other. Former Liberal Democrat leader Paddy Ashdown vowed to "eat his hat" and former Labour "spin doctor" Alastair Campbell promised to "eat his kilt" if the exit poll, which predicted huge losses for their respective parties, was right.[188]

As it turned out, the results were even more favourable to the Conservatives than the poll predicted, with the Conservatives obtaining 330 seats, an absolute majority.[189] Ashdown and Campbell were presented with hat- and kilt-shaped cakes (labelled "eat me") on BBC Question Time on 8 May.[188]

Opinion polling inaccuracies and scrutiny edit

 
Polling results for the 2015 UK general election, compared to the actual result

With the eventual outcome in terms of both votes and seats varying substantially from the bulk of opinion polls released in the final months before the election, the polling industry received criticism for their inability to predict what was a surprisingly clear Conservative victory. Several theories have been put forward to explain the inaccuracy of the pollsters. One theory was that there had simply been a very late swing to the Conservatives, with the polling company Survation claiming that 13% of voters made up their minds in the final days and 17% on the day of the election.[190] The company also claimed that a poll they carried out a day before the election gave the Conservatives 37% and Labour 31%, though they said they did not release the poll (commissioned by the Daily Mirror) on the concern that it was too much of an outlier with other poll results.[191]

However, it was reported that pollsters had in fact picked up a late swing to Labour immediately prior to polling day, not the Conservatives.[192] It was reported after the election that private pollsters working for the two largest parties actually gathered more accurate results, with Labour's pollster James Morris claiming that the issue was largely to do with surveying technique.[193] Morris claimed that telephone polls that immediately asked for voting intentions tended to get a high "Don't know" or anti-government reaction, whereas longer telephone conversations conducted by private polls that collected other information such as views on the leaders' performances placed voters in a much better mode to give their true voting intentions.[citation needed] Another theory was the issue of 'shy Tories' not wanting to openly declare their intention to vote Conservative to pollsters.[194] A final theory, put forward after the election, was the 'Lazy Labour' factor, which claimed that Labour voters tend to not vote on polling day whereas Conservative voters have a much higher turnout.[195]

The British Polling Council announced an inquiry into the substantial variance between the opinion polls and the actual election result.[196][197] The inquiry published preliminary findings in January 2016, concluding that "the ways in which polling samples are constructed was the primary cause of the polling miss".[198] Their final report was published in March 2016.[199]

The British Election Study team have suggested that weighting error appears to be the cause.[200]

Results edit

 

After all 650 constituencies had been declared, the results were:[201]

 
Party Leader MPs Votes
Of total Of total
Conservative Party David Cameron 330 50.8%
330 / 650
11,299,609 36.8%
Labour Party Ed Miliband 232 35.7%
232 / 650
9,347,273 30.4%
Scottish National Party Nicola Sturgeon 56 8.6%
56 / 650
1,454,436 4.7%
Liberal Democrats Nick Clegg 8 1.2%
8 / 650
2,415,916 7.9%
Democratic Unionist Party Peter Robinson 8 1.2%
8 / 650
184,260 0.6%
Sinn Féin Gerry Adams 4 0.6%
4 / 650
176,232 0.6%
Plaid Cymru Leanne Wood 3 0.5%
3 / 650
181,704 0.6%
Social Democratic & Labour Party Alasdair McDonnell 3 0.5%
3 / 650
99,809 0.3%
Ulster Unionist Party Mike Nesbitt 2 0.3%
2 / 650
114,935 0.4%
UK Independence Party Nigel Farage 1 0.2%
1 / 650
3,881,099 12.6%
Green Party of England and Wales Natalie Bennett 1 0.2%
1 / 650
1,111,603 3.8%
Speaker John Bercow 1 0.2%
1 / 650
34,617 0.1%[202]
Independent Unionist Sylvia Hermon 1 0.2%
1 / 650
17,689 0.06%[203]

The following table shows final election results as reported by BBC News[204] and The Guardian.[205]

e • d Summary[a] of the May 2015 House of Commons of the United Kingdom results
 
Political party Leader MPs Votes
Candidates[206] Total Gained Lost Net Of total (%) Total Of total (%) Change[b] (%)
Conservative[c] David Cameron 647 330 35 11 +24 50.8 11,299,609 36.8 +0.7
Labour Ed Miliband 631 232 22 48 −26 35.7 9,347,273 30.4 +1.5
UKIP Nigel Farage 624 1 1 0 +1 0.2 3,881,099 12.6 +9.5
Liberal Democrats Nick Clegg 631 8 0 49 −49 1.2 2,415,916 7.9 −15.1
SNP Nicola Sturgeon 59 56 50 0 +50 8.6 1,454,436 4.7 +3.1
Green Party of England and Wales Natalie Bennett 538 1 0 0 0 0.2 1,111,603 3.8 +2.7
DUP Peter Robinson 16 8 1 1 0 1.2 184,260 0.6 0.0
Plaid Cymru Leanne Wood 40 3 0 0 0 0.5 181,704 0.6 0.0
Sinn Féin Gerry Adams 18 4 0 1 −1 0.6 176,232 0.6 0.0
Ulster Unionist Mike Nesbitt 15 2 2 0 +2 0.3 114,935 0.4 [d]
Independent 170 1 0 0 0 0.2 101,897 0.3
SDLP Alasdair McDonnell 18 3 0 0 0 0.5 99,809 0.3 0.0
Alliance David Ford 18 0 0 1 −1 0 61,556 0.2 +0.1
Scottish Green Patrick Harvie / Maggie Chapman 32 0 0 0 0 0 39,205 0.1 0.0
TUSC Dave Nellist 128 0 0 0 0 0 36,490 0.1 +0.1
Speaker John Bercow 1 1 0 0 0 0.2 34,617 0.1 0.0
NHA[e] Richard Taylor & Clive Peedell 13 0 0 0 0 0 12,999 0.1 0.0
TUV Jim Allister 7 0 0 0 0 0 16,538 0.1 0.0
Respect George Galloway 4 0 0 0 0 0 9,989 0.0 −0.1
Green (NI) Steven Agnew 5 0 0 0 0 0 6,822 0.0 0.0
CISTA Paul Birch 34 0 0 0 0 0 6,566 0.0 New
People Before Profit Collective 1 0 0 0 0 0 6,978 0.0 0.0
Yorkshire First Richard Carter 14 0 0 0 0 0 6,811 0.0 New
English Democrat Robin Tilbrook 35 0 0 0 0 0 6,531 0.0 −0.2
Mebyon Kernow Dick Cole 6 0 0 0 0 0 5,675 0.0 0.0
Lincolnshire Independent Marianne Overton 5 0 0 0 0 0 5,407 0.0 0.0
Liberal Steve Radford 4 0 0 0 0 0 4,480 0.0 0.0
Monster Raving Loony Alan "Howling Laud" Hope 27 0 0 0 0 0 3,898 0.0 0.0
Independent Save Withybush Save Lives Chris Overton 1 0 0 0 0 0 3,729 0.0 New
Socialist Labour Arthur Scargill 8 0 0 0 0 0 3,481 0.0 0.0
CPA Sidney Cordle 17 0 0 0 0 0 3,260 0.0 0.0
Christian[f] Jeff Green 9 0 0 0 0 0 3,205 0.0 −0.1
No description[g] 0 0 0 0 0 3,012 0.0
Workers' Party John Lowry 5 0 0 0 0 0 2,724 0.0 0.0
North East Hilton Dawson 4 0 0 0 0 0 2,138 0.0 0.0
Poole People Mike Howell 1 0 0 0 0 0 1,766 0.0 New
BNP Adam Walker 8 0 0 0 0 0 1,667 0.0 −1.9
Residents for Uttlesford John Lodge 1 0 0 0 0 0 1,658 0.0 New
Rochdale First Party Farooq Ahmed 1 0 0 0 0 0 1,535 0.0 New
Communist Robert David Griffiths 9 0 0 0 0 0 1,229 0.0 New
Pirate Laurence Kaye 6 0 0 0 0 0 1,130 0.0 0.0
National Front Kevin Bryan 7 0 0 0 0 0 1,114 0.0 0.0
Communities United Kamran Malik 5 0 0 0 0 0 1,102 0.0 New
Reality Mark "Bez" Berry 3 0 0 0 0 0 1,029 0.0 New
The Southport Party David Cobham 1 0 0 0 0 0 992 0.0 New
All People's Party Prem Goyal 4 0 0 0 0 0 981 0.0 New
Peace John Morris 4 0 0 0 0 0 957 0.0 New
Bournemouth Independent Alliance David Ross 1 0 0 0 0 0 903 0.0 New
Socialist (GB) Collective 10 0 0 0 0 0 899 0.0 New
Scottish Socialist Executive Committee 4 0 0 0 0 0 875 0.0 0.0
Alliance for Green Socialism Mike Davies 4 0 0 0 0 0 852 0.0 0.0
Your Vote Could Save Our Hospital Sandra Allison 1 0 0 0 0 0 849 0.0 New
Wigan Independents Gareth Fairhurst 1 0 0 0 0 0 768 0.0 New
Animal Welfare Vanessa Hudson 4 0 0 0 0 0 736 0.0 0.0
Something New James Smith 2 0 0 0 0 0 695 0.0 New
Consensus Helen Tyrer 1 0 0 0 0 0 637 0.0 New
National Liberal National Council 2 0 0 0 0 0 627 0.0 New
Independents Against Social Injustice Steve Walmsley 1 0 0 0 0 0 603 0.0 New
Independence from Europe Mike Nattrass 5 0 0 0 0 0 578 0.0 New
Whig Waleed Ghani 4 0 0 0 0 0 561 0.0 New
Guildford Greenbelt Group Susan Parker 1 0 0 0 0 0 538 0.0 New
Class War Ian Bone 7 0 0 0 0 0 526 0.0 New
Above and Beyond Mark Flanagan 5 0 0 0 0 0 522 0.0 New
Northern Mark Dawson 5 0 0 0 0 0 506 0.0 New
Workers Revolutionary Sheila Torrance 7 0 0 0 0 0 488 0.0 0.0
Left Unity Kate Hudson 3 0 0 0 0 0 455 0.0 New
Liberty GB Paul Weston 3 0 0 0 0 0 418 0.0 New
People First Collective 1 0 0 0 0 0 407 0.0 New
Other parties[h] 0 0 0 0 0 65,537 0.0
Total 3,921 650 30,697,525
  1. ^ 66 parties are grouped together as 'other parties'. None of those parties contested more than 2 constituencies, or gained more than 300 votes
  2. ^ This column shows the change in vote share percentage from the 2010 general election to the 2015 general election. It does not account for by-elections.
  3. ^ BBC News includes the Speaker of the House of Commons, John Bercow, in the MP tally and the vote tally for the Conservatives. See About these results, BBC News (30 April 2015). In this table, however, the speaker (who usually does not vote in the Commons) is listed separately, and has been removed from the Conservative tally.
  4. ^ The UUP did not run itself in 2010; instead, it ran candidates under the Ulster Conservatives and Unionists banner.
  5. ^ BBC News lists the National Health Action Party together with Independent Community and Health Concern (formerly known as Independent Kidderminster Hospital and Health Concern), which is affiliated with the larger party, for a total of 20,210 votes. The Guardian lists each party separately. Health Concern received 7,211 of the votes attributed to the National Health Action Party.
  6. ^ The BBC groups together the votes under the Scottish Christian Party (1,467 votes); Christian Party (1,040 votes); and Christian (698 votes) labels, for a total of 3,205 votes. The Guardian lists these designations separately.
  7. ^ Candidates who do not specify a party or Independent are categorised as No description
  8. ^ 66 parties, none of which contested more than 2 constituencies, each with under 300 votes
Vote share
Conservative
36.8%
Labour
30.4%
UK Independence
12.6%
Liberal Democrat
7.9%
Scottish National
4.7%
Green
3.8%
Democratic Unionist
0.6%
Sinn Fein
0.6%
Plaid Cymru
0.4%
UUP
0.4%
SDLP
0.3%
Others
2.1%
Parliamentary seats
Conservative
50.8%
Labour
35.7%
Scottish National
8.6%
Liberal Democrat
1.2%
Democratic Unionist
1.2%
Sinn Fein
0.6%
Plaid Cymru
0.5%
SDLP
0.5%
UUP
0.3%
UK Independence
0.2%
Green
0.2%
Independent
0.2%
Speaker
0.2%


 
The disproportionality of parliament in the 2015 election was 15.04 according to the Gallagher Index, mainly between the UKIP and Conservative Parties.

Geographic voting distribution edit

One result of the 2015 general election was that a different political party won the popular vote in each of the countries of the United Kingdom.[207] This was reflected in terms of MPs elected: The Conservatives won in England with 319 MPs out of 533 constituencies,[208] the SNP won in Scotland with 56 out of 59,[209] Labour won in Wales with 25 out of 40,[210] and the Democratic Unionist Party won in Northern Ireland with 8 out of 18.[211]

Outcome edit

 

Despite most opinion polls predicting that the Conservatives and Labour were neck and neck, the Conservatives secured a surprise victory after having won a clear lead over their rivals and incumbent Prime Minister David Cameron was able to form a majority single-party government with a working majority of 12 (in practice increased to 15 due to Sinn Féin's four MPs' abstention). Thus the result bore resemblance to 1992.[212] The Conservatives gained 38 seats while losing 10, all to Labour; Employment Minister Esther McVey, in Wirral West, was the most senior Conservative to lose her seat. Cameron became the first Prime Minister since Lord Salisbury in 1900 to increase his popular vote share after a full term, and is sometimes credited as being the only Prime Minister other than Margaret Thatcher (in 1983) to be re-elected with a greater number of seats for his party after a 'full term'[n 4].[213]

 
A map of the results, showing each constituency as a hexagon of equal size, with the black lines showing separations in regions

The Labour Party polled below expectations, winning 30.4% of the vote and 232 seats, 24 fewer than its previous result in 2010—even though in 222 constituencies there was a Conservative-to-Labour swing, as against 151 constituencies where there was a Labour-to-Conservative swing.[214] Its net loss of seats were mainly a result of its resounding defeat in Scotland, where the Scottish National Party took 40 of Labour's 41 seats, unseating key politicians such as shadow Foreign Secretary Douglas Alexander and Scottish Labour leader Jim Murphy. Labour gained some seats in London and other major cities, but lost a further nine seats to the Conservatives, recording its lowest share of the seats since the 1987 general election.[215] Ed Miliband subsequently tendered his resignation as Labour leader.

The Scottish National Party had a stunning election, rising from just 6 seats to 56 – winning all but 3 of the constituencies in Scotland and securing 50% of the popular vote in Scotland.[209] They recorded a number of record breaking swings of over 30% including the new record of 39.3% in Glasgow North East. They also won the seat of former Prime Minister Gordon Brown, overturning a majority of 23,009 to win by a majority of 9,974 votes and saw Mhairi Black, then a 20-year-old student, defeat Labour's Shadow Foreign Secretary Douglas Alexander with a swing of 26.9%.

The Liberal Democrats, who had been in government as coalition partners, suffered the worst defeat they or the previous Liberal Party had suffered since the 1970 general election.[216] Winning just eight seats, the Liberal Democrats lost their position as the UK's third party and found themselves tied in fourth place with the Democratic Unionist Party of Northern Ireland in the House of Commons, with Nick Clegg being one of the few MPs from his party to retain his seat. The Liberal Democrats gained no seats, while losing 49 in the process—of them, 27 to the Conservatives, 12 to Labour, and 10 to the SNP. The party also lost their deposit in 341 seats, the same number as in every general election from 1979 to 2010 combined.

The UK Independence Party (UKIP) was only able to hold one of its two seats, Clacton, gaining no new ones despite increasing its vote share to 12.9% (the third-highest share overall). Party leader Nigel Farage, having failed to win the constituency of South Thanet, tendered his resignation, although this was rejected by his party's executive council and he stayed on as leader.

In Northern Ireland, the Ulster Unionist Party returned to the Commons with two MPs after a five-year absence, gaining one seat from the Democratic Unionist Party and one from Sinn Féin, while the Alliance Party lost its only Commons seat to the DUP, despite an increase in total vote share.[217]

Voter demographics edit

Ipsos MORI edit

Ipsos MORI polling after the election suggested the following demographic breakdown:

The 2015 UK General Election vote in Great Britain[218]
Social group Con Lab UKIP Lib Dem Green Others Lead
Total vote 38 31 13 8 4 6 7
Gender
Male 38 30 14 8 4 6 8
Female 37 33 12 8 4 6 4
Age
18–24 27 43 8 5 8 9 16
25–34 33 36 10 7 7 7 3
35–44 35 35 10 10 4 6 0
45–54 36 33 14 8 4 5 3
55–64 37 31 14 9 2 7 6
65+ 47 23 17 8 2 3 24
Men by Age
18–24 32 41 7 4 8 8 9
25–34 35 32 11 9 6 7 3
35–54 38 32 12 8 4 6 6
55+ 40 25 19 8 2 6 15
Women by Age
18–24 24 44 10 5 9 8 20
25–34 31 40 9 5 8 7 9
35–54 32 35 12 9 4 8 3
55+ 45 27 13 9 2 4 18
Social class
AB 45 26 8 12 4 5 19
C1 41 29 11 8 4 7 12
C2 32 32 19 6 4 7 0
DE 27 41 17 5 3 7 14
Men by social class
AB 46 25 10 11 3 5 21
C1 42 27 12 8 4 7 15
C2 30 32 21 5 4 8 2
DE 26 40 18 4 3 9 14
Women by social class
AB 44 28 6 12 5 5 16
C1 41 31 10 8 5 5 10
C2 34 33 17 7 4 5 1
DE 28 42 16 5 3 6 14
Housing tenure
Owned 46 22 15 9 2 6 24
Mortgage 39 31 10 9 3 8 8
Social renter 18 50 18 3 3 8 32
Private renter 28 39 11 6 9 7 11
Ethnic group
White 39 28 14 8 4 7 11
BME 23 65 2 4 3 3 44

YouGov edit

YouGov polling after the election suggested the following demographic breakdown:

The 2015 UK general election vote in Great Britain[219][220]
Social group Con Lab UKIP Lib Dem SNP Green Plaid Others Lead
Total vote 38 31 13 8 5 4 1 2 7
Gender
Male 37 29 15 8 5 4 1 2 8
Female 38 33 12 8 4 4 0 2 5
Age
18–29 32 36 9 9 5 7 1 2 4
30–39 36 34 10 8 5 5 0 2 2
40–49 33 33 14 7 5 4 1 2 0
50–59 36 32 16 7 5 3 1 2 4
60+ 45 25 16 7 3 2 0 2 20
Men by Age
18–29 34 31 10 10 5 6 1 2 3
30–39 38 31 11 8 5 5 1 1 7
40–49 34 31 16 7 6 4 1 2 3
50–59 33 31 18 7 6 3 1 2 2
60+ 44 24 18 7 4 2 0 1 20
Women by Age
18–29 29 41 7 8 4 8 1 2 12
30–39 33 37 9 8 5 5 0 2 4
40–49 33 36 12 7 5 4 1 2 3
50–59 38 32 14 7 4 3 0 2 6
60+ 46 25 14 8 3 2 0 2 21
Social class
AB 44 28 9 10 4 4 1 2 16
C1 38 30 11 9 5 5 1 2 8
C2 36 31 17 6 5 3 1 2 5
DE 29 37 18 6 5 3 0 2 8
Highest educational level
GCSE or lower 38 30 20 5 3 2 0 2 8
A-Level 37 31 11 8 6 5 1 2 6
University 35 34 6 11 5 6 1 2 1
Other 41 27 13 8 5 3 0 2 14
DK/refused 32 33 18 4 6 3 0 4 1
Housing status
Own outright 47 23 15 8 3 2 0 1 24
Mortgage 42 29 12 8 4 3 0 2 13
Social housing 20 45 18 5 7 3 0 1 25
Private rented 34 32 12 9 4 7 0 1 2
Don't know 31 38 10 8 4 6 0 3 7
Work sector
Private sector 43 26 14 7 4 4 0 2 17
Public sector 33 36 11 9 5 4 1 2 3
Household income
Under £20,000 29 36 17 7 5 4 1 2 7
£20,000-£39,999 37 32 14 8 4 4 0 1 5
£40,000-£69,999 42 29 10 9 5 4 1 1 13
£70,000+ 51 23 7 10 4 3 0 1 28
Newspaper
Daily Express 51 13 27 5 2 1 0 1 38
Daily Mail 59 14 19 5 1 1 0 2 45
Daily Mirror/Daily Record 11 67 9 5 6 2 0 1 56
Daily Star 25 41 26 3 3 1 0 2 16
The Sun 47 24 19 4 4 1 0 1 23
The Daily Telegraph 69 8 12 8 0 1 0 1 61
The Guardian 6 62 1 11 3 14 1 2 56
The Independent 17 47 4 16 3 11 1 1 30
The Times 55 20 6 13 1 3 1 2 35

Gender edit

The election led to an increase in the number of female MPs, to 191 (29% of the total, including 99 Labour; 68 Conservative; 20 SNP; 4 other) from 147 (23% of the total, including 87 Labour; 47 Conservative; 7 Liberal Democrat; 1 SNP; 5 other). As before the election, the region with the largest proportion of women MPs was North East England.[221]

Votes, of total, by party

  Conservative (36.8%)
  Labour (30.4%)
  UKIP (12.6%)
  SNP (4.7%)
  Green (3.8%)
  DUP (0.6%)
  Plaid Cymru (0.6%)
  Sinn Féin (0.6%)
  UUP (0.4%)
  SDLP (0.3%)
  Other (1.3%)

MPs, of total, by party

  Conservative (50.8%)
  Labour (35.7%)
  SNP (8.6%)
  DUP (1.2%)
  Sinn Féin (0.6%)
  Plaid Cymru (0.5%)
  UUP (0.3%)
  Green (0.2%)
  Speaker (0.2%)
  UKIP (0.2%)

Open seats changing hands edit

Party Candidate Incumbent Constituency Defeated by Party
Labour Richard Baker Frank Doran Aberdeen North Kirsty Blackman SNP
Liberal Democrats Steve Bradley Don Foster Bath Ben Howlett Conservative
Liberal Democrats Julie Pörksen Alan Beith Berwick-upon-Tweed Anne-Marie Trevelyan Conservative
Liberal Democrats Lauren Keith Sarah Teather Brent Central Dawn Butler Labour
Labour Michael Marra Jim McGovern Dundee West Chris Law SNP
Labour Ricky Henderson Alistair Darling Edinburgh South West Joanna Cherry SNP
Independent Karen Whitefield (Lab) Eric Joyce (elected as Labour)[n 5] Falkirk John McNally SNP
Labour Melanie Ward Lindsay Roy Glenrothes Peter Grant SNP
Liberal Democrats Christine Jardine Malcolm Bruce Gordon Alex Salmond SNP
Labour Liz Evans Martin Caton Gower Byron Davies Conservative
Liberal Democrats Lisa Smart Andrew Stunell Hazel Grove William Wragg Conservative
Conservative Graham Cox Mike Weatherley Hove Peter Kyle Labour
Labour Kenny Selbie Gordon Brown Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath Roger Mullin SNP
Liberal Democrats Vikki Slade Annette Brooke Mid Dorset and North Poole Michael Tomlinson Conservative
Labour Kenny Young David Hamilton Midlothian Owen Thompson SNP
Liberal Democrats Tim Brett Menzies Campbell North East Fife Stephen Gethins SNP
Liberal Democrats Josh Mason Ian Swales Redcar Anna Turley Labour Co-operative
Liberal Democrats David Rendel David Heath Somerton and Frome David Warburton Conservative
Labour Rowenna Davis John Denham Southampton Itchen Royston Smith Conservative
Labour Johanna Boyd Anne McGuire Stirling Steven Paterson SNP
Liberal Democrats Rachel Gilmour Jeremy Browne Taunton Deane Rebecca Pow Conservative

Seats which changed allegiance edit

111 seats changed hands compared to the result in 2010 plus three by-election gains reverted to the party that won the seat at the last general election in 2010 (Bradford West, Corby and Rochester and Strood).

General election records broken in 2015 edit

Youngest elected MP edit

Largest swing edit

Lowest winning vote share edit

Aftermath edit

Resignations edit

On 8 May, three party leaders announced their resignations within an hour of each other:[226] Ed Miliband (Labour) and Nick Clegg (Liberal Democrat) resigned due to their parties' worse-than-expected results in the election, although both had been re-elected to their seats in Parliament.[227][228][229][230] Nigel Farage (UKIP) offered his resignation because he had failed to be elected as MP for Thanet South, but said he might re-stand in the resulting leadership election. However, on 11 May, the UKIP executive rejected his resignation on the grounds that the election campaign had been "a great success",[231] and Farage agreed to continue as party leader.[232]

Alan Sugar, a Labour peer in the House of Lords, also announced his resignation from the Labour Party for running what he perceived to be an anti-business campaign.[233]

In response to Labour's poor performance in Scotland, Scottish Labour leader Jim Murphy initially resisted calls for his resignation by other senior party members. Despite surviving a no-confidence vote by 17–14 from the party's national executive, Murphy announced he would step down as leader on or before 16 May.[234]

Financial markets edit

Financial markets reacted positively to the result, with the pound sterling rising against the Euro and US dollar when the exit poll was published, and the FTSE 100 stock market index rising 2.3% on 8 May. The BBC reported: "Bank shares saw some of the biggest gains, on hopes that the sector will not see any further rises in levies. Shares in Lloyds Banking Group rose 5.75% while Barclays was 3.7% higher", adding: "Energy firms also saw their share prices rise, as Labour had wanted a price freeze and more powers for the energy regulator. British Gas owner Centrica rose 8.1% and SSE shares were up 5.3%." BBC economics editor Robert Peston noted: "To state the obvious, investors love the Tories' general election victory. There are a few reasons. One (no surprise here) is that Labour's threat of breaking up banks and imposing energy price caps has been lifted. Second is that investors have been discounting days and weeks of wrangling after polling day over who would form the government – and so they are semi-euphoric that we already know who's in charge. Third, many investors tend to be economically Conservative and instinctively Conservative."[235]

Electoral reform edit

The disparity between the numbers of votes and the number of seats obtained by the smaller parties gave rise to increased calls for replacement of the 'first-past-the-post' voting system with a more proportional system. For example, UKIP had 3.9 million votes per seat, whereas SNP had just 26,000 votes per seat, about 150 times greater representation for each vote cast. UKIP stood in 10 times as many seats as the SNP. Noting that UKIP's 13% share of the overall votes cast had resulted in the election of just one MP, Nigel Farage argued that the UK's voting system needed reforming, saying: "Personally, I think the first-past-the-post system is bankrupt."[236]

Re-elected Green Party MP Caroline Lucas agreed, saying: "The political system in this country is broken [...] It's ever clearer tonight that the time for electoral reform is long overdue, and it's only proportional representation that will deliver a Parliament that is truly legitimate and better reflects the people it is meant to represent."[237]

Daily Telegraph investigation of abuse of Wikipedia edit

Following the election, The Daily Telegraph detailed changes to Wikipedia pages made from computers with IP addresses inside Parliament raising suspicion that "MPs or their political parties deliberately hid information from the public online to make candidates appear more electable to voters" and a deliberate attempt to hide embarrassing information from the electorate.[238]

Telegraph Media Group fined edit

On 21 December 2015, the UK Information Commissioner's Office fined the Telegraph Media Group £30,000 for sending 'hundreds of thousands of emails on the day of the general election urging readers to vote Conservative ... in a letter from Daily Telegraph editor Chris Evans, attached to the paper's usual morning e-bulletin'. The ICO concluded that subscribers had not expressed their consent to receive this kind of direct marketing.[239]

Election petition edit

Four electors from Orkney and Shetland lodged an election petition on 29 May 2015 attempting to unseat Alistair Carmichael and force a by-election[240][241] over what became known as 'Frenchgate'.[242] The issue centred around the leaking of a memo from the Scotland Office about comments allegedly made by the French ambassador Sylvie Bermann about Nicola Sturgeon, claiming that Sturgeon had privately stated she would "rather see David Cameron remain as PM", in contrast to her publicly stated opposition to a Conservative government.[243] The veracity of the memo was quickly denied by the French ambassador, French consul general and Sturgeon.[244] At the time of the leak, Carmichael denied all knowledge of the leaking of the memo in a television interview with Channel 4 News.[245] but after the election Carmichael accepted the contents of the memo were incorrect, admitted that he had lied, and that he had authorised the leaking of the inaccurate memo to the media after a Cabinet Office enquiry identified Carmichael's role in the leak. On 9 December, an Election Court decided that although he had told a "blatant lie" in a TV interview, it had not been proven beyond reasonable doubt that he had committed an "illegal practice" under the Representation of the People Act[246] and he was allowed to retain his seat.[247]

Party election spending investigations edit

At national party level, the Electoral Commission fined the three largest parties for breaches of spending regulations, levying the highest fines since its foundation:[248] £20,000 for Labour in October 2016,[249] £20,000 for the Liberal Democrats in December 2016,[250] and £70,000 for the Conservative Party in March 2017.[251][248]

The higher fine for the Conservatives reflected both the extent of the wrongdoing (which extended to the 2014 parliamentary by-elections in Clacton, Newark and Rochester and Strood) and 'the unreasonable uncooperative conduct by the Party'.[252][248] The commission also found that the Party Treasurer, Simon Day, may not have fulfilled his obligations under the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000 and referred him for investigation to the Metropolitan Police Service.[253]

At constituency level, related alleged breaches of spending regulations led to 'unprecedented'[251] police investigations for possible criminal conduct of between 20 and 30 Conservative Party MPs. On 9 May 2017, the Crown Prosecution Service decided not to prosecute the vast majority of suspects, saying that "in order to bring a charge, it must be proved that a suspect knew the return was inaccurate and acted dishonestly in signing the declaration. Although there is evidence to suggest the returns may have been inaccurate, there is insufficient evidence to prove to the criminal standard that any candidate or agent was dishonest."[254] On 2 June 2017, charges were brought under the Representation of the People Act 1983 against Craig Mackinlay, who was elected Conservative MP for South Thanet in 2015, his agent Nathan Gray, and a party activist, Marion Little.[255][256] Appearing at Westminster Magistrates' Court on 4 July 2017, the three pleased not guilty and were released on unconditional bail pending an appearance at Southwark Crown Court on 1 August 2017.[257][258] The investigation of Party Treasurer Simon Day remained ongoing.[259]

In 2016–18, the European Parliament found that UKIP had unlawfully spent over €173,000 of EU funding on the party's 2015 UK election campaign, via the Alliance for Direct Democracy in Europe and the affiliated Institute for Direct Democracy. The Parliament required the repayment of the mis-spent funds and denied the organisations some other funding.[260][261][262] It also found that UKIP MEPs had unlawfully spent EU money on other assistance for national campaigning purposes during 2014–16 and docked their salaries to recoup the mis-spent funds.[263][264][265]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ SNP party leader Nicola Sturgeon, a Member of the Scottish Parliament and First Minister of Scotland, participated in some of the main UK-wide televised debates, but did not stand for a Commons seat at this election. Angus Robertson, MP for Moray at the time, was the leader of the SNP delegation to the House of Commons.
  2. ^ After nominations had closed and ballot papers were printed, the Labour candidate in Banff and Buchan, Sumon Hoque, was suspended from the Labour Party when he was charged with multiple driving offences, and the Labour candidate in Wellingborough, Richard Garvie, was also suspended after a conviction for fraud
  3. ^ After nominations had closed and ballot papers were printed, two UKIP candidates were suspended from the party for offensive comments.
  4. ^ In the 20th century so few Parliaments lasted the full five-year term that some commentators regarded four years as being a 'full term', thus calling the 1979–83 Parliament a 'full term'
  5. ^ Joyce was a member of the Labour Party until his resignation from the party in 2012 in the aftermath of an assault.

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2015, united, kingdom, general, election, held, thursday, 2015, elect, members, parliament, house, commons, only, general, election, held, under, rules, fixed, term, parliaments, 2011, local, elections, took, place, most, areas, same, 2010, 2015, 2017, outgoin. The 2015 United Kingdom general election was held on Thursday 7 May 2015 to elect 650 Members of Parliament or MPs to the House of Commons It was the only general election held under the rules of the Fixed term Parliaments Act 2011 Local elections took place in most areas on the same day 2015 United Kingdom general election 2010 7 May 2015 2017 outgoing memberselected members All 650 seats in the House of Commons326 seats needed for a majorityOpinion pollsRegistered46 354 197Turnout66 4 1 1 3 First party Second party Leader David Cameron Ed MilibandParty Conservative LabourLeader since 6 December 2005 25 September 2010Leader s seat Witney Doncaster NorthLast election 306 seats 36 1 258 seats 29 0 Seats won 330 232Seat change 24 26Popular vote 11 299 609 9 347 273Percentage 36 8 30 4 Swing 0 7 pp 1 4 pp Third party Fourth party Leader Nicola Sturgeon Nick CleggParty SNP Liberal DemocratsLeader since 14 November 2014 18 December 2007Leader s seat Did not stand n 1 Sheffield HallamLast election 6 seats 1 7 57 seats 23 0 Seats won 56 8Seat change 50 49Popular vote 1 454 436 2 415 916Percentage 4 7 7 9 Swing 3 1 pp 15 1 ppColours denote the winning party as shown in the main table of results Figure does not include the Speaker of the House of Commons John Bercow who was included in the Conservative seat total by some media outlets Composition of the House of Commons after the electionPrime Minister before electionDavid CameronConservative Prime Minister after election David CameronConservativeOpinion polls and political commentators had predicted that the results of the election would cause a second consecutive hung parliament whose composition would be similar to the previous Parliament which was in effect from the previous national election in 2010 Opinion polls turned out to have underestimated the Conservatives however as they won 330 of the 650 seats and 36 9 of the votes giving them a majority of ten seats not including the Speaker who cannot vote or debate and must remain impartial This won them the right to govern the country alone and the right for their leader David Cameron to continue as Prime Minister The Labour Party led by Ed Miliband saw a small increase in its share of the vote to 30 4 but won 26 fewer seats than in 2010 This gave them 232 MPs This was the fewest seats the party won since the 1987 general election when it had 229 MPs returned Many senior Labour MPs such as Ed Balls Douglas Alexander and Jim Murphy lost their seats The Scottish National Party won a landslide victory in Scotland mainly at the expense of Labour who had held a majority of Scottish seats in the House of Commons at every general election since 1964 The SNP won 56 of the 59 Scottish seats and became the third largest party in the House of Commons The Liberal Democrats led by outgoing Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg had their worst result since their formation in 1988 losing 49 of their 57 seats with Cabinet ministers Vince Cable Ed Davey and Danny Alexander all losing their seats The UK Independence Party came third in terms of votes with 12 6 but won only a single seat with party leader Nigel Farage failing to win his seat of South Thanet The Green Party won its highest ever vote share of 3 8 and retained their only seat 2 In Northern Ireland the Ulster Unionist Party returned to the Commons with two seats after their five year long absence and the Alliance Party lost its only seat despite an increase in their vote share Following the election Ed Miliband resigned as leader of the Labour Party and Nick Clegg resigned as leader of the Liberal Democrats The election is considered to have begun a political realignment in the UK marking the end of the traditional three party domination of the Conservatives Labour and the Liberal Democrats seen throughout the 20th century The Scottish National Party began its domination of Scottish politics It also saw the last public appearance of Charles Kennedy the former Leader of the Liberal Democrats before his death on 1 June 2015 Notable MPs who retired at this election included former Prime Minister Gordon Brown former Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling former Leader of the Conservative Party William Hague and former Leader of the Liberal Democrats Menzies Campbell Notable newcomers to the House of Commons include future Leader of the SNP in the House of Commons Ian Blackford future Deputy Leader of the Labour Party Angela Rayner future Leader of the Labour Party Sir Keir Starmer and future UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak Another future UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson who had previously left Parliament in 2008 so he could serve as the Mayor of London returned to Parliament as the MP for Uxbridge and South Ruislip Contents 1 Election process 2 Date of the election 2 1 Timetable 3 MPs not standing for re election 4 Contesting political parties and candidates 4 1 Overview 4 2 National 4 2 1 Minor parties 4 3 Northern Ireland 4 4 Scotland 4 5 Wales 4 6 Pacts and possible coalitions 4 7 Candidates 5 Campaign 5 1 By party 5 1 1 Conservative 5 1 2 Labour 5 2 Issues 5 2 1 Constitutional affairs 5 2 2 Government finance 5 2 3 Possibility of a hung Parliament 6 Television debates 7 Endorsements 7 1 National daily newspapers 7 2 National Sunday newspapers 8 Media coverage 9 Opinion polling 9 1 Predictions one month before the vote 9 2 Final predictions before the vote 9 3 Exit poll 9 4 Opinion polling inaccuracies and scrutiny 10 Results 10 1 Geographic voting distribution 10 2 Outcome 10 3 Voter demographics 10 3 1 Ipsos MORI 10 3 2 YouGov 10 4 Gender 11 Open seats changing hands 11 1 Seats which changed allegiance 11 2 General election records broken in 2015 11 2 1 Youngest elected MP 11 2 2 Largest swing 11 2 3 Lowest winning vote share 12 Aftermath 12 1 Resignations 12 2 Financial markets 12 3 Electoral reform 12 4 Daily Telegraph investigation of abuse of Wikipedia 12 5 Telegraph Media Group fined 12 6 Election petition 12 7 Party election spending investigations 13 See also 14 Footnotes 15 References 16 External links 16 1 Polls and forecasts 16 2 Constitutional issues 16 3 News sites 16 4 Manifestos 16 5 Boundary Commissions 16 6 ResultsElection process editSee also Parliamentary Voting System and Constituencies Act 2011 The Fixed term Parliaments Act 2011 led to the dissolution of the 55th Parliament on 30 March 2015 and the scheduling of the election on 7 May 3 There were local elections on the same day in all of England with the exception of Greater London No elections were scheduled to take place in Scotland Wales or Northern Ireland All British Irish and Commonwealth citizens over the age of 18 residing in the UK that weren t in prison a mental hospital or on the run from law enforcement on the date of the election were permitted to vote In British general elections voting takes place in all constituencies in the United Kingdom to elect members of parliament or MPs to the House of Commons the lower house of Parliament in the UK Each constituency elects one MP to the House of Commons using the first past the post voting system If one party obtains a majority 326 of the 650 seats then that party is entitled to form the Government If no party has a majority then there is what is known as a hung parliament In this case the options for forming the Government are either a minority government where one party governs alone despite not having the majority of the seats or a coalition government where one party governs alongside party in order to get a majority of seats 4 Although the Conservative Party planned for the number of constituencies to be reduced from 650 to 600 through the Sixth Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies under the Parliamentary Voting System and Constituencies Act 2011 the review of constituencies and reduction in seats was delayed by the Electoral Registration and Administration Act 2013 5 6 7 8 The next boundary review was set to take place in 2018 and so the 2015 general election was contested using the same constituencies and boundaries as in 2010 Of the 650 constituencies 533 were in England 59 were in Scotland 40 were in Wales and 18 were in Northern Ireland In addition the 2011 Act mandated a referendum in 2011 on changing from the first past the post voting system to an alternative vote system for general elections The Conservative Liberal Democrat coalition government agreed to holding a referendum 9 The referendum was held in May 2011 and resulted in the retention of the existing voting system Before the previous general election the Liberal Democrats had pledged to change the voting system and the Labour Party had pledged to hold a referendum on any such change 10 The Conservatives however promised to keep the first past the post system but to reduce the number of constituencies to 600 Liberal Democrats plan was to reduce the number of MPs to 500 and for them to be elected using a proportional vote system 11 12 The Government increased the amount of money that parties and candidates were allowed to spend on campaigning during the election by 23 a move decided against the advice of the Electoral Commission 13 The election saw the first cap on spending by parties in individual constituencies during the 100 days before Parliament s dissolution on 30 March 30 700 plus a per voter allowance of 9p in county constituencies and 6p in borough seats An additional voter allowance of more than 8 700 is available after the dissolution of Parliament In total parties spent 31 1m in the 2010 general election of which the Conservative Party spent 53 the Labour Party spent 25 and the Liberal Democrats 15 14 This was also the first UK general election to use individual rather than household voter registration Date of the election editSee also Fixed term Parliaments Act 2011 nbsp A church used as a polling station in Bath on 7 May 2015An election is called following the dissolution of the Parliament of the United Kingdom The 2015 general election was the first to be held under the provisions of the Fixed term Parliaments Act 2011 Prior to this the power to dissolve Parliament was a royal prerogative exercised by the sovereign on the advice of the prime minister Under the provisions of the Septennial Act 1716 as amended by the Parliament Act 1911 an election had to be announced on or before the fifth anniversary of the beginning of the previous parliament barring exceptional circumstances No sovereign had refused a request for dissolution since the beginning of the 20th century and the practice had evolved that a prime minister would typically call a general election to be held at a tactically convenient time within the final two years of a Parliament s lifespan to maximise the chance of an electoral victory for his or her party 15 Prior to the 2010 general election the Labour Party and the Liberal Democrats pledged to introduce fixed term elections 10 As part of the Conservative Liberal Democrat coalition agreement the Cameron ministry agreed to support legislation for fixed term Parliaments with the date of the next general election being 7 May 2015 16 This resulted in the Fixed term Parliaments Act 2011 which removed the prime minister s power to advise the monarch to call an early election The Act only permits an early dissolution if Parliament votes for one by a two thirds supermajority or if a majority of MPs pass a vote of no confidence and no new government is subsequently formed within 14 days 17 However the prime minister had the power by order made by Statutory Instrument under section 1 5 of the Fixed term Parliaments Act 2011 to fix the polling day to be up to two months later than 7 May 2015 Such a Statutory Instrument must be approved by each House of Parliament Under section 14 of the Electoral Registration and Administration Act 2013 the Fixed term Parliaments Act 2011 was amended to extend the period between the dissolution of Parliament and the following general election polling day from 17 to 25 working days This had the effect of moving forward the date of the dissolution of the Parliament to 30 March 2015 3 Timetable edit The key dates were Monday 30 March Dissolution of Parliament and the start of campaigning Saturday 2 May Deadline to file nomination papers to register to vote and to request a postal vote 18 Thursday 7 May Date of the election Friday 8 May The Conservative Party wins the election with a majority of 10 seats Monday 18 May New Parliament meets for the first time to elect a Speaker Wednesday 27 May 2015 State Opening of Parliament MPs not standing for re election editMain article List of MPs who stood down at the 2015 United Kingdom general election While at the previous election there had been a record 148 MPs not standing for re election 19 the 2015 election saw 90 MPs standing down 20 Out of these MPs 38 were Conservatives 37 were Labour 10 were Liberal Democrats 3 were Independents 1 was Sinn Fein and 1 was Plaid Cymru The highest profile members of parliament leaving were Gordon Brown the former Prime Minister and William Hague the former Leader of the Conservative Party and Leader of the Opposition 21 Alongside Brown and Hague 17 former cabinet ministers stood down at the election including Stephen Dorrell Jack Straw Alistair Darling David Blunkett Sir Malcolm Rifkind and Dame Tessa Jowell 21 The highest profile Liberal Democrat to stand down was their former leader Sir Menzies Campbell while the longest serving MP Sir Peter Tapsell also retired having served as an MP continuously since 1966 or for 49 years 21 Contesting political parties and candidates edit nbsp A sign in Woking showing opening hours of polling stations including the advice that people queuing outside polling stations at 10 00 pm will be entitled to apply for a ballot paper Overview edit Main article Candidates in the 2015 United Kingdom general election On 9 April 2015 the deadline for standing for the general election there were 464 political parties registered with the Electoral Commission Candidates who did not belong to a party were either labelled as an Independent or not labelled at all The Conservative Party and the Labour Party had been the two biggest parties since 1922 and had supplied all the UK s prime ministers since 1935 Opininion polls had predicted that the two parties would receive a combined total of anywhere between 65 and 75 of votes and would receive anywhere between 80 and 85 of the seats 22 23 and that as such the leader of one of the two parties would become the Prime Minister after the election The Liberal Democrats had been the third largest party in the UK for many years but as described by various political commentators other parties had risen relative to the Liberal Democrats since the 2010 election 24 25 In order to emphasise this The Economist stated that the familiar three party system of the Tories Labour and the Lib Dems appears to be breaking down with the rise of UKIP the Greens and the SNP Ofcom ruled that the major parties in Great Britain were the Conservatives Labour the Liberal Democrats and UKIP the SNP a major party in Scotland and Plaid Cymru a major party in Wales 26 The BBC s guidelines were similar but removed UKIP from their list of major parties and instead stated that UKIP should be given appropriate levels of coverage in output to which the largest parties contribute and on some occasions similar levels of coverage 27 28 Seven parties Conservative Labour Liberal Democrat UKIP SNP PC and Green participated in the election leadership debates 29 Northern Ireland s political parties were not included in any debates despite the DUP a party based in Northern Ireland being the fourth largest party in the UK going into the election National edit nbsp The Conservative Prime Minister David Cameron stood for a second term in office nbsp Ed Miliband was leader of the opposition and leader of the Labour Party after winning a leadership election against his brother David Miliband nbsp Nick Clegg and the Liberal Democrats showed a great fall in the polls after entering a coalition government with the Conservatives nbsp UK Independence Party leader Nigel Farage stood in the South Thanet constituency nbsp Nicola Sturgeon was the fifth First Minister of Scotland and the leader of the Scottish National Party in office since 2014 She is the first woman to hold either position nbsp Natalie Bennett leader of the Green Party of England and Wales She contested Holborn and St Pancras Several parties operate in specific regions only The main national parties standing in most seats across all of the country are listed below in order of the number of seats that they contested Conservative Party The Conservative Party was the senior party in the 2010 15 coalition government having won the most seats 306 at the 2010 election The party stood in 647 seats every seat except for two in Northern Ireland and the Speaker s seat Labour Party Labour had been in power from 1997 to 2010 The party was Her Majesty s Most Loyal Opposition after the 2010 election having won 258 seats It stood in 631 constituencies n 2 missing only the Speaker s seat and all seats in Northern Ireland Liberal Democrats The Liberal Democrats were the junior member of the 2010 15 coalition government having won 57 seats They contested 631 seats and like Labour only not contesting the Speaker s seat and all seats in Northern Ireland UK Independence Party or UKIP UKIP won the fourth most votes at the 2010 election but failed to win any seats They went into the election with two seats due to winning two by elections They also won the most votes of any British party at the 2014 European election It contested 624 seats across the United Kingdom n 3 Green Party The Green Party went into the election with only one seat However they won the fourth most votes in the 2014 European election In 2010 Caroline Lucas became the party s first ever MP In this election they received 3 8 of the vote This made them the sixth largest party in terms of how many people voted for them They stood in 573 seats Minor parties edit Dozens of minor parties stood in this election The Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition of Parties stood 135 candidates and was the only minor party to have more than forty candidates 30 The Respect Party who came into the election with one MP who was elected at the 2012 Bradford West by election stood four candidates The British National Party who finished fifth with 1 9 of the vote and stood 338 candidates at the 2010 general election stood only eight candidates this year following a collapse in their support 31 753 other candidates stood at the general election including Independents and candidates from other parties 31 Northern Ireland edit See also List of political parties in Northern Ireland The main parties in Northern Ireland in order of their number of seats were Democratic Unionist Party DUP the DUP won eight seats in 2010 making it the largest party in Northern Ireland and the fourth biggest in the UK The party also won the 2011 Northern Ireland Assembly election and came in second out of the Northern Irish parties at the 2014 European election It contested 16 of the 18 Northern Irish constituencies having entered into an electoral pact to abstain from the two other seats with the Ulster Unionist Party Sinn Fein Sinn Fein won the most votes in Northern Ireland in 2010 but came second in the number of seats winning five They came second at the 2011 Northern Ireland Assembly election and they came in first out of the Northern Irish parties in the 2014 European election In the House of Commons Sinn Fein are abstentionists and so they have never taken up the seats that they have won there The party also operates in Ireland where it does take seats in parliament It stood in all 18 Northern Irish constituencies Social Democratic and Labour Party or the SDLP The SDLP third in terms of both votes and seats in the 2010 general election and 2011 Northern Ireland Assembly election and fourth in the 2014 European election Going into this election the party had three MPs The SDLP has a relationship with the Labour Party with the SDLP s MPs generally following the Labour whip In the case of a hung parliament the party would have entered into a confidence and supply agreement with the party 32 They contested all 18 Northern Irish constituencies at the election Ulster Unionist Party or the UUP in 2010 the UUP entered into an electoral alliance with the Conservative Party and finished fourth in terms of votes in Northern Ireland but won no seats The party has one MEP having placed third in the 2014 European elections They came fourth in the 2011 Northern Ireland Assembly election The UUP contested 15 of the 18 Northern Irish seats the party did not run in two seats because of its electoral pact with the DUP and also did not nominate a candidate against former party member Sylvia Hermon 33 Alliance Party of Northern Ireland The Alliance Party had one MP going into this election Naomi Long who had been elected for the first time in 2010 They came fifth in the 2010 election by vote share They have a relationship with the Liberal Democrats However the Alliance s one MP elected in 2010 sat on the opposition benches in the Commons and not with the Liberal Democrats on the government benches The party contested all 18 Northern Irish constituencies in 2015 Smaller parties in Northern Ireland included the Traditional Unionist Voice who won no seats at this election but had one member of the Northern Ireland Assembly the Conservatives and UKIP both are major parties in the rest of the UK but are minor parties here 34 Scotland edit See also List of political parties in Scotland Scottish National Party or the SNP The SNP only contested seats in Scotland and stood in all 59 Scottish constituencies The party received the second most votes in Scotland and the sixth most overall in 2010 winning six seats It won the 2011 election to the Scottish Parliament and had a surge of support since the Scottish independence referendum in September 2014 in which it was the main political party behind the losing Yes campaign 35 Most projections suggested that it would be the third largest party overall after the 2015 election in terms of seats won overtaking the Liberal Democrats 23 Smaller parties in Scotland include the Scottish Libertarian Party but none of the smaller parties make much of an impact in general elections in Scotland Wales edit See also List of political parties in Wales Plaid Cymru led by Leanne Wood who was a member of the Welsh Assembly and did not stand in the general election Plaid Cymru organises only in Wales where it contested all forty Welsh constituencies The party has three MPs and was fourth in Wales eighth overall by vote share in 2010 later finishing third in the 2011 Welsh Assembly elections Wales has a number of smaller parties which again do not tend to make much impact in the general elections In 2015 the Labour Party continued to dominate Welsh politics at the general elections Pacts and possible coalitions edit Coalitions have been rare in the United Kingdom because the first past the post system has usually led to one party winning an overall majority in the Commons However with the outgoing Government being a coalition and with opinion polls not showing a large or consistent lead for any one party there was much discussion about possible post election coalitions or other arrangements such as confidence and supply agreements 36 Some UK political parties that only stand in part of the country have reciprocal relationships with parties standing in other parts of the country These include Labour in Great Britain and SDLP in Northern Ireland Liberal Democrats in Great Britain and Alliance in Northern Ireland SNP in Scotland and Plaid Cymru in Wales Plaid Cymru also recommended supporters in England to vote Green 37 while the SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon said she would vote for Plaid Cymru were she in Wales and Green were she in England 38 However Sturgeon also said that if their candidate was the most progressive she would vote for Labour were she in England 39 Green Party of England and Wales in England and Wales Scottish Greens in Scotland and the Green Party in Northern Ireland in Northern Ireland On 17 March 2015 the Democratic Unionist Party and the Ulster Unionist Party agreed an election pact whereby the DUP would not stand candidates in Fermanagh and South Tyrone where Michelle Gildernew the Sinn Fein candidate won by only four votes in 2010 and in Newry and Armagh In return the UUP would stand aside in Belfast East and Belfast North The SDLP rejected a similar pact suggested by Sinn Fein to try to ensure that an agreed nationalist would win that constituency 40 41 42 The DUP also called on voters in Scotland to support whichever pro Union candidate was best placed to beat the SNP 43 Candidates edit Main article Candidates in the 2015 United Kingdom general election The deadline for parties and individuals to file candidate nomination papers to the acting returning officer and the deadline for candidates to withdraw was 4 p m on 9 April 2015 44 45 46 47 The total number of candidates was 3 971 the second highest number in history slightly down from the record 4 150 candidates at the last election in 2010 31 48 There were a record number of female candidates standing in terms of both absolute numbers and percentage of candidates 1 020 26 1 in 2015 up from 854 21 1 in 2010 31 48 The proportion of female candidates for major parties ranged from 41 of Alliance Party candidates to 12 of UKIP candidates 49 According to UCL s Parliamentary Candidates UK project 50 the major parties had the following percentages of black and ethnic minority candidates the Conservatives 11 the Liberal Democrats 10 Labour 9 UKIP 6 the Greens 4 51 The average age of the candidates for the seven major parties was 45 50 The youngest candidates were all aged 18 Solomon Curtis Labour Wealden Niamh McCarthy Independent Liverpool Wavertree Michael Burrows UKIP Inverclyde Declan Lloyd Labour South East Cornwall and Laura Jane Rossington Communist Party Plymouth Sutton and Devonport 52 53 54 The oldest candidate was Doris Osen 84 of the Elderly Persons Independent Party EPIC who was standing in Ilford North 53 Other candidates aged over 80 included three long serving Labour MPs standing for re election Sir Gerald Kaufman aged 84 Manchester Gorton Dennis Skinner aged 83 Bolsover and David Winnick aged 81 Walsall North A number of candidates including two for Labour 55 56 and two for UKIP 57 58 were suspended from their respective parties after nominations were closed Independent candidate Ronnie Carroll died after nominations were closed 59 Campaign editBy party edit Conservative edit In late 2014 the year before the election the Conservatives decided to target Lib Dem seats as well as defending their own seats and targeting Conservative Labour marginals which ultimately contributed towards their victory 60 In 2015 David Cameron launched the Conservative formal campaign in Chippenham on 30 March 61 Throughout the campaign the Conservatives played on fears of a Labour SNP coalition following the Scottish independence referendum the year before 62 Labour edit See also Woman to Woman campaign The Labour campaign was launched on 27 March at Olympic Park in London 63 64 Ed Miliband s EdStone was a major feature of the campaign which was covered by the media 65 Deputy Leader of the Labour Party Harriet Harman embarked on a pink bus tour as part of her Woman to Woman campaign 66 Issues edit Constitutional affairs edit See also 2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum The Conservative manifesto committed to a straight in out referendum on our membership of the European Union by the end of 2017 67 Labour did not support this but did commit to an EU membership referendum if any further powers were transferred to the European Union 68 The Lib Dems also supported the Labour position but explicitly supported the UK s continuing membership of the EU The election was the first following the 2014 Scottish independence referendum None of the three major party manifestos supported a second referendum and the Conservative manifesto stated that the question of Scotland s place in the United Kingdom is now settled In the run up to the election David Cameron coined the phrase Carlisle principle for the idea that checks and balances are required to ensure that devolution to Scotland has no adverse effects on other parts of the United Kingdom 69 70 The phrase references a fear that Carlisle being the English town closest to the Scottish border could be affected economically by preferential tax rates in Scotland Government finance edit The deficit who was responsible for it and plans to deal with it were a major theme of the campaign While some smaller parties opposed austerity 71 the Conservatives Labour Liberal Democrats UKIP and the Greens all supported some further cuts albeit to different extents Conservative campaigning sought to blame the deficit on the previous Labour government Labour in return sought to establish their fiscal responsibility With the Conservatives also making several spending commitments e g on the NHS commentators talked of the two main parties political crossdressing each trying to campaign on the other s traditional territory 72 Possibility of a hung Parliament edit Hung Parliaments have been unusual in post War British political history but with the outgoing Government a coalition and opinion polls not showing a large or consistent lead for any one party it was widely expected and predicted throughout the election campaign that no party would gain an overall majority which could have led to a new coalition or other arrangements such as confidence and supply agreements 73 74 This was also associated with a rise in multi party politics with increased support for UKIP the SNP and the Greens The question of what the different parties would do in the event of a hung result dominated much of the campaign Smaller parties focused on the power this would bring them in negotiations Labour and the Conservatives both insisted that they were working towards winning a majority government while they were also reported to be preparing for the possibility of a second election in the year 75 In practice Labour were prepared to make a broad offer to the Liberal Democrats in the event of a hung Parliament 76 Most predictions saw Labour as having more potential support in Parliament than the Conservatives with several parties notably the SNP having committed to keeping out a Conservative government 77 78 The Conservatives described a potential Labour led hung parliament as a coalition of chaos and David Cameron described in a tweet the electoral choice as one between stable and strong government with me or chaos with Ed Miliband 79 80 The political turmoil in Britain in the wake of the 2015 election has since made the tweet infamous 80 Conservative campaigning sought to highlight what they described as the dangers of a minority Labour administration supported by the SNP This proved effective at dominating the agenda of the campaign 76 and at motivating voters to support them 81 82 83 84 The Conservative victory was widely put down to the success of the anti Labour SNP warnings according to a BBC article 85 and others 86 Labour in reaction produced ever stronger denials that they would co operate with the SNP after the election 76 The Conservatives and Lib Dems both also rejected the idea of a coalition with the SNP 87 88 89 This was particularly notable for Labour to whom the SNP had previously offered support their manifesto stated that the SNP will never put the Tories into power Instead if there is an anti Tory majority after the election we will offer to work with other parties to keep the Tories out 90 91 SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon later confirmed in the Scottish leaders debate on STV that she was prepared to help make Ed Miliband prime minister 92 However on 26 April Miliband ruled out a confidence and supply arrangement with the SNP too 93 Miliband s comments suggested to many that he was working towards forming a minority government 94 95 The Liberal Democrats said that they would talk first to whichever party won the most seats 96 They later campaigned on being a stabilising influence should either the Conservatives or Labour fall short of a majority with the slogan We will bring a heart to a Conservative Government and a brain to a Labour one 97 Both Labour and the Liberal Democrats ruled out coalitions with UKIP 98 Ruth Davidson leader of the Scottish Conservatives asked about a deal with UKIP in the Scottish leaders debate replied No deals with UKIP She continued that her preference and the Prime Minister s preference in a hung Parliament was for a minority Conservative government 99 UKIP said they could have supported a minority Conservative government through a confidence and supply arrangement in return for a referendum on EU membership before Christmas 2015 100 They also spoke of the DUP joining UKIP in this arrangement 101 UKIP and DUP said they would work together in Parliament 102 The DUP welcomed the possibility of a hung Parliament and the influence that this would bring them 75 The party s deputy leader Nigel Dodds said the party could work with the Conservatives or Labour but that the party is not interested in a full blown coalition government 103 Their leader Peter Robinson said that the DUP would talk first to whichever party wins the most seats 104 The DUP said they wanted for their support a commitment to 2 defence spending a referendum on EU membership and a reversal of the under occupation penalty They opposed the SNP being involved in government 105 106 The UUP also indicated that they would not work with the SNP if it wanted another independence referendum in Scotland 107 The Green Party of England amp Wales Plaid Cymru and the Scottish National Party all ruled out working with the Conservatives and agreed to work together wherever possible to counter austerity 108 109 71 Each would also make it a condition of any agreement with Labour that Trident nuclear weapons was not replaced the Green Party of England and Wales stated that austerity is a red line 110 Both Plaid Cymru and the Green Party stated a preference for a confidence and supply arrangement with Labour rather than a coalition 110 111 The leader of the SDLP Alasdair McDonnell said We will be the left of centre backbone of a Labour administration and that the SDLP will categorically refuse to support David Cameron and the Conservative Party 112 Sinn Fein reiterated their abstentionist stance 75 In the event the Conservatives did secure an overall majority rendering much of the speculation and positioning moot Television debates edit source track track Cameron s speech at Bloomberg in 2013 his promise to hold a referendum on leaving the EU helped him to win a majority at the 2015 election but would eventually lead to his resignation little more than a year later Main article 2015 United Kingdom general election debates The first series of televised leaders debates in the United Kingdom was held in the previous election Following much debate and various proposals 113 114 a seven way debate with the leaders of Labour the Conservatives Liberal Democrats UKIP Greens SNP and Plaid Cymru was held 115 with a series of other debates involving some of the parties The campaign was notable for a reduction in the number of party posters on roadside hoardings It was suggested that 2015 saw the death of the campaign poster 116 Endorsements editMain article Endorsements in the 2015 United Kingdom general election Various newspapers organisations and individuals endorsed parties or individual candidates for the election For example the main national newspapers gave the following endorsements National daily newspapers edit Newspaper Main endorsement Secondary endorsement s Notes LinkDaily Express UK Independence Party Conservative Party Endorsed the UK Independence Party 1 Daily Mail Conservative Party UK Independence Party Supported a Conservative government Encouraged anti Labour tactical voting 2 Liberal DemocratsDaily Mirror Labour Party Liberal Democrats Endorsed a Labour government Supported tactically voting LibDem against the Conservatives in marginal seats 3 4 Daily Telegraph Conservative Party None 5 Financial Times Conservative Party Liberal Democrats Endorsed a Conservative led coalition 6 The Guardian Labour Party Green parties in the United Kingdom Endorsed the Labour Party Also supported Green and Liberal Democrat candidates where they were the main opposition to the Conservatives 7 Liberal DemocratsThe Independent Liberal Democrats Conservative Party Endorsed a second term of the Conservative Liberal Democrat coalition 8 9 Metro NoneThe Sun Conservative Party Liberal Democrats Supported voting for the Liberal Democrats in 14 Labour LibDem marginals 10 The Times Conservative Party Liberal Democrats Endorsed a second term of Conservative Liberal Democrat coalition 11 National Sunday newspapers edit Newspaper Party endorsed Notes LinkIndependent on Sunday None Newspaper stated in an editorial that it was not advising readers how to vote in 2015 12 Mail on Sunday Conservative Party 13 The Observer Labour Party 14 Sunday Express UK Independence Party 15 Sunday Mirror Labour Party 16 Sunday Telegraph Conservative Party 17 Sunday Times Conservative Party 18 Media coverage editDespite speculation that the 2015 general election would be the social media election traditional media particularly broadcast media remained more influential than new digital platforms 117 118 119 A majority of the public 62 reported that TV coverage had been most influential for informing them during the election period especially televised debates between politicians 120 Newspapers were next most influential with the Daily Mail influencing people s opinions most 30 followed by The Guardian 21 and The Times 20 120 Online major media outlets like BBC News newspaper websites and Sky News were most influential 120 Social media was regarded less influential than radio and conversations with friends and family 120 During the campaign TV news coverage was dominated by horse race journalism focusing on the how close Labour and the Conservatives supposedly were according to the polls and speculation on possible coalition outcomes 121 This meta coverage was seen to squeeze out other content namely policy 121 122 123 Policy received less than half of election news airtime across all five main TV broadcasters BBC ITV Channel 4 Channel 5 and Sky during the first five weeks of the campaign 121 When policy was addressed the news agenda in both broadcast and print media followed the lead of the Conservative campaign 122 124 125 126 focusing on the economy tax and constitutional matters e g the possibility of a Labour SNP coalition government 126 124 with the economy dominating the news every week of the campaign 125 On TV these topics made up 43 of all election news coverage 126 within the papers nearly a third 31 of all election related articles were on the economy alone 127 Within reporting and comment about the economy newspapers prioritised Conservative party angles i e spending cuts 1 351 articles economic growth 921 articles reducing the deficit 675 articles over Labour s i e Zero hour contracts 445 articles mansion tax 339 articles non domicile status 322 articles 127 Less attention was given to policy areas that might have been problematic for the Conservatives like the NHS or housing policy topics favoured by Labour 126 or immigration favoured by UKIP 124 Reflecting on analysis carried out during the election campaign period David Deacon of Loughborough University s Communication Research Centre said there was aggressive partisanship in many section of the national press which could be seen especially in the Tory press 122 Similarly Steve Barnett Professor of Communications at the University of Westminster said that while partisanship has always been part of British newspaper campaigning in this election it was more relentless and more one sided in favour of the Conservatives and against Labour and the other parties 119 According to Bart Cammaerts of the Media and Communications Department at the London School of Economics during the campaign almost all newspapers were extremely pro Conservative and rabidly anti Labour 128 57 5 of the daily newspapers backed the Conservatives 11 7 Labour 4 9 UKIP and 1 4 backed a continuation of the incumbent Conservative Liberal Democrat coalition government 129 66 of Sunday national newspapers backed the Conservatives 130 Of newspaper front page lead stories the Conservatives received 80 positive splashes and 26 negative Labour received 30 positive against 69 negative 125 Print media was hostile towards Labour at levels not seen since the 1992 General Election 124 128 131 132 when Neil Kinnock was attacked hard and hit below the belt repeatedly 128 Roy Greenslade described the newspaper coverage of Labour as relentless ridicule 133 Of the leader columns in The Sun 95 were anti Labour 132 The SNP also received substantial negative press in English newspapers of the 59 leader columns about the SNP during the election one was positive 125 The Daily Mail ran a headline suggesting SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon was the most dangerous woman in Britain 124 134 and at other times called her a glamorous power dressing imperatrix and said that she would make Hillary Clinton look human 127 While the Scottish edition of The Sun encouraged people north of the border to vote for the SNP the English edition encouraged people to vote for the Conservatives in order to stop the SNP running the country 135 The negative coverage of the SNP increased towards the end of the election campaign 118 While TV news airtime given to quotations from politicians was more balanced between the two larger parties Con 30 14 Lab 27 98 more column space in newspapers was dedicated to quotes from Conservative politicians 44 45 versus 29 01 for Labour 118 according to analysts the Conservatives benefitted from a Tory supporting press in away the other leaders did not 118 At times the Conservatives worked closely with newspapers to co ordinate their news coverage 127 For example The Daily Telegraph printed a letter purportedly sent directly to the paper from 5 000 small business owners the letter had been organised by the Conservatives and prepared at Conservative Campaign Headquarters 127 According to researchers at Cardiff University and Loughborough University TV news agendas focused on Conservative campaign issues partly because of editorial choices to report on news originally broken in the rightwing press but not that broken in the leftwing press 126 122 121 Researchers also found that most airtime was given to politicians from the Conservative party especially in Channel 4 s and Channel 5 s news coverage where they received more than a third of speaking time 121 136 Only ITV gave more airtime to Labour spokespeople 26 9 compared with 25 1 for the Conservatives 136 Airtime given to the two main political leaders Cameron 22 4 and Miliband 20 9 was more balanced than that given to their parties 136 Smaller parties especially the SNP 136 received unprecedented levels of media coverage because of speculation about a minority or coalition government 124 126 The five most prominent politicians were David Cameron Con 15 of TV and press appearances Ed Miliband Lab 14 7 Nick Clegg Lib Dem 6 5 Nicola Sturgeon SNP 5 7 and Nigel Farage UKIP 5 5 124 126 However according to analysts from Loughborough University Communication Research Centre the big winners of the media coverage were the Conservatives They gained the most quotation time the most strident press support and coverage focused on their favoured issues the economy and taxation rather than say the NHS 118 Other than politicians business sources were the most frequently quoted in the media On the other hand trade unions representatives for example received very little coverage with business representatives receiving seven times more coverage than unions 122 Tony Blair was also in the top ten most prominent politicians 9 warning people about the threat of the UK leaving the EU 124 Opinion polling editMain articles Opinion polling for the 2015 United Kingdom general election and Opinion polling in United Kingdom constituencies 2010 2015 nbsp Conservative Labour Liberal Democrats UKIP GreensThroughout the 55th parliament of the United Kingdom first and second place in the polls without exception alternated between the Conservatives and Labour Labour took a lead in the polls in the second half of 2010 driven in part by a collapse in Liberal Democrat support 137 This lead rose to approximately 10 points over the Conservative Party during 2012 whose ratings dipped alongside an increase in UKIP support 138 UKIP passed the Liberal Democrats as the third most popular party at the start of 2013 Following this Labour s lead over the Conservatives began to fall as UKIP gained support from it as well 139 and by the end of the year Labour were polling at 39 compared to 33 for the Conservative Party and 11 for UKIP 139 UKIP received 26 6 of the vote at the European elections in 2014 and though their support in the polls for Westminster never reached this level it did rise up to over 15 through that year 140 2014 was also marked by the Scottish independence referendum Despite the No vote winning support for the Scottish National Party rose quickly after the referendum and had reached 43 in Scotland by the end of the year up 23 points from the 2010 general election largely at the expense of Labour 16 points in Scotland and the Liberal Democrats 13 points 141 In Wales where polls were less frequent the 2012 2014 period saw a smaller decline in Labour s lead over the second placed Conservative Party from 28 points to 17 142 These votes went mainly to UKIP 8 points and Plaid Cymru 2 points The rise of UKIP and SNP alongside the smaller increases for Plaid Cymru and the Green Party from around 2 to 6 140 saw the combined support of the Conservative and Labour party fall to a record low of around 65 143 Within this the decline came predominantly from Labour whose lead fell to under 2 points by the end of 2014 140 Meanwhile the Liberal Democrat vote which had held at about 10 since late 2010 declined further to about 8 140 Early 2015 saw the Labour lead continue to fall disappearing by the start of March 144 Polling during the election campaign itself remained relatively static with the Labour and Conservative parties both polling between 33 and 34 and neither able to establish a consistent lead 145 Support for the Green Party and UKIP showed slight drops of around 1 2 points each while Liberal Democrat support rose up to around 9 146 In Scotland support for the SNP continued to grow with polling figures in late March reaching 54 with the Labour vote continuing to decline accordingly 147 while Labour retained their reduced lead in Wales polling at 39 by the end of the campaign to 26 for the Conservatives 13 for Plaid Cymru 12 for UKIP and 6 for the Liberal Democrats 142 The final polls showed a mixture of Conservative leads Labour leads and ties with both between 31 and 36 UKIP on 11 16 the Lib Dems on 8 10 the Greens on 4 6 and the SNP on 4 5 of the national vote 148 In addition to the national polls Lord Ashcroft funded from May 2014 a series of polls in marginal constituencies and constituencies where minor parties were expected to be significant challengers Among other results Lord Ashcroft s polls suggested that the growth in SNP support would translate into more than 50 seats 149 that there was little overall pattern in Labour and Conservative Party marginals 150 that the Green Party MP Caroline Lucas would retain her seat 151 that both Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg and UKIP leader Nigel Farage would face very close races to be elected in their own constituencies 152 and that Liberal Democrat MPs would enjoy an incumbency effect that would lose fewer MPs than their national polling implied 153 As with other smaller parties their proportion of MPs remained likely to be considerably lower than that of total national votes cast Several polling companies included Ashcroft s polls in their election predictions though several of the political parties disputed his findings 154 Predictions one month before the vote edit The first past the post system used in UK general elections means that the number of seats won is not closely related to vote share 155 Thus several approaches were used to convert polling data and other information into seat predictions The table below lists some of the predictions ElectionForecast was used by Newsnight and FiveThirtyEight May2015 com is a project run by the New Statesman magazine 156 Seat predictions draw from nationwide polling polling in the constituent nations of Britain and may additionally incorporate constituency level polling particularly the Ashcroft polls Approaches may or may not use uniform national swing UNS Approaches may just use current polling i e a nowcast e g Electoral Calculus May2015 com and The Guardian or add in a predictive element about how polling shifts based on historical data e g ElectionForecast and Elections Etc 157 An alternative approach is to use the wisdom of the crowd and base a prediction on betting activity the Spreadex and Sporting Index columns below cover bets on the number of seats each party will win with the midpoint between asking and selling price while FirstPastThePost net aggregates the betting predictions in each individual constituency Some predictions cover Northern Ireland with its distinct political culture while others do not Parties are sorted by current number of seats in the House of Commons Party ElectionForecast 157 Newsnight Index as of 9 April 2015 Electoral Calculus 158 as of 12 April 2015 Elections Etc 159 as of 3 April 2015 The Guardian 160 as of 12 April 2015 May2015 com 161 as of 12 April 2015 Spreadex 162 as of 15 April 2015 Sporting Index 163 as of 12 April 2015 First Past the Post 164 as of 12 April 2015Conservatives 284 278 289 281 284 5 267 283Labour 274 284 266 271 277 273 5 272 279Liberal Democrats 28 17 22 29 26 24 5 25 28DUP 8 Included under Other GB forecast only Included under Other Included under Other No market No market 8 7SNP 41 48 49 50 54 43 5 42 38UKIP 1 2 5 4 3 4 5 6 7SDLP 3 Included under Other GB forecast only Included under Other Included under Other No market No market 2 7Plaid Cymru 2 3 3 3 3 3 8 3 3 3Greens 1 1 1 1 1 1 25 1 25 1Other 8 18 including 18 NI seats GB forecast only but above may not sum to 632 due to rounding 18 including 18 NI seats 19 including 18 NI seats amp Respect 1 No Market No market Respect 0 5 UUP 0 9Speaker 1 Sinn Fein 4 5Independent Unionist 1Overall result probability Hung parliament 93 Hung parliament 60 Hung parliament 80 Hung parliament Hung parliament Hung Parliament Hung parliament Hung parliamentOther predictions were published 165 An election forecasting conference on 27 March 2015 yielded 11 forecasts of the result in Great Britain including some included in the table above 166 Averaging the conference predictions gives Labour 283 seats Conservatives 279 Liberal Democrats 23 UKIP 3 SNP 41 Plaid Cymru 3 and Greens 1 167 In that situation no two parties excluding a Lab Con coalition would have been able to form a majority without the support of a third On 27 April Rory Scott of the bookmaker Paddy Power predicted Conservatives 284 Labour 272 SNP 50 UKIP 3 and Greens 1 168 LucidTalk for the Belfast Telegraph predicted for Northern Ireland DUP 9 Sinn Fein 5 SDLP 3 Sylvia Hermon 1 with the only seat change being the DUP gaining Belfast East from Alliance 169 170 Final predictions before the vote edit Percentage shares of votes as predicted in the first week of May Party BMG 171 TNS BNRB 172 Opinium 173 ICM 148 YouGov 174 Ipsos MORI 175 Ashcroft 176 Comres 177 Panelbase 178 Populus 179 Survation 180 AverageConservative 33 7 33 35 34 34 36 33 35 31 33 31 4 33 6Labour 33 7 32 34 35 34 35 33 34 33 33 31 4 33 5UKIP 12 14 12 11 12 11 11 12 16 14 15 7 12 7Liberal Democrats 10 8 8 9 10 8 10 9 8 10 9 6 10 0Green 4 6 6 4 4 5 6 4 5 5 4 8 4 5SNP 4 4 4 5 5 PC 5 5 5 5 4 4 7 4 6Other 2 6 2 1 2 1 0 5 3 2 2 2 1 9 1 8Lead Tie Con 1 Con 1 Lab 1 Tie Con 1 Tie Con 1 Lab 2 Tie Tie TiePC Includes Plaid CymruSeats predicted on 7 May Party ElectionForecast 157 181 Newsnight Index Electoral Calculus 158 Elections Etc 182 The Guardian 183 May2015 com 161 Spreadex 184 Sporting Index 163 First Past the Post 164 MeanConservatives 278 280 285 273 288 286 279Labour 267 274 262 273 268 266 269 270 269 0SNP 53 52 53 52 56 48 46 49 51 6Liberal Democrats 27 21 25 27 28 25 5 26 5 25 25 6DUP 8 Included under Other GB forecast only Included under Other Included under Other No market No market 8 7UKIP 1 1 3 3 2 3 25 3 3 4 2 5SDLP 3 Included under Other GB forecast only Included under Other Included under Other No market No market 2 7Plaid Cymru 4 3 3 3 3 3 8 3 35 3 1 3 2Greens 1 1 1 1 1 1 75 1 15 0 7 1 0Other Sinn Fein 5UUP 1Sylvia Hermon 1Speaker 1 18 including 18 NI seats 1 although its GB forecast only 18 NI seats 18 including 18 NI seats 19 including 18 NI seats amp Respect 1 No market No market Sinn Fein 4 7Hermon 1Speaker 1UUP 1Respect 0 6Overall result probability Hung parliament 100 citation needed Hung parliament 92 Hung parliament 91 Hung parliament Hung parliament Hung parliament Hung parliament Hung parliament Hung parliament Exit poll edit An exit poll collected by Ipsos MORI and GfK on behalf of the BBC ITN and Sky News was published at 10 pm at the end of voting It interviewed around 22 000 people across a sample of 133 constituencies 185 Parties Seats ChangeConservative Party 316 nbsp 10Labour Party 239 nbsp 19Scottish National Party 58 nbsp 52Liberal Democrats 10 nbsp 47UK Independence Party 2 nbsp 2Green Party 2 nbsp 1Others 23 N AConservatives 10 short of majorityThis predicted the Conservatives to be 10 seats short of an absolute majority although with the 5 predicted Sinn Fein MPs not taking their seats it was likely to be enough to govern In the event Michelle Gildernew lost her seat reducing the number of Sinn Fein MPs to 4 186 The exit poll was markedly different from the pre election opinion polls 187 which had been fairly consistent this led many pundits and MPs to speculate that the exit poll was inaccurate and that the final result would have the two main parties closer to each other Former Liberal Democrat leader Paddy Ashdown vowed to eat his hat and former Labour spin doctor Alastair Campbell promised to eat his kilt if the exit poll which predicted huge losses for their respective parties was right 188 As it turned out the results were even more favourable to the Conservatives than the poll predicted with the Conservatives obtaining 330 seats an absolute majority 189 Ashdown and Campbell were presented with hat and kilt shaped cakes labelled eat me on BBC Question Time on 8 May 188 Opinion polling inaccuracies and scrutiny edit nbsp Polling results for the 2015 UK general election compared to the actual resultWith the eventual outcome in terms of both votes and seats varying substantially from the bulk of opinion polls released in the final months before the election the polling industry received criticism for their inability to predict what was a surprisingly clear Conservative victory Several theories have been put forward to explain the inaccuracy of the pollsters One theory was that there had simply been a very late swing to the Conservatives with the polling company Survation claiming that 13 of voters made up their minds in the final days and 17 on the day of the election 190 The company also claimed that a poll they carried out a day before the election gave the Conservatives 37 and Labour 31 though they said they did not release the poll commissioned by the Daily Mirror on the concern that it was too much of an outlier with other poll results 191 However it was reported that pollsters had in fact picked up a late swing to Labour immediately prior to polling day not the Conservatives 192 It was reported after the election that private pollsters working for the two largest parties actually gathered more accurate results with Labour s pollster James Morris claiming that the issue was largely to do with surveying technique 193 Morris claimed that telephone polls that immediately asked for voting intentions tended to get a high Don t know or anti government reaction whereas longer telephone conversations conducted by private polls that collected other information such as views on the leaders performances placed voters in a much better mode to give their true voting intentions citation needed Another theory was the issue of shy Tories not wanting to openly declare their intention to vote Conservative to pollsters 194 A final theory put forward after the election was the Lazy Labour factor which claimed that Labour voters tend to not vote on polling day whereas Conservative voters have a much higher turnout 195 The British Polling Council announced an inquiry into the substantial variance between the opinion polls and the actual election result 196 197 The inquiry published preliminary findings in January 2016 concluding that the ways in which polling samples are constructed was the primary cause of the polling miss 198 Their final report was published in March 2016 199 The British Election Study team have suggested that weighting error appears to be the cause 200 Results edit nbsp For results by county region and analysis see Results breakdown of the 2015 United Kingdom general election For results by constituency see Results of the 2015 United Kingdom general election Main article List of MPs elected in the 2015 United Kingdom general election After all 650 constituencies had been declared the results were 201 nbsp Party Leader MPs VotesOf total Of totalConservative Party David Cameron 330 50 8 330 650 11 299 609 36 8 Labour Party Ed Miliband 232 35 7 232 650 9 347 273 30 4 Scottish National Party Nicola Sturgeon 56 8 6 56 650 1 454 436 4 7 Liberal Democrats Nick Clegg 8 1 2 8 650 2 415 916 7 9 Democratic Unionist Party Peter Robinson 8 1 2 8 650 184 260 0 6 Sinn Fein Gerry Adams 4 0 6 4 650 176 232 0 6 Plaid Cymru Leanne Wood 3 0 5 3 650 181 704 0 6 Social Democratic amp Labour Party Alasdair McDonnell 3 0 5 3 650 99 809 0 3 Ulster Unionist Party Mike Nesbitt 2 0 3 2 650 114 935 0 4 UK Independence Party Nigel Farage 1 0 2 1 650 3 881 099 12 6 Green Party of England and Wales Natalie Bennett 1 0 2 1 650 1 111 603 3 8 Speaker John Bercow 1 0 2 1 650 34 617 0 1 202 Independent Unionist Sylvia Hermon 1 0 2 1 650 17 689 0 06 203 The following table shows final election results as reported by BBC News 204 and The Guardian 205 e d Summary a of the May 2015 House of Commons of the United Kingdom results nbsp Political party Leader MPs VotesCandidates 206 Total Gained Lost Net Of total Total Of total Change b Conservative c David Cameron 647 330 35 11 24 50 8 11 299 609 36 8 0 7Labour Ed Miliband 631 232 22 48 26 35 7 9 347 273 30 4 1 5UKIP Nigel Farage 624 1 1 0 1 0 2 3 881 099 12 6 9 5Liberal Democrats Nick Clegg 631 8 0 49 49 1 2 2 415 916 7 9 15 1SNP Nicola Sturgeon 59 56 50 0 50 8 6 1 454 436 4 7 3 1Green Party of England and Wales Natalie Bennett 538 1 0 0 0 0 2 1 111 603 3 8 2 7DUP Peter Robinson 16 8 1 1 0 1 2 184 260 0 6 0 0Plaid Cymru Leanne Wood 40 3 0 0 0 0 5 181 704 0 6 0 0Sinn Fein Gerry Adams 18 4 0 1 1 0 6 176 232 0 6 0 0Ulster Unionist Mike Nesbitt 15 2 2 0 2 0 3 114 935 0 4 d Independent 170 1 0 0 0 0 2 101 897 0 3 SDLP Alasdair McDonnell 18 3 0 0 0 0 5 99 809 0 3 0 0Alliance David Ford 18 0 0 1 1 0 61 556 0 2 0 1Scottish Green Patrick Harvie Maggie Chapman 32 0 0 0 0 0 39 205 0 1 0 0TUSC Dave Nellist 128 0 0 0 0 0 36 490 0 1 0 1Speaker John Bercow 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 34 617 0 1 0 0NHA e Richard Taylor amp Clive Peedell 13 0 0 0 0 0 12 999 0 1 0 0TUV Jim Allister 7 0 0 0 0 0 16 538 0 1 0 0Respect George Galloway 4 0 0 0 0 0 9 989 0 0 0 1Green NI Steven Agnew 5 0 0 0 0 0 6 822 0 0 0 0CISTA Paul Birch 34 0 0 0 0 0 6 566 0 0 NewPeople Before Profit Collective 1 0 0 0 0 0 6 978 0 0 0 0Yorkshire First Richard Carter 14 0 0 0 0 0 6 811 0 0 NewEnglish Democrat Robin Tilbrook 35 0 0 0 0 0 6 531 0 0 0 2Mebyon Kernow Dick Cole 6 0 0 0 0 0 5 675 0 0 0 0Lincolnshire Independent Marianne Overton 5 0 0 0 0 0 5 407 0 0 0 0Liberal Steve Radford 4 0 0 0 0 0 4 480 0 0 0 0Monster Raving Loony Alan Howling Laud Hope 27 0 0 0 0 0 3 898 0 0 0 0Independent Save Withybush Save Lives Chris Overton 1 0 0 0 0 0 3 729 0 0 NewSocialist Labour Arthur Scargill 8 0 0 0 0 0 3 481 0 0 0 0CPA Sidney Cordle 17 0 0 0 0 0 3 260 0 0 0 0Christian f Jeff Green 9 0 0 0 0 0 3 205 0 0 0 1No description g 0 0 0 0 0 3 012 0 0 Workers Party John Lowry 5 0 0 0 0 0 2 724 0 0 0 0North East Hilton Dawson 4 0 0 0 0 0 2 138 0 0 0 0Poole People Mike Howell 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 766 0 0 NewBNP Adam Walker 8 0 0 0 0 0 1 667 0 0 1 9Residents for Uttlesford John Lodge 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 658 0 0 NewRochdale First Party Farooq Ahmed 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 535 0 0 NewCommunist Robert David Griffiths 9 0 0 0 0 0 1 229 0 0 NewPirate Laurence Kaye 6 0 0 0 0 0 1 130 0 0 0 0National Front Kevin Bryan 7 0 0 0 0 0 1 114 0 0 0 0Communities United Kamran Malik 5 0 0 0 0 0 1 102 0 0 NewReality Mark Bez Berry 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 029 0 0 NewThe Southport Party David Cobham 1 0 0 0 0 0 992 0 0 NewAll People s Party Prem Goyal 4 0 0 0 0 0 981 0 0 NewPeace John Morris 4 0 0 0 0 0 957 0 0 NewBournemouth Independent Alliance David Ross 1 0 0 0 0 0 903 0 0 NewSocialist GB Collective 10 0 0 0 0 0 899 0 0 NewScottish Socialist Executive Committee 4 0 0 0 0 0 875 0 0 0 0Alliance for Green Socialism Mike Davies 4 0 0 0 0 0 852 0 0 0 0Your Vote Could Save Our Hospital Sandra Allison 1 0 0 0 0 0 849 0 0 NewWigan Independents Gareth Fairhurst 1 0 0 0 0 0 768 0 0 NewAnimal Welfare Vanessa Hudson 4 0 0 0 0 0 736 0 0 0 0Something New James Smith 2 0 0 0 0 0 695 0 0 NewConsensus Helen Tyrer 1 0 0 0 0 0 637 0 0 NewNational Liberal National Council 2 0 0 0 0 0 627 0 0 NewIndependents Against Social Injustice Steve Walmsley 1 0 0 0 0 0 603 0 0 NewIndependence from Europe Mike Nattrass 5 0 0 0 0 0 578 0 0 NewWhig Waleed Ghani 4 0 0 0 0 0 561 0 0 NewGuildford Greenbelt Group Susan Parker 1 0 0 0 0 0 538 0 0 NewClass War Ian Bone 7 0 0 0 0 0 526 0 0 NewAbove and Beyond Mark Flanagan 5 0 0 0 0 0 522 0 0 NewNorthern Mark Dawson 5 0 0 0 0 0 506 0 0 NewWorkers Revolutionary Sheila Torrance 7 0 0 0 0 0 488 0 0 0 0Left Unity Kate Hudson 3 0 0 0 0 0 455 0 0 NewLiberty GB Paul Weston 3 0 0 0 0 0 418 0 0 NewPeople First Collective 1 0 0 0 0 0 407 0 0 NewOther parties h 0 0 0 0 0 65 537 0 0 Total 3 921 650 30 697 525 66 parties are grouped together as other parties None of those parties contested more than 2 constituencies or gained more than 300 votes This column shows the change in vote share percentage from the 2010 general election to the 2015 general election It does not account for by elections BBC News includes the Speaker of the House of Commons John Bercow in the MP tally and the vote tally for the Conservatives See About these results BBC News 30 April 2015 In this table however the speaker who usually does not vote in the Commons is listed separately and has been removed from the Conservative tally The UUP did not run itself in 2010 instead it ran candidates under the Ulster Conservatives and Unionists banner BBC News lists the National Health Action Party together with Independent Community and Health Concern formerly known as Independent Kidderminster Hospital and Health Concern which is affiliated with the larger party for a total of 20 210 votes The Guardian lists each party separately Health Concern received 7 211 of the votes attributed to the National Health Action Party The BBC groups together the votes under the Scottish Christian Party 1 467 votes Christian Party 1 040 votes and Christian 698 votes labels for a total of 3 205 votes The Guardian lists these designations separately Candidates who do not specify a party or Independent are categorised as No description 66 parties none of which contested more than 2 constituencies each with under 300 votes Vote shareConservative 36 8 Labour 30 4 UK Independence 12 6 Liberal Democrat 7 9 Scottish National 4 7 Green 3 8 Democratic Unionist 0 6 Sinn Fein 0 6 Plaid Cymru 0 4 UUP 0 4 SDLP 0 3 Others 2 1 Parliamentary seatsConservative 50 8 Labour 35 7 Scottish National 8 6 Liberal Democrat 1 2 Democratic Unionist 1 2 Sinn Fein 0 6 Plaid Cymru 0 5 SDLP 0 5 UUP 0 3 UK Independence 0 2 Green 0 2 Independent 0 2 Speaker 0 2 nbsp The disproportionality of parliament in the 2015 election was 15 04 according to the Gallagher Index mainly between the UKIP and Conservative Parties Geographic voting distribution edit One result of the 2015 general election was that a different political party won the popular vote in each of the countries of the United Kingdom 207 This was reflected in terms of MPs elected The Conservatives won in England with 319 MPs out of 533 constituencies 208 the SNP won in Scotland with 56 out of 59 209 Labour won in Wales with 25 out of 40 210 and the Democratic Unionist Party won in Northern Ireland with 8 out of 18 211 Outcome edit nbsp Conservative 70 80 Conservative 60 70 Conservative 50 60 Conservative 40 50 Conservative lt 40 Labour 80 85 Labour 70 80 Labour 60 70 Labour 50 60 Labour 40 50 Labour lt 40 Despite most opinion polls predicting that the Conservatives and Labour were neck and neck the Conservatives secured a surprise victory after having won a clear lead over their rivals and incumbent Prime Minister David Cameron was able to form a majority single party government with a working majority of 12 in practice increased to 15 due to Sinn Fein s four MPs abstention Thus the result bore resemblance to 1992 212 The Conservatives gained 38 seats while losing 10 all to Labour Employment Minister Esther McVey in Wirral West was the most senior Conservative to lose her seat Cameron became the first Prime Minister since Lord Salisbury in 1900 to increase his popular vote share after a full term and is sometimes credited as being the only Prime Minister other than Margaret Thatcher in 1983 to be re elected with a greater number of seats for his party after a full term n 4 213 nbsp A map of the results showing each constituency as a hexagon of equal size with the black lines showing separations in regionsThe Labour Party polled below expectations winning 30 4 of the vote and 232 seats 24 fewer than its previous result in 2010 even though in 222 constituencies there was a Conservative to Labour swing as against 151 constituencies where there was a Labour to Conservative swing 214 Its net loss of seats were mainly a result of its resounding defeat in Scotland where the Scottish National Party took 40 of Labour s 41 seats unseating key politicians such as shadow Foreign Secretary Douglas Alexander and Scottish Labour leader Jim Murphy Labour gained some seats in London and other major cities but lost a further nine seats to the Conservatives recording its lowest share of the seats since the 1987 general election 215 Ed Miliband subsequently tendered his resignation as Labour leader The Scottish National Party had a stunning election rising from just 6 seats to 56 winning all but 3 of the constituencies in Scotland and securing 50 of the popular vote in Scotland 209 They recorded a number of record breaking swings of over 30 including the new record of 39 3 in Glasgow North East They also won the seat of former Prime Minister Gordon Brown overturning a majority of 23 009 to win by a majority of 9 974 votes and saw Mhairi Black then a 20 year old student defeat Labour s Shadow Foreign Secretary Douglas Alexander with a swing of 26 9 The Liberal Democrats who had been in government as coalition partners suffered the worst defeat they or the previous Liberal Party had suffered since the 1970 general election 216 Winning just eight seats the Liberal Democrats lost their position as the UK s third party and found themselves tied in fourth place with the Democratic Unionist Party of Northern Ireland in the House of Commons with Nick Clegg being one of the few MPs from his party to retain his seat The Liberal Democrats gained no seats while losing 49 in the process of them 27 to the Conservatives 12 to Labour and 10 to the SNP The party also lost their deposit in 341 seats the same number as in every general election from 1979 to 2010 combined The UK Independence Party UKIP was only able to hold one of its two seats Clacton gaining no new ones despite increasing its vote share to 12 9 the third highest share overall Party leader Nigel Farage having failed to win the constituency of South Thanet tendered his resignation although this was rejected by his party s executive council and he stayed on as leader In Northern Ireland the Ulster Unionist Party returned to the Commons with two MPs after a five year absence gaining one seat from the Democratic Unionist Party and one from Sinn Fein while the Alliance Party lost its only Commons seat to the DUP despite an increase in total vote share 217 Voter demographics edit Ipsos MORI edit Ipsos MORI polling after the election suggested the following demographic breakdown The 2015 UK General Election vote in Great Britain 218 Social group Con Lab UKIP Lib Dem Green Others LeadTotal vote 38 31 13 8 4 6 7GenderMale 38 30 14 8 4 6 8Female 37 33 12 8 4 6 4Age18 24 27 43 8 5 8 9 1625 34 33 36 10 7 7 7 335 44 35 35 10 10 4 6 045 54 36 33 14 8 4 5 355 64 37 31 14 9 2 7 665 47 23 17 8 2 3 24Men by Age18 24 32 41 7 4 8 8 925 34 35 32 11 9 6 7 335 54 38 32 12 8 4 6 655 40 25 19 8 2 6 15Women by Age18 24 24 44 10 5 9 8 2025 34 31 40 9 5 8 7 935 54 32 35 12 9 4 8 355 45 27 13 9 2 4 18Social classAB 45 26 8 12 4 5 19C1 41 29 11 8 4 7 12C2 32 32 19 6 4 7 0DE 27 41 17 5 3 7 14Men by social classAB 46 25 10 11 3 5 21C1 42 27 12 8 4 7 15C2 30 32 21 5 4 8 2DE 26 40 18 4 3 9 14Women by social classAB 44 28 6 12 5 5 16C1 41 31 10 8 5 5 10C2 34 33 17 7 4 5 1DE 28 42 16 5 3 6 14Housing tenureOwned 46 22 15 9 2 6 24Mortgage 39 31 10 9 3 8 8Social renter 18 50 18 3 3 8 32Private renter 28 39 11 6 9 7 11Ethnic groupWhite 39 28 14 8 4 7 11BME 23 65 2 4 3 3 44YouGov edit YouGov polling after the election suggested the following demographic breakdown The 2015 UK general election vote in Great Britain 219 220 Social group Con Lab UKIP Lib Dem SNP Green Plaid Others LeadTotal vote 38 31 13 8 5 4 1 2 7GenderMale 37 29 15 8 5 4 1 2 8Female 38 33 12 8 4 4 0 2 5Age18 29 32 36 9 9 5 7 1 2 430 39 36 34 10 8 5 5 0 2 240 49 33 33 14 7 5 4 1 2 050 59 36 32 16 7 5 3 1 2 460 45 25 16 7 3 2 0 2 20Men by Age18 29 34 31 10 10 5 6 1 2 330 39 38 31 11 8 5 5 1 1 740 49 34 31 16 7 6 4 1 2 350 59 33 31 18 7 6 3 1 2 260 44 24 18 7 4 2 0 1 20Women by Age18 29 29 41 7 8 4 8 1 2 1230 39 33 37 9 8 5 5 0 2 440 49 33 36 12 7 5 4 1 2 350 59 38 32 14 7 4 3 0 2 660 46 25 14 8 3 2 0 2 21Social classAB 44 28 9 10 4 4 1 2 16C1 38 30 11 9 5 5 1 2 8C2 36 31 17 6 5 3 1 2 5DE 29 37 18 6 5 3 0 2 8Highest educational levelGCSE or lower 38 30 20 5 3 2 0 2 8A Level 37 31 11 8 6 5 1 2 6University 35 34 6 11 5 6 1 2 1Other 41 27 13 8 5 3 0 2 14DK refused 32 33 18 4 6 3 0 4 1Housing statusOwn outright 47 23 15 8 3 2 0 1 24Mortgage 42 29 12 8 4 3 0 2 13Social housing 20 45 18 5 7 3 0 1 25Private rented 34 32 12 9 4 7 0 1 2Don t know 31 38 10 8 4 6 0 3 7Work sectorPrivate sector 43 26 14 7 4 4 0 2 17Public sector 33 36 11 9 5 4 1 2 3Household incomeUnder 20 000 29 36 17 7 5 4 1 2 7 20 000 39 999 37 32 14 8 4 4 0 1 5 40 000 69 999 42 29 10 9 5 4 1 1 13 70 000 51 23 7 10 4 3 0 1 28NewspaperDaily Express 51 13 27 5 2 1 0 1 38Daily Mail 59 14 19 5 1 1 0 2 45Daily Mirror Daily Record 11 67 9 5 6 2 0 1 56Daily Star 25 41 26 3 3 1 0 2 16The Sun 47 24 19 4 4 1 0 1 23The Daily Telegraph 69 8 12 8 0 1 0 1 61The Guardian 6 62 1 11 3 14 1 2 56The Independent 17 47 4 16 3 11 1 1 30The Times 55 20 6 13 1 3 1 2 35Gender edit The election led to an increase in the number of female MPs to 191 29 of the total including 99 Labour 68 Conservative 20 SNP 4 other from 147 23 of the total including 87 Labour 47 Conservative 7 Liberal Democrat 1 SNP 5 other As before the election the region with the largest proportion of women MPs was North East England 221 Votes of total by party Conservative 36 8 Labour 30 4 UKIP 12 6 Liberal Democrats 7 9 SNP 4 7 Green 3 8 DUP 0 6 Plaid Cymru 0 6 Sinn Fein 0 6 UUP 0 4 SDLP 0 3 Other 1 3 MPs of total by party Conservative 50 8 Labour 35 7 SNP 8 6 Liberal Democrats 1 2 DUP 1 2 Sinn Fein 0 6 Plaid Cymru 0 5 Social Democratic amp Labour Party 0 5 UUP 0 3 Green 0 2 Speaker 0 2 Independent Unionist 0 2 UKIP 0 2 Open seats changing hands editParty Candidate Incumbent Constituency Defeated by PartyLabour Richard Baker Frank Doran Aberdeen North Kirsty Blackman SNPLiberal Democrats Steve Bradley Don Foster Bath Ben Howlett ConservativeLiberal Democrats Julie Porksen Alan Beith Berwick upon Tweed Anne Marie Trevelyan ConservativeLiberal Democrats Lauren Keith Sarah Teather Brent Central Dawn Butler LabourLabour Michael Marra Jim McGovern Dundee West Chris Law SNPLabour Ricky Henderson Alistair Darling Edinburgh South West Joanna Cherry SNPIndependent Karen Whitefield Lab Eric Joyce elected as Labour n 5 Falkirk John McNally SNPLabour Melanie Ward Lindsay Roy Glenrothes Peter Grant SNPLiberal Democrats Christine Jardine Malcolm Bruce Gordon Alex Salmond SNPLabour Liz Evans Martin Caton Gower Byron Davies ConservativeLiberal Democrats Lisa Smart Andrew Stunell Hazel Grove William Wragg ConservativeConservative Graham Cox Mike Weatherley Hove Peter Kyle LabourLabour Kenny Selbie Gordon Brown Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath Roger Mullin SNPLiberal Democrats Vikki Slade Annette Brooke Mid Dorset and North Poole Michael Tomlinson ConservativeLabour Kenny Young David Hamilton Midlothian Owen Thompson SNPLiberal Democrats Tim Brett Menzies Campbell North East Fife Stephen Gethins SNPLiberal Democrats Josh Mason Ian Swales Redcar Anna Turley Labour Co operativeLiberal Democrats David Rendel David Heath Somerton and Frome David Warburton ConservativeLabour Rowenna Davis John Denham Southampton Itchen Royston Smith ConservativeLabour Johanna Boyd Anne McGuire Stirling Steven Paterson SNPLiberal Democrats Rachel Gilmour Jeremy Browne Taunton Deane Rebecca Pow ConservativeSeats which changed allegiance edit Main article List of MPs who lost their seat in the 2015 United Kingdom general election 111 seats changed hands compared to the result in 2010 plus three by election gains reverted to the party that won the seat at the last general election in 2010 Bradford West Corby and Rochester and Strood Labour to SNP 40 Aberdeen North Aberdeen South Airdrie and Shotts Ayr Carrick and Cumnock Central Ayrshire Coatbridge Chryston and Bellshill Cumbernauld Kilsyth and Kirkintilloch East Dumfries and Galloway Dundee West Dunfermline and West Fife East Kilbride Strathaven and Lesmahagow East Lothian East Renfrewshire Edinburgh East Edinburgh North and Leith Edinburgh South West Falkirk Glasgow Central Glasgow East Glasgow North Glasgow North East Glasgow North West Glasgow South Glasgow South West Glenrothes Inverclyde Kilmarnock and Loudoun Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath Lanark and Hamilton East Linlithgow and East Falkirk Livingston Midlothian Motherwell and Wishaw North Ayrshire and Arran Ochil and South Perthshire Paisley and Renfrewshire North Paisley and Renfrewshire South Rutherglen and Hamilton West Stirling West DunbartonshireLiberal Democrat to Conservative 27 Bath Berwick upon Tweed Brecon and Radnorshire Cheadle Cheltenham Chippenham Colchester Eastbourne Eastleigh Hazel Grove Kingston and Surbiton Lewes Mid Dorset and North Poole North Cornwall North Devon Portsmouth South Solihull Somerton and Frome St Austell and Newquay St Ives Sutton and Cheam Taunton Deane Thornbury and Yate Torbay Twickenham Wells Yeovil Liberal Democrat to Labour 12 Bermondsey and Old Southwark Birmingham Yardley Bradford East Brent Central Bristol West Burnley Cambridge Cardiff Central Hornsey and Wood Green Manchester Withington Norwich South RedcarLiberal Democrat to SNP 10 Argyll and Bute Berwickshire Roxburgh and Selkirk Caithness Sutherland and Easter Ross East Dunbartonshire Edinburgh West Gordon Inverness Nairn Badenoch and Strathspey North East Fife Ross Skye and Lochaber West Aberdeenshire and KincardineConservative to Labour 10 Brentford and Isleworth City of Chester Dewsbury Ealing Central amp Acton Enfield North Hove Ilford North Lancaster and Fleetwood Wirral West Wolverhampton South WestLabour to Conservative 8 Bolton West Derby North Gower Morley and Outwood Plymouth Moor View Southampton Itchen Telford Vale of ClwydConservative to UKIP 1 ClactonDUP to UUP 1 South AntrimSinn Fein to UUP 1 Fermanagh and South TyroneAlliance to DUP 1 Belfast East General election records broken in 2015 edit Youngest elected MP edit Mhairi Black Scottish National Party elected aged 20 years 237 days 222 Largest swing edit A swing of 39 3 from Labour to the SNP was recorded in Glasgow North East 223 Lowest winning vote share edit Alasdair McDonnell of the SDLP won the seat of Belfast South on 24 5 of the vote 224 225 Aftermath editResignations edit On 8 May three party leaders announced their resignations within an hour of each other 226 Ed Miliband Labour and Nick Clegg Liberal Democrat resigned due to their parties worse than expected results in the election although both had been re elected to their seats in Parliament 227 228 229 230 Nigel Farage UKIP offered his resignation because he had failed to be elected as MP for Thanet South but said he might re stand in the resulting leadership election However on 11 May the UKIP executive rejected his resignation on the grounds that the election campaign had been a great success 231 and Farage agreed to continue as party leader 232 Alan Sugar a Labour peer in the House of Lords also announced his resignation from the Labour Party for running what he perceived to be an anti business campaign 233 In response to Labour s poor performance in Scotland Scottish Labour leader Jim Murphy initially resisted calls for his resignation by other senior party members Despite surviving a no confidence vote by 17 14 from the party s national executive Murphy announced he would step down as leader on or before 16 May 234 Financial markets edit Financial markets reacted positively to the result with the pound sterling rising against the Euro and US dollar when the exit poll was published and the FTSE 100 stock market index rising 2 3 on 8 May The BBC reported Bank shares saw some of the biggest gains on hopes that the sector will not see any further rises in levies Shares in Lloyds Banking Group rose 5 75 while Barclays was 3 7 higher adding Energy firms also saw their share prices rise as Labour had wanted a price freeze and more powers for the energy regulator British Gas owner Centrica rose 8 1 and SSE shares were up 5 3 BBC economics editor Robert Peston noted To state the obvious investors love the Tories general election victory There are a few reasons One no surprise here is that Labour s threat of breaking up banks and imposing energy price caps has been lifted Second is that investors have been discounting days and weeks of wrangling after polling day over who would form the government and so they are semi euphoric that we already know who s in charge Third many investors tend to be economically Conservative and instinctively Conservative 235 Electoral reform edit See also Electoral reform United Kingdom The disparity between the numbers of votes and the number of seats obtained by the smaller parties gave rise to increased calls for replacement of the first past the post voting system with a more proportional system For example UKIP had 3 9 million votes per seat whereas SNP had just 26 000 votes per seat about 150 times greater representation for each vote cast UKIP stood in 10 times as many seats as the SNP Noting that UKIP s 13 share of the overall votes cast had resulted in the election of just one MP Nigel Farage argued that the UK s voting system needed reforming saying Personally I think the first past the post system is bankrupt 236 Re elected Green Party MP Caroline Lucas agreed saying The political system in this country is broken It s ever clearer tonight that the time for electoral reform is long overdue and it s only proportional representation that will deliver a Parliament that is truly legitimate and better reflects the people it is meant to represent 237 Daily Telegraph investigation of abuse of Wikipedia edit Following the election The Daily Telegraph detailed changes to Wikipedia pages made from computers with IP addresses inside Parliament raising suspicion that MPs or their political parties deliberately hid information from the public online to make candidates appear more electable to voters and a deliberate attempt to hide embarrassing information from the electorate 238 Telegraph Media Group fined edit On 21 December 2015 the UK Information Commissioner s Office fined the Telegraph Media Group 30 000 for sending hundreds of thousands of emails on the day of the general election urging readers to vote Conservative in a letter from Daily Telegraph editor Chris Evans attached to the paper s usual morning e bulletin The ICO concluded that subscribers had not expressed their consent to receive this kind of direct marketing 239 Election petition edit Four electors from Orkney and Shetland lodged an election petition on 29 May 2015 attempting to unseat Alistair Carmichael and force a by election 240 241 over what became known as Frenchgate 242 The issue centred around the leaking of a memo from the Scotland Office about comments allegedly made by the French ambassador Sylvie Bermann about Nicola Sturgeon claiming that Sturgeon had privately stated she would rather see David Cameron remain as PM in contrast to her publicly stated opposition to a Conservative government 243 The veracity of the memo was quickly denied by the French ambassador French consul general and Sturgeon 244 At the time of the leak Carmichael denied all knowledge of the leaking of the memo in a television interview with Channel 4 News 245 but after the election Carmichael accepted the contents of the memo were incorrect admitted that he had lied and that he had authorised the leaking of the inaccurate memo to the media after a Cabinet Office enquiry identified Carmichael s role in the leak On 9 December an Election Court decided that although he had told a blatant lie in a TV interview it had not been proven beyond reasonable doubt that he had committed an illegal practice under the Representation of the People Act 246 and he was allowed to retain his seat 247 Party election spending investigations edit Main article 2015 United Kingdom general election party spending investigation At national party level the Electoral Commission fined the three largest parties for breaches of spending regulations levying the highest fines since its foundation 248 20 000 for Labour in October 2016 249 20 000 for the Liberal Democrats in December 2016 250 and 70 000 for the Conservative Party in March 2017 251 248 The higher fine for the Conservatives reflected both the extent of the wrongdoing which extended to the 2014 parliamentary by elections in Clacton Newark and Rochester and Strood and the unreasonable uncooperative conduct by the Party 252 248 The commission also found that the Party Treasurer Simon Day may not have fulfilled his obligations under the Political Parties Elections and Referendums Act 2000 and referred him for investigation to the Metropolitan Police Service 253 At constituency level related alleged breaches of spending regulations led to unprecedented 251 police investigations for possible criminal conduct of between 20 and 30 Conservative Party MPs On 9 May 2017 the Crown Prosecution Service decided not to prosecute the vast majority of suspects saying that in order to bring a charge it must be proved that a suspect knew the return was inaccurate and acted dishonestly in signing the declaration Although there is evidence to suggest the returns may have been inaccurate there is insufficient evidence to prove to the criminal standard that any candidate or agent was dishonest 254 On 2 June 2017 charges were brought under the Representation of the People Act 1983 against Craig Mackinlay who was elected Conservative MP for South Thanet in 2015 his agent Nathan Gray and a party activist Marion Little 255 256 Appearing at Westminster Magistrates Court on 4 July 2017 the three pleased not guilty and were released on unconditional bail pending an appearance at Southwark Crown Court on 1 August 2017 257 258 The investigation of Party Treasurer Simon Day remained ongoing 259 In 2016 18 the European Parliament found that UKIP had unlawfully spent over 173 000 of EU funding on the party s 2015 UK election campaign via the Alliance for Direct Democracy in Europe and the affiliated Institute for Direct Democracy The Parliament required the repayment of the mis spent funds and denied the organisations some other funding 260 261 262 It also found that UKIP MEPs had unlawfully spent EU money on other assistance for national campaigning purposes during 2014 16 and docked their salaries to recoup the mis spent funds 263 264 265 See also edit nbsp Politics portal nbsp United Kingdom portal2015 United Kingdom general election in England 2015 United Kingdom general election in Northern Ireland 2015 United Kingdom general election in Scotland 2015 United Kingdom general election in Wales List of MPs elected in the 2015 United Kingdom general election List of MPs for constituencies in England 2015 2017 List of MPs for constituencies in Northern Ireland 2015 2017 List of MPs for constituencies in Scotland 2015 2017 List of MPs for constituencies in Wales 2015 2017 2015 United Kingdom local elections Results of the 2015 United Kingdom general election Results breakdown of the 2015 United Kingdom general election 2010s in United Kingdom political historyFootnotes edit SNP party leader Nicola Sturgeon a Member of the Scottish Parliament and First Minister of Scotland participated in some of the main UK wide televised debates but did not stand for a Commons seat at this election Angus Robertson MP for Moray at the time was the leader of the SNP delegation to the House of Commons After nominations had closed and ballot papers were printed the Labour candidate in Banff and Buchan Sumon Hoque was suspended from the Labour Party when he was charged with multiple driving offences and the Labour candidate in Wellingborough Richard Garvie was also suspended after a conviction for fraud After nominations had closed and ballot papers were printed two UKIP candidates were suspended from the party for offensive comments In the 20th century so few Parliaments lasted the full five year term that some commentators regarded four years as being a full term thus calling the 1979 83 Parliament a full term Joyce was a member of the Labour Party until his resignation from the party in 2012 in the aftermath of an assault References edit The May 2015 UK elections Report on the administration of the 7 May 2015 elections including the UK Parliamentary general election PDF p 3 Archived PDF from the original on 22 February 2017 Retrieved 15 May 2016 Bawden Tom 8 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