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2019 United Kingdom general election

The 2019 United Kingdom general election was held on Thursday 12 December 2019 to elect members of the House of Commons. The Conservative Party won a landslide victory with a majority of 80 seats,[n 5] a net gain of 48, on 43.6% of the popular vote, the highest percentage for any party since the 1979 general election.[3]

2019 United Kingdom general election

← 2017 12 December 2019 Next →

All 650 seats in the House of Commons
326[n 1] seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Registered47,568,611
Turnout67.3% ( 1.5 pp)[2]
  First party Second party
 
Leader Boris Johnson Jeremy Corbyn
Party Conservative Labour
Leader since 23 July 2019 12 September 2015
Leader's seat Uxbridge and
South Ruislip
Islington North
Last election 317 seats, 42.4% 262 seats, 40.0%
Seats won 365 202[n 2]
Seat change 48 60
Popular vote 13,966,454 10,269,051
Percentage 43.6% 32.1%
Swing 1.2 pp 7.9 pp

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Nicola Sturgeon Jo Swinson
Party SNP Liberal Democrats
Leader since 14 November 2014 22 July 2019
Leader's seat Did not stand[n 3] East Dunbartonshire
(defeated)
Last election 35 seats, 3.0% 12 seats, 7.4%
Seats won 48[n 4] 11
Seat change 13 1
Popular vote 1,242,380 3,696,419
Percentage 3.9% 11.6%
Swing 0.8 pp 4.2 pp

A map presenting the results of the election, by party of the MP elected from each constituency

Composition of the House of Commons after the election

Prime Minister before election

Boris Johnson
Conservative

Prime Minister after election

Boris Johnson
Conservative

Having failed to obtain a majority at the 2017 general election, the Conservative Party governed in minority with the support of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP). This led to the resignation of Prime Minister Theresa May with Boris Johnson becoming Conservative leader and Prime Minister in July 2019. Johnson could not persuade Parliament to approve a revised Brexit withdrawal agreement by the end of October, and chose to call for a snap election, which the House of Commons supported under the Early Parliamentary General Election Act 2019.[4] Opinion polls showed a firm lead for the Conservatives against the opposition Labour Party throughout the campaign.[5]

The Conservatives won 365 seats, their highest number and proportion since 1987, and recorded their highest share of the popular vote since 1979; many of their gains were made in long-held Labour seats, dubbed the red wall, which had voted strongly for Leave in the 2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum. Labour won 202 seats, its lowest number and proportion since 1935.[6][7][8] The Scottish National Party (SNP) made a net gain of 13 seats with 45% of the vote in Scotland, winning 48 of the 59 seats there.[9] The Liberal Democrats improved their vote share to 11.6% but won only 11 seats, a net loss of one since the last election.[10] The DUP won a plurality of seats in Northern Ireland. The Social Democratic and Labour Party and the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland regained parliamentary representation as the DUP lost seats.

The election result gave Johnson the mandate he sought from the electorate to formally implement the Exit Day of the Withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union on 31 January 2020 and repeal the European Communities Act 1972, thereby ending hopes of the Remain movement and those opposed to Brexit. Labour's defeat led to Jeremy Corbyn announcing his intention to resign, triggering a leadership election that was won by Keir Starmer.[8][11] For the Liberal Democrats leader Jo Swinson, the loss of her constituency seat in East Dunbartonshire disqualified her as party leader under the party's rules, triggering a leadership election,[10] which was won by Ed Davey.[12] Jane Dodds, the party's leader in Wales, was also unseated in Brecon and Radnorshire.[13] In Northern Ireland, Irish nationalist MPs outnumbered unionists for the first time, although the unionist popular vote remained higher at 43.1%, and the seven Sinn Féin MPs did not take their seats due to their tradition of abstentionism.

This was the eighteenth and final general election to be held during the reign of Queen Elizabeth II, as she died three years later and was succeeded by her son, Charles III.

Background edit

In July 2016, Theresa May became the Prime Minister, having taken over from David Cameron, who had resigned in the wake of the 2016 Brexit referendum. Her party, the Conservative and Unionist Party, had governed since the 2010 general election, initially in coalition with the Liberal Democrats and then alone with a small majority following the 2015 general election. In the 2017 general election, May lost her majority but was able to resume office as a result of a confidence and supply agreement with Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), known as the Conservative–DUP agreement. In the face of opposition from the DUP and Conservative backbenchers, the second May ministry was unable to pass its Brexit withdrawal agreement by 29 March 2019, so some political commentators considered that an early general election was likely.[14]

The opposition Labour Party called for a 2019 vote of confidence in the May ministry but the motion, held in January, failed.[15] May resigned following her party's poor performance in the 2019 European Parliament election during the first extension granted by the European Union for negotiations on the withdrawal agreement. Boris Johnson won the 2019 Conservative leadership election and became the prime minister on 24 July 2019. Along with attempting to revise the withdrawal agreement arranged by his predecessor's negotiations, Johnson made three attempts to hold a snap election under the process defined in the Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011,[16] which requires a two-thirds supermajority in order for an election to take place.[17][18][19]

All three attempts to call an election failed to gain support; Parliament insisted that Johnson "take a no-deal Brexit off the table first" and secure a negotiated Withdrawal Agreement, expressed in particular by its enactment against his will of the European Union (Withdrawal) (No. 2) Act 2019, often called the Benn Act, after Labour MP Hilary Benn, who introduced the bill. After failing to pass a revised deal before the first extension's deadline of 31 October 2019, Johnson agreed to a second extension on negotiations with the European Union and finally secured a revised withdrawal agreement. Parliament agreed to an election through a motion proposed by the Liberal Democrats and the Scottish National Party (SNP) on 28 October. The Early Parliamentary General Election Act 2019 (EPGEA) was passed in the House of Commons by 438 votes to 20; an attempt to pass an amendment by opposition parties for the election to be held on 9 December failed by 315 votes to 295.[20][21] The House of Lords followed suit on 30 October,[22] with royal assent made the day after for the ratification of the EPGEA.[23]

Date of the election edit

The deadline for candidate nominations was 14 November 2019,[24] with political campaigning for four weeks until polling day on 12 December. On the day of the election, polling stations across the country were open from 7 am, and closed at 10 pm.[25] The date chosen for the 2019 general election made it the first to be held in December since the 1923 general election.[26][27]

Voting eligibility edit

Individuals eligible to vote had to be registered to vote by midnight on 26 November.[28] To be eligible to vote, individuals had to be aged 18 or over;[29][30] residing as an Irish or Commonwealth citizen at an address in the United Kingdom,[n 6] or be a British citizen overseas who registered to vote in the last 15 years;[32][33][n 7] and not legally excluded (on grounds of detainment in prison, a mental hospital, or on the run from law enforcement),[34] or disqualified from voting.[35][36] Anyone who qualified as an anonymous elector had until midnight on 6 December to register.[n 8]

Timetable edit

Key dates[38]
Date Event
Tuesday 29 October Passage of the Early Parliamentary General Election Act 2019 through the House of Commons.
Wednesday 30 October Passage of the Early Parliamentary General Election Act 2019 through the House of Lords.
Thursday 31 October Early Parliamentary General Election Act 2019 received royal assent and comes into force immediately. The Act set 12 December as the date for the next parliamentary general election.
Wednesday 6 November Dissolution of parliament and official start of the campaign. Beginning of purdah. Royal Proclamation issued, summoning a new Parliament and setting the date for its first meeting.
Thursday 7 November Receipt of writ of election – legal documents declaring election issued.
Friday 8 November Notices of election were given in constituencies.
Thursday 14 November Nominations of candidates closed.
Saturday 16 November Lists of candidates were published for each constituency.
Thursday 21 November Deadline to register for a postal vote at 5pm in Northern Ireland.[39]
Tuesday 26 November Deadline to register for a postal vote at 5pm (Great Britain),[39] as well as registering to vote across the United Kingdom at 11:59pm.[39]
Wednesday 4 December Deadline to register for a proxy vote at 5pm. Exemptions applied for emergencies.
Thursday 12 December Polling Day – polls opened at 7 am to 10 pm.
Friday 13 December Results announced for all the 650 constituencies. End of purdah.
Tuesday 17 December First meeting of the new Parliament of the United Kingdom, for the formal election of Speaker of the House of Commons and the swearing-in of members, ahead of the State Opening of Parliament's first session.[40][41][42]
Thursday 19 December State Opening of Parliament and queen's speech.

Contesting political parties and candidates edit

Most candidates are representatives of a political party, which must be registered with the Electoral Commission's Register. Those who do not belong to one must use the label Independent or none. In the 2019 election 3,415 candidates stood: 206 being independents, the rest representing one of 68 political parties.

Great Britain edit

Party Party leader(s) Leader since Leader's seat 2017 election Seats at
dissolution
Contested seats
% of
votes
Seats
Conservative Party Boris Johnson July 2019 Uxbridge & South Ruislip 42.4% 317 298 635 seats in the United Kingdom[43]
Labour Party Jeremy Corbyn September 2015 Islington North 40.0% 262 244 631 seats in Great Britain
Scottish National Party Nicola Sturgeon November 2014 None[n 3] 3.0% 35 35 59 seats in Scotland
Liberal Democrats Jo Swinson July 2019 East Dunbartonshire 7.4% 12 21 611 seats in Great Britain
Change UK Anna Soubry June 2019 Broxtowe New party 5 3 seats in England
Plaid Cymru Adam Price September 2018 None[n 9] 0.5% 4 4 36 seats in Wales
Green Party of England and Wales Jonathan Bartley September 2016 None[n 10] 1.6% 1 1 474 seats in England and Wales
Siân Berry September 2018
Brexit Party Nigel Farage March 2019 None[n 11] New party 0 276 seats in Great Britain

Conservatives had been governing in coalition or on their own since 2010 and led by Boris Johnson since July 2019. Jeremy Corbyn had been Labour Party leader since 2015 and was the first Labour leader since Tony Blair to contest consecutive general elections, and the first since Neil Kinnock to do so after losing the first. The Liberal Democrats contested seats across Great Britain. They were led by Tim Farron at the 2017 election, before he was replaced by Vince Cable. In the 2019 Liberal Democrats leadership election, Cable was succeeded by Jo Swinson in July 2019.[44][45]

The Brexit Party contested somewhat under half the seats. It was founded in early 2019 by Nigel Farage, former leader of the UK Independence Party (UKIP), and largely replaced UKIP in British politics, with UKIP losing almost all its support after they gained 12.6% of the vote but just one MP at the 2015 general election; for the 2019 general election, UKIP stood in 42 seats in Great Britain and two seats in Northern Ireland. The Brexit Party won the most votes at the 2019 European Parliament election.[46]

The Green Party of England and Wales had been led by Jonathan Bartley and Siân Berry since 2018, with its counterpart, the Scottish Greens, standing in Scottish seats. The two parties stood in a total of 495 seats. The third-largest party in seats won at the 2017 election was the Scottish National Party, led by Nicola Sturgeon since 2014, which stands only in Scotland where it won 35 out of 59 seats at the 2017 election. Similarly, Plaid Cymru, led by Adam Price, stands only in Wales where it held 4 of 40 seats; Price was elected as the party leader in September 2018.[47]

Northern Ireland edit

While a number of UK parties organise in Northern Ireland, including the Labour Party in Northern Ireland, which does not field candidates, and others field candidates for election (most notably the Northern Ireland Conservatives), the main Northern Ireland parties are different from those in the rest of the United Kingdom. Some parties in Northern Ireland operate on an all-Ireland basis, including Sinn Féin and Aontú, who are abstentionist parties and do not take up any Commons seats to which they are elected. Sylvia Hermon, the only independent politician elected to Parliament in 2017, represented North Down but did not stand in 2019. The election result was particularly notable in Northern Ireland as the first Westminster election in which the number of nationalists elected exceeded the number of unionists. In the 2019 election, there were a total of 102 candidates in Northern Ireland.[48]

Party Leader Leader since Leader's
seat
2017 election Seats
at
disso-lution
Contested
seats
(out of 18)
2019 election
%
(in NI)
Seats %
(in NI)
Seats won
Democratic Unionist Party Arlene Foster December 2015 None[n 12] 36.0% 10 10 17 seats 30.6% 8 ( 2)
Sinn Féin Mary Lou McDonald February 2018 None[n 13] 29.4% 7 7 15 seats 22.8% 7 ( 0)
Social Democratic and Labour Party Colum Eastwood November 2015 Foyle[n 14] 11.7% 0 0 15 seats 14.9% 2 ( 2)
Ulster Unionist Party Steve Aiken November 2019 None[n 15] 10.3% 0 0 16 seats 11.7% 0 ( 0)
Alliance Party Naomi Long October 2016 None[n 16] 7.9% 0 0 18 seats 16.8% 1 ( 1)
Independent Sylvia Hermon None[n 17] 5.6% 1 1 0 N/A 0 ( 1)

Electoral pacts and unilateral decisions edit

 
Constituencies where the Unite to Remain pact was active. Coloured by which party stood a candidate.
 
Constituencies, highlighted, which the Brexit Party contested at the 2019 election.

In England and Wales, the Liberal Democrats, Plaid Cymru, and the Green Party of England and Wales — parties sharing an anti-Brexit position — arranged a "Unite to Remain" pact. Labour declined to be involved. This agreement meant that in 60 constituencies only one of these parties, the one considered to have the best chance of winning, stood. This pact aimed to maximise the total number of anti-Brexit MPs returned under the first-past-the-post system by avoiding the spoiler effect.[49] In addition, the Liberal Democrats did not run against Dominic Grieve (independent, formerly Conservative),[50] Gavin Shuker (independent, formerly Labour),[51] and Anna Soubry (The Independent Group for Change, formerly Conservative).[52][53]

The Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage had suggested the Brexit and Conservative parties could form an electoral pact to maximise the seats taken by Brexit-supporting MPs; this was rejected by Johnson.[54] On 11 November, Farage announced that his party would not stand in any of the 317 seats won by the Conservatives at the last election. This was welcomed by the Conservative Party chairman James Cleverly, and he insisted there had been no contact between them and the Brexit Party over the plan.[55] Newsnight reported that conversations between members of the Brexit Party and the Conservative, pro-Brexit research support group European Research Group led to this decision.[56] The Brexit Party reportedly requested that Johnson publicly state he would not extend the Brexit transition period beyond the planned end of December 2020 date and that he wished for a Canada-style free trade agreement with the European Union. Johnson made a statement covering these two issues, something which Farage referenced as key when announcing he was standing down some candidates. Both the Brexit Party and the Conservatives denied any deal was done between the two.[56][57][58] Farage later claimed that he, and eight other prominent Brexit Party figures, were offered a peerage two days before making the announcement to stand down in 317 seats.[59] The claim led to complaints to the Electoral Commission, CPS, and Metropolitan Police.

 
Map showing electoral pacts in Northern Ireland

The Green Party did not stand in two Conservative-held seats, Chingford and Woodford Green and Calder Valley, in favour of Labour.[60][61] The Green Party had also unsuccessfully attempted to form a progressive alliance with the Labour Party prior to "Unite to Remain".[62] The Women's Equality Party stood aside in two seats in favour of the Liberal Democrats after they adopted some of its policies.[63]

The DUP did not contest Fermanagh and South Tyrone and the UUP did not contest Belfast North so as not to split the unionist vote. Other parties stood down in selected seats so as not to split the anti-Brexit vote. The nationalist and anti-Brexit parties the SDLP and Sinn Féin agreed a pact whereby the SDLP did not stand in Belfast North (in favour of Sinn Féin), while Sinn Féin did not stand in Belfast South (in favour of SDLP); neither party stood in Belfast East or North Down,[64] and advised their supporters to vote Alliance in those two constituencies. The Green Party in Northern Ireland did not stand in any of the four Belfast constituencies,[65] backing the SDLP in Belfast South, Sinn Féin in Belfast North and West,[66] and Alliance in Belfast East and North Down;[67][68][69] the party only stood in the safe seats of East Antrim, Strangford, and West Tyrone. Alliance did not stand down in any seats,[70] describing the plans as "sectarian".[71]

Marginal seats edit

At the 2017 election, more than one in eight seats was won by a margin of 5% or less of votes,[72] while almost one in four was won by 10% or less.[73] These seats were seen as crucial in deciding the election.[74]

2017–2019 MPs standing under a different political affiliation edit

The 2017–2019 Parliament was defined by a significant amount of political instability, and consequently a large number of defections and switching between parties. This was due to issues such as disquiet over antisemitism in the Labour Party, and divisions over Brexit in the Conservative Party. Eighteen MPs elected in 2017 contested the election for a different party or as an independent candidate; five stood for a different seat. All of these candidates failed to be re-elected.

Outgoing MP 2017 party 2017 constituency 2019 party 2019 constituency
Luciana Berger Labour Liverpool Wavertree Liberal Democrats Finchley and Golders Green
Frank Field Labour Birkenhead Birkenhead Social Justice Birkenhead
Mike Gapes Labour Ilford South Change UK Ilford South
David Gauke Conservative South West Hertfordshire Independent South West Hertfordshire
Roger Godsiff Labour Birmingham Hall Green Independent Birmingham Hall Green
Dominic Grieve Conservative Beaconsfield Independent Beaconsfield
Sam Gyimah Conservative East Surrey Liberal Democrats Kensington
Phillip Lee Conservative Bracknell Liberal Democrats Wokingham
Chris Leslie Labour Nottingham East Change UK Nottingham East
Ivan Lewis Labour Bury South Independent Bury South
Anne Milton Conservative Guildford Independent Guildford
Antoinette Sandbach Conservative Eddisbury Liberal Democrats Eddisbury
Gavin Shuker Labour Luton South Independent Luton South
Angela Smith Labour Penistone and Stocksbridge Liberal Democrats Altrincham and Sale West
Anna Soubry Conservative Broxtowe Change UK Broxtowe
Chuka Umunna Labour Streatham Liberal Democrats Cities of London and Westminster
Chris Williamson Labour Derby North Independent Derby North
Sarah Wollaston Conservative Totnes Liberal Democrats Totnes

Withdrawn or disowned candidates edit

Below are listed the candidates who withdrew from campaigning or had support from their party withdrawn after the close of nominations and so they remained on the ballot paper in their constituency. Only Hanvey was elected.[75]

Candidate Party Constituency Reason for withdrawal Date
Safia Ali Labour Falkirk Alleged prior antisemitic posts on Facebook.[76] 28 November
Amjad Bashir Conservative Leeds North East Comments made in 2014 saying Jews were radicalised by visiting Israel.[77][78] 20 November[79][80]
Sophie Cook Independent East Worthing and Shoreham Reported experience of abuse and harassment.[81] 19 November
Victor Farrell Brexit Party Glenrothes Homophobic comments in 2017.[82] 18 November
Neale Hanvey SNP Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath Allegations of antisemitism (based on criticism of Israel and George Soros) in a 2016 Facebook post.[83] 28 November
Ryan Houghton Conservative Aberdeen North Allegations of Antisemitic, Islamophobic and homophobic tweets in 2012.[84] 19 November
Ben Mathis Liberal Democrats Hackney North and Stoke Newington Tweets that included references to "hot young boys", "whiny bitches", and conjuring images of Katie Hopkins losing "several kilos of unpleasant fat ... [with] an axe or a guillotine", before 2019.[85] 24 November
Waheed Rafiq Liberal Democrats Birmingham Hodge Hill Antisemitic comments before 2015.[86] 20 November
Antony Calvert Conservative Wakefield Stepped down over historic offensive social media posts about a Labour MP, Muammar Gaddafi and food poverty.[87] 10 November
Flora Scarabello Conservative Glasgow Central Islamophobic comment — recorded private words.[88] 27 November

Campaign edit

Campaign background edit

Donations to political parties in
last quarter of 2019[89]
Party Donations
(£ millions)
Conservative 37.7
Liberal Democrats 13.6
Labour 10.7
Brexit 7.2
SNP 0.2

The Conservative Party and Labour Party have been the two biggest political parties, and have supplied every Prime Minister since the 1922 general election. The Conservative Party have governed since the 2010 election, in coalition with the Liberal Democrats from 2010 to 2015. At the 2015 general election, the Conservative Party committed to offering a referendum on whether the United Kingdom should leave the European Union (EU) and won a majority in that election. A referendum was held in June 2016, and the Leave campaign won by 51.9% to 48.1%. United Kingdom invocation of Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union came in March 2017, and Theresa May triggered a snap election in 2017, in order to demonstrate support for her planned negotiation of Brexit. Instead, the Conservative Party lost seats; they won a plurality of MPs but not a majority, and the result was a hung parliament. They formed a minority government, with the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) as their confidence and supply partner. Neither May nor her successor Boris Johnson, the winner of the 2019 Conservative leadership election,[90][91] was able to secure parliamentary support either for a deal on the terms of the country's exit from the EU, or for exiting the EU without an agreed deal. Johnson later succeeded in bringing his withdrawal agreement to a second reading in Parliament, following another extension until January 2020;[92] after Johnson's 2019 win, a new Withdrawal Agreement Bill was introduced in 2020. Compared to its 2019 October predecessor, this bill offered, in the words of political scientist Meg Russell, "significantly weaker parliamentary oversight of Brexit ... giving parliament no formal role in agreeing the future relationship negotiating objectives, and a diminished role in approving any resulting treaty."[93]

During the lifespan of the 2017 Parliament, twenty MPs resigned from their parties, mostly due to disputes with their party leaderships; some formed new parties and alliances. In February 2019, eight Labour and three Conservative MPs left their parties to sit together as The Independent Group.[94] Having undergone a split and two name changes, at dissolution, this group numbered five MPs who sat as the registered party The Independent Group for Change under the leadership of Anna Soubry.[95][96] Two MPs sat in a group called The Independents, which at its peak had five members, one MP created the Birkenhead Social Justice Party, while a further 20 MPs who began as Labour or Conservative ended Parliament as unaffiliated independents. Seven MPs, from both the Conservatives and Labour, joined the Liberal Democrats during Parliament, in combination with a gain after the 2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by-election. By the time Parliament was dissolved, the Liberal Democrats had raised their number from 12 at the election to 20 at dissolution.[97]

One reason for the defections from the Labour Party was the ongoing row over alleged antisemitism in the Labour Party. Labour entered the election campaign while under investigation by the Equality and Human Rights Commission.[98] The Jewish Labour Movement declared that it would not generally campaign for Labour.[99] The Conservative Party was also criticised for not doing enough to tackle the alleged Islamophobia in the Conservative Party.[100] Additionally, The Conservatives ended the previous parliamentary period with fewer seats than they had started with because of defections and also saw the 2019 suspension of rebel Conservative MPs for going against the party line by voting to prevent a no-deal Brexit.[101] Of the 21 expelled, 10 were subsequently reinstated, while the others continued as independents.[102]

Policy positions edit

Brexit edit

The major parties had a wide variety of stances on Brexit. The Conservative Party supported leaving under the terms of the withdrawal agreement as negotiated by Johnson (amending May's previous agreement), and this agreement formed a central part of the Conservative campaign via the slogan "Get Brexit Done".[103] The Brexit Party was in favour of a no-deal Brexit, with its leader Nigel Farage calling for Johnson to drop the deal.[104]

The Labour Party proposed a renegotiation of the withdrawal agreement (towards a closer post-withdrawal relationship with the EU) and would then put this forward as an option in a referendum alongside the option of remaining in the EU.[105] The Labour Party's campaigning stance in that referendum would be decided at a special conference.[106] In a Question Time special featuring four party leaders, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said that he would stay neutral in the referendum campaign.[107]

The Liberal Democrats, Scottish National Party, Plaid Cymru, The Independent Group for Change, and the Green Party of England and Wales were all opposed to Brexit, and proposed that a further referendum be held with the option, for which they would campaign, to remain in the EU.[108] The Liberal Democrats originally pledged that if they formed a majority government, which was considered a highly unlikely outcome by observers,[109] they would revoke the Article 50 notification immediately and cancel Brexit.[110][111] Part-way through the campaign, the Liberal Democrats dropped the policy of revoking Article 50 after the party realised it was not going to win a majority in the election.[112]

The Democratic Unionist Party was in favour of a withdrawal agreement in principle but opposed the deals negotiated by both May and Johnson, believing that they create too great a divide between Northern Ireland and the rest of the United Kingdom.[113][114] Sinn Féin, the Social Democratic and Labour Party, the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP),[115] and the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland all favoured remaining in the EU. The UUP did not see a second referendum as a necessary route to achieving this goal.[115]

The environment edit

The Labour Party promised what they described as a green industrial revolution. This included support for renewable energies and a promise to plant 2 billion trees by 2040. The party also promised to transition to electrify the United Kingdom's bus fleet by 2030.[116] The Liberal Democrats promised to put the environment at the heart of their agenda with a promise to plant 60 million trees a year. They also promised to significantly reduce carbon emissions by 2030 and hit zero carbon emissions by 2045. By 2030, they planned to generate 80% of the country's energy needs from renewable energies such as solar power and wind and retrofit 26 million homes with insulation by 2030. They also promised to build more environmentally friendly homes and to establish a new Department for the Climate Crisis.[117]

The Conservatives pledged net zero emissions by 2050 with investment in clean energy solutions and green infrastructure to reduce carbon emissions and pollution. They also pledged to plant 30 million trees.[118] The Conservatives were judged the worst of the main parties on climate change by Friends of the Earth with a manifesto which mentioned it only ten times.[119]

Tax and spending commitments edit

In September 2019, the Conservative government performed a spending review, where they announced plans to increase public spending by £13.8 billion a year, and reaffirmed plans to spend another £33.9 billion a year on the National Health Service (NHS) by 2023. Chancellor Sajid Javid said the government had turned the page on 10 years of austerity in the United Kingdom.[120]

During the election, the parties produced manifestos that outlined spending in addition to those already planned. The Conservative Party manifesto was described as having "little in the way of changes to tax" by the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS). The decision to keep the rate of corporation tax at 19%, and not reduce it to 17% as planned, was expected to raise £6 billion a year. The plan to increase the national insurance threshold for employees and self-employed to £9,500 would cost £2 billion a year.[121] They also committed to not raise rates of income tax, National Insurance, or VAT.[122] There were increased spending commitments of £3 billion current spending and £8 billion investment spending. Overall, this would have led to the country's debt as a percentage of GDP remaining stable; the IFS assessed that it would rise in the event of a no-deal Brexit.[123] The Labour Party manifesto planned to raise an extra £78 billion a year from taxes over the course of Parliament, with sources including:[121]

  • £24bn – raising the headline rate of corporation tax to 26%
  • £6.3bn – tax the global profits of multinationals according to the United Kingdom's share of global employment, assets, and sales, not British profits
  • £4.0bn – abolish patent box and R&D tax credit for large companies
  • £4.3bn – cutting unspecified corporation tax reliefs
  • £9bn – financial transactions tax
  • £14bn – dividends and capital gains
  • £6bn – anti-avoidance
  • £5bn – increases in income tax rates above £80,000 a year
  • £5bn – other

In addition, Labour was to obtain income from the Inclusive Ownership Fund, windfall tax on oil companies, and some smaller tax changes. There were increased spending commitments of £98 billion current spending and £55 billion investment spending. Overall, this would have led to the national debt as a percentage of GDP rising.[123] Labour's John McDonnell said borrowing would only be for investment and one-offs (e.g. compensating WASPI women, not shown above), and not for day-to-day spending.[124]

The Liberal Democrats manifesto planned to raise an extra £36 billion per year from taxes over the course of Parliament, with sources including:[121]

  • £10bn – raising corporation tax to 20%
  • £7bn – 1% point rise in all rates of income tax
  • £5bn – abolish the capital gains tax allowance
  • £5bn – air passenger duty on frequent flyers
  • £6bn – anti-avoidance
  • £3bn – other

There were increased commitments of £37 billion current spending and £26 billion investment spending, which would overall lead to the debt as a percentage of GDP falling, partly due to improved economic conditions which would result from staying in the EU.[123]

Institute for Fiscal Studies analysis edit

The Institute of Fiscal Studies (IFS), an influential research body, released on 28 November its in-depth analysis of the manifestos of the three main national political parties.[125][126] The analysis provided a summary of the financial promises made by each party and an inspection of the accuracy of claims around government income and expenditure.[127][128][121] The IFS reported that neither the Conservatives nor the Labour Party had published a "properly credible prospectus".[125]

Its analysis of the Conservative manifesto concluded there was "essentially nothing new in the manifesto", that there was "little in the way of changes to tax, spending, welfare or anything else", and that they had already promised increased spending for health and education whilst in government. The Labour manifesto was described as introducing "enormous economic and social change", and increasing the role of the state to be bigger than anything in the last 40 years.[129] The IFS highlighted a raft of changes in including free childcare, university, personal care, and prescriptions, as well nationalisations, labour market regulations, increases in the minimum wage, and enforcing "effective ownership of 10% of large companies from current owners to a combination of employees and government". The IFS said that Labour's vision "is of a state not so dissimilar to those seen in many other successful Western European economies", and presumed that the manifesto should be seen as "a long-term prospectus for change rather than a realistic deliverable plan for a five-year parliament".[129] They said that the Liberal Democrats manifesto was not as radical as the Labour manifesto but was a "decisive move away from the policies of the past decade".[125]

The Conservative manifesto was criticised for a commitment not to raise rates of income tax, National Insurance, or VAT, as this put a significant constraint on reactions to events that might affect government finances. One such event could be the "die in a ditch" promise to terminate the Brexit transition period by the end of 2020, which risked harming the economy.[129] The IFS also stated that it is "highly likely" spending under a Conservative government would be higher than in that party's manifesto, partly due to a number of uncosted commitments.[125] Outside of commitments to the NHS, the proposals would leave public service spending 14% lower in 2023–2024 than it was in 2010–2011, which the IFS described as "no more austerity perhaps, but an awful lot of it baked in".[130]

The IFS stated it had "serious doubt" that tax rises proposed would raise the amount Labour suggested, and said that they would need to introduce more broad based tax increases. They assessed that the public sector does not have the capacity to increase investment spending as Labour would want. The IFS further assessed the claim that tax rises would only hit the top 5% of earners as "certainly progressive" but "clearly not true", with those under that threshold impacted by changes to the marriage allowance, taxes on dividends, or capital gains, and lower wages or higher prices that might be passed on from corporation tax changes. Some of Labour's proposals were described as "huge and complex undertakings", where significant care is required in implementation. The IFS was particularly critical of the policy to compensate the WASPI women, announced after the manifesto, which was a £58bn promise to women who are "relatively well off on average" and would result in public finances going off target.[127] They said that Labour's manifesto would not increase UK public spending as a share of national income above Germany.[127] They found that Labour's plan to spend and invest would boost economic growth but that the impact of tax rises, government regulation, nationalisations, and the inclusive ownership fund could reduce growth, meaning the overall impact of Labour's plan on growth was uncertain.[127][129]

The IFS described the plans of the Liberal Democrats as a radical tax and spend package, and said that the proposals would require lower borrowing than Conservative or Labour plans. The report said they were the only party whose proposals would put debt "on a decisively downward path", praising their plan to put 1p on income tax to go to the NHS as "simple, progressive and would raise a secure level of revenue". The IFS also said plans to "virtually quintuple" current spending levels on universal free childcare amounted to "creating a whole new leg of the universal welfare state".[131][127] The IFS said that the SNP's manifesto was not costed. Their proposals on spending increases and tax cuts would mean the government would have to borrow to cover day-to-day spending. They concluded that the SNP's plans for Scottish independence would likely require increased austerity.[132]

Other issues edit

The Conservatives proposed increasing spending on the NHS, although not as much of an increase as Labour and Liberal Democrats proposals.[133] They also proposed increased funding for childcare and on the environment. They proposed more funding for care services and to work with other parties on reforming how care is delivered. They wished to maintain the triple lock on pensions. They proposed investing in local infrastructure, including building a new rail line between Leeds and Manchester.[122]

Labour proposed significantly increasing government spending to 45% of national output, which would be high compared to most of British history but is comparable with other European countries.[134] This was to pay for an increased NHS budget; stopping state pension age rises; introducing a National Care Service providing free personal care; move to a net-zero carbon economy by the 2030s; nationalising key industries; scrapping Universal Credit; free bus travel for under-25s; building 100,000 council houses per year; and other proposals.[135] Within this, the Labour Party proposed to take rail-operating companies, energy supply networks, Royal Mail, sewerage infrastructure, and England's private water companies back into public ownership. Labour proposed nationalising part of the BT Group and to provide free broadband to everyone,[136] along with free education for six years during each person's adult life.[137][138] Over a decade, Labour planned to reduce the average full-time weekly working hours to 32, with resulting productivity increases facilitating no loss of pay.[139]

The main priority of the Liberal Democrats was opposing Brexit. Other policies included increased spending on the NHS; free childcare for two-to-four-year-olds; recruiting 20,000 more teachers; generating 80% of electricity from renewable sources by 2030; freezing train fares; and legalising cannabis.[140] The Brexit Party was also focused on Brexit. It opposed privatising the NHS. It sought to reduce immigration, cutting net migration to 50,000 per year; cutting VAT on domestic fuel; banning the exporting of waste; free broadband in deprived regions; scrapping the BBC licence fee; and abolishing inheritance tax, interest on student loans, and High Speed 2. It also wanted to move to a United States-style supreme court.[141]

The policies of the SNP included a second referendum on Scottish independence to be held in 2020, as well as one on Brexit, removing the Trident nuclear deterrent, and devolution across issues like as employment law, drug policy, and migration.[142] The Liberal Democrats, the Greens, the SNP, and Labour all supported a ban on fracking in the United Kingdom, whilst the Conservatives proposed approving fracking on a case-by-case basis.[143][144]

Party positions in the event of a hung parliament edit

The Conservatives and Labour insisted they were on course for outright majorities, while smaller parties were quizzed about what they would do in the event of a hung parliament. The Liberal Democrats said that they would not actively support Johnson or Corbyn becoming Prime Minister but that they could, if an alternative could not be achieved, abstain on votes allowing a minority government to form if there was support for a second referendum on Brexit.[145] The SNP ruled out either supporting the Conservatives or a coalition with Labour but spoke about a looser form of support, such as a confidence and supply arrangement with the latter, if they supported a second referendum on Scottish independence.[146]

The DUP previously supported the Conservative government but withdrew that support given their opposition to Johnson's proposed Brexit deal. It said that it would never support Corbyn as prime minister but could work with Labour if that party were led by someone else. Labour's position on a hung parliament was that it would do no deals with any other party, citing Corbyn to say: "We are out here to win it." At the same time, it was prepared to adopt key policies proposed by the SNP and Liberal Democrats to woo them into supporting a minority government.[147][148] The UUP said they would never support Corbyn as prime minister, with their leader Steve Aiken also saying that he "can't really see" any situation in which they would support a Conservative government either. Their focus would be on remaining in the EU.[115]

Tactical voting edit

Under the first-past-the-post electoral system, there is often concern (especially in marginal seats) that if voters of similar ideological leanings are split between multiple different parties they may allow a victory for a candidate with significantly different views.[149][150] In the early stages of the campaign, there was considerable discussion of tactical voting (generally in the context of support or opposition to Brexit) and whether parties would stand in all seats or not.[151] There were various electoral pacts and unilateral decisions. The Brexit Party chose not to stand against sitting Conservative candidates but stood in most other constituencies. The Brexit Party alleged that pressure was put on its candidates by the Conservatives to withdraw, including the offer of peerages, which would be illegal. This was denied by the Conservative Party.[152] Under the banner of Unite to Remain, the Liberal Democrats, Plaid Cymru, and the Green Party of England and Wales agreed an electoral pact in some seats; some commentators criticised the Liberal Democrats for not standing down in some Labour seats.[153]

 
A sticker in Bournemouth calling for tactical voting with an anti-Conservative billboard in the background

A number of tactical voting websites were set up in an attempt to help voters choose the candidate in their constituency who would be best placed to beat the Conservative one.[154][155] The websites did not always give the same advice, which Michael Savage, political editor of The Guardian, said had the potential to confuse voters.[154] One of the websites, named GetVoting.org and set up by Best for Britain, was accused of giving bogus advice in Labour/Conservative marginal seats.[156][157] The website, which had links to the Liberal Democrats,[157] was criticised for advising pro-Remain voters to back the Liberal Democrats when doing so risked pulling voters away from Labour candidates and enabling the Conservative candidate to gain most votes.[156][157] They changed their controversial recommendation in Kensington to Labour, which had won it in 2017 by 20 votes,[158] and lined up with Tacticalvote.co.uk in this seat; describing themselves as a progressive grassroots campaign not affiliated with any political party, Tacticalvote.co.uk were previously known as Tactical2017. Gina Miller's Remain United and People's Vote kept their recommendation for the Liberal Democrats. This caused a lot of confusion around tactical voting,[154][159] as it was reported that the sites did not match one another's advice. Further into the election period, tactical voting websites that relied on multilevel regression with poststratification, such as Best for Britain, People's Vote, Remain United,[160] and Survation,[161] changed their recommendations on other seats because of new data.[162] The effectiveness of their tactical voting has also been questioned,[163] and the loss of Kensington, which was a Labour gain in 2017, was blamed by Labour MPs on Liberal Democrats for splitting the vote.[164]

In the final weekend before voting, The Guardian cited a poll suggesting that the Conservative Party held a 15% lead over Labour;[165] on the same day, the Conservative-backing Daily Telegraph emphasised a poll indicating a lower 8% lead.[166] Senior opposition politicians from Labour, the Liberal Democrats, and the SNP launched a late-stage appeal to anti-Conservative voters to consider switching allegiance in the general election, amid signs that tactical voting in a relatively small number of marginal seats could deprive Johnson of a majority in parliament.[167] Shortly before the election, The Observer newspaper recommended Remainers tactically vote for 50 Labour, Liberal Democrats, SNP, and independent candidates across Great Britain;[168] of these, 13 triumphed, 9 of which were SNP gains in Scotland (in line with a broader trend of relative success for the party), along with four in England divided equally between Labour and the Liberal Democrats. The pollster responsible argued in the aftermath that the unpopularity of the Labour leadership limited the effectiveness of tactical voting.[169] Other research suggested it would have taken 78% of people voting tactically to prevent a Conservative majority completely, and it would not have been possible to deliver a Labour majority.[170]

Canvassing and leafleting edit

Predictions of an overall Conservative majority were based on their targeting of primarily Labour-held, Brexit-backing seats in the Midlands and the north of England.[171] At the start of the election period, Labour-supporting organisation Momentum held what was described as "the largest mobilising call in UK history", involving more than 2,000 canvassers.[172] The organisation challenged Labour supporters to devote a week or more to campaigning full-time; by 4 December, 1,400 people had signed up. Momentum also developed an app called My Campaign Map that updated members about where they could be more effective, particularly in canvassing in marginal constituencies. Over one weekend during the campaign period, 700 Labour supporters campaigned in Iain Duncan Smith's constituency, Chingford and Woodford Green, which was regarded as a marginal, with a majority of 2,438 votes at the 2017 general election.[172]

The Liberal Democrats were considered possible winners of a number of Conservative-held southern English constituencies, with a large swing that could even topple Dominic Raab in Esher and Walton.[173] At the beginning of the 2019 campaign, they had been accused of attempting to mislead voters by using selective opinion polling data,[174] and use of a quotation attributed to The Guardian rather than to their leader Jo Swinson.[175] They were also accused of making campaign leaflets look like newspapers, although this practice had been used by all major British political parties for many years, including by Labour and the Conservatives during this election.[176]

The Liberal Democrats won a court case stopping the SNP from distributing a "potentially defamatory" leaflet in Swinson's constituency over false claims about funding she had received.[177] Two Labour Party campaigners, both in their seventies, were verbally abused and physically assaulted in separate unprovoked attacks on the weekend of 23–24 November. One attack occurred in Bromyard, Herefordshire, and the other in Rotherham, South Yorkshire. Party officials in Bromyard, where Labour campaigners suffered red-baiting and had been called Marxists,[178][179] decided that activists should only canvass in pairs.[180][181]

Online campaigning edit

The use of social media advertising was seen as particularly useful to political parties as it could be used to target people of particular demographics.[182] Labour was reported to have the most interactions, with The Times describing Labour's "aggressive, anti-establishment messages" as "beating clever Tory memes". In the first week of November, Labour was reported to have four of the five most liked tweets by political parties, many of the top interactions of Facebook posts, as well as doing very well on Instagram, where younger voters are particularly active.[183] Bloomberg News reported that between 6 and 21 November the views on Twitter/Facebook were 18.7/31.0 million for Labour, 10/15.5 million for the Conservatives, 2.9/2.0 million for the Brexit Party, and 0.4/1.4 million for the Liberal Democrats.[184]

Brexit was the most tweeted topic for the Conservative Party (~45% of tweets), the Liberal Democrats, and the Brexit Party (~40% each). Labour focused on health care (24.1%), the environment, and business, mentioning Brexit in less than 5 per cent of its tweets.[185] Devolution was the topic most tweeted about by the SNP (29.8%) and Plaid Cymru (21.4%), and the environment was the top issue for the Green Party (45.9%) on Twitter. The Conservatives were unique in their focus on taxation (16.2%), and the Brexit Party on defence (14%).[185]

Prior to the campaign, the Conservatives contracted New Zealand marketing agency Topham Guerin, which had been credited with helping Australia's Liberal–National Coalition unexpectedly win the 2019 Australian federal election. The agency's social media approach was described as purposefully posting badly-designed social media material that becomes viral and so would be seen by a wider audience.[186] Some of the Conservative social media activity created headlines challenging whether it was deceptive,[187][188] including by the BBC,[189] amid disinformation concerns.[190][191] This included editing a clip of Keir Starmer to give the appearance that he was unable to answer a question about Labour's Brexit policy.[188] In response to criticism over the doctored Starmer footage, Conservative Party chairman James Cleverly said the clip of Starmer was satire and "obviously edited".[188]

Veracity of statements by political parties edit

During the 19 November debate between Johnson and Corbyn hosted by ITV, the press office of the Conservative Campaign Headquarters (CCHQ) re-branded their Twitter account (@CCHQPress) as factcheckUK (with "from CCHQ" in small text appearing underneath the logo in the account's banner image), which critics suggested could be mistaken for that of an independent fact-checking body, and published posts supporting the Conservative's position.[192][193][194] In defence, Conservative chairman Cleverly stated: "The Twitter handle of the CCHQ press office remained CCHQPress, so it's clear the nature of the site", and as "calling out when the Labour Party put what they know to be complete fabrications in the public domain."[187] In response to the re-branding on Twitter, the Electoral Commission, which does not have a role in regulating election campaign content, called on all campaigners to act "responsibly",[195][196][197] fact-checking body Full Fact criticised this behaviour as "inappropriate and misleading", and Twitter stated that it would take "decisive corrective action" if there were "further attempts to mislead people".[195][198][199]

First Draft News released an analysis of Facebook ads posted by political parties between 1 and 4 December. The analysis reported that 88% of the 6,749 posts the Conservatives made had been "challenged" by fact checker Full Fact. 5,000 of these ads related to a "40 new hospitals" claim, of which Full Fact concluded only six had been costed, with the others only receiving money for planning (with building uncosted and due to occur after 2025). 4,000 featured inaccurate claims about the cost of Labour's spending plans to the tax payer. 500 related to a "50,000 more nurses" pledge, consisting of 31,500 new nurses, and convincing 18,500 nurses already in post to remain.[200][201] 16.5% of Liberal Democrats posts were highlighted, which related to claims they are the only party to beat Labour, the Conservatives, or the SNP "in seats like yours".[201] None of the posts made by Labour in the period were challenged, although posts made on 10 December stating that a "Labour government would save households thousands in bills" and the Conservative Party had "cut £8bn from social care" since 2010 were flagged as misleading.[201][202] According to the BBC, Labour supporters had been more likely to share unpaid-for electioneering posts, some of which included misleading claims.[203]

Television debates edit

ITV aired a head-to-head election debate between Johnson and Corbyn on 19 November, hosted by Julie Etchingham.[204] ITV Cymru Wales aired a debate featuring representatives from the Conservatives, Labour, the Liberal Democrats, Plaid Cymru, and the Brexit Party on 17 November, hosted by Adrian Masters.[205] Johnson cancelled his ITV interview with Etchingham, scheduled for 6 December, whilst the other major party leaders agreed to be interviewed.[206]

On the BBC, broadcaster Andrew Neil was due to separately interview party leaders in The Andrew Neil Interviews, and BBC Northern Ireland journalist Mark Carruthers to separately interview the five main Northern Irish political leaders.[207] The leaders of the SNP, Labour, Plaid Cymru, the Liberal Democrats, and the Brexit Party were all interviewed by Neil and the leader of the Conservative Party was not,[208] leading Neil to release a challenge to Johnson to be interviewed.[209] The Conservatives dismissed Neil's challenge.[210] BBC Scotland, BBC Cymru Wales, and BBC Northern Ireland also hosted a variety of regional debates.[211]

Channel 4 cancelled a debate scheduled for 24 November after Johnson would not agree to a head-to-head with Corbyn.[212] A few days later, the network hosted a leaders' debate focused on the climate. Johnson and Farage did not attend and were replaced on stage by ice sculptures with their party names written on them.[213] The Conservatives alleged this was part of a pattern of bias at the channel, complained to Ofcom that Channel 4 had breached due impartiality rules as a result of their refusal to allow Michael Gove to appear as a substitute,[214] and suggested that they might review the channel's broadcasting licence.[215] In response, the Conservatives, as well as the Brexit Party, did not send a representative to Channel 4's "Everything but Brexit" on 8 December,[216] and Conservative ministers were briefed not to appear on Channel 4 News.[217] Ofcom rejected the Conservatives' complaint on 3 December.[218]

Sky News was due to hold a three-way election debate on 28 November, inviting Johnson, Corbyn, and Swinson.[219] Swinson confirmed she would attend the debate,[220] which was later cancelled after agreements could not be made with Corbyn or Johnson.[221]

2019 United Kingdom general election debates in Great Britain
Date Organisers Venue Region Viewing figures
(millions)
 P  Present   S  Surrogate   NI  Not invited   A  Absent   I  Invited   N  No debate  
Con Lab SNP LD Plaid GPEW Brexit
17 November[222] ITV Cymru Wales ITV Wales Studios, Cardiff[205] Wales 0.28 S
Davies
S
Thomas-Symonds
NI P
Dodds
S
Saville Roberts
NI S
Gill
19 November[223] ITV dock10 studios, Salford[224] UK 7.34 P
Johnson
P
Corbyn
NI NI NI NI NI
22 November[225] BBC
(Question Time)
Octagon Centre, Sheffield[226][225] UK 4.62 P
Johnson
P
Corbyn
P
Sturgeon
P
Swinson
NI NI NI
24 November
(cancelled)[227][228]
Channel 4 N/A UK N/A N
Johnson
N
Corbyn
NI NI NI NI NI
26 November BBC Wales
(Wales Live)
Pembrokeshire County
Showground, Haverfordwest[229]
Wales TBA S
Davies
S
Griffith
NI P
Dodds
S
Saville Roberts
NI S
Wells
28 November
(cancelled)[221]
Sky News N/A UK N/A N
Johnson
N
Corbyn
NI N
Swinson
NI NI NI
28 November[230] Channel 4
(climate and nature)
ITN Headquarters, London[231] UK TBA A[n 18]
Johnson
P
Corbyn
P
Sturgeon
P
Swinson
P
Price
P
Berry
A
Farage
29 November[233] BBC Senedd, Cardiff[234] UK TBA S
Sunak
S
Long-Bailey
P
Sturgeon
P
Swinson
P
Price
S
Lucas
S
Tice
1 December[235] ITV Dock10, Salford[236] UK TBA S
Sunak
S
Burgon
P
Sturgeon
P
Swinson
P
Price
P
Berry
P
Farage
3 December[237] BBC Wales Wrexham Glyndŵr University, Wrexham Wales TBA S
Jones
S
Hanson
NI S
John
S
ap Iorwerth
NI P
Gill
3 December[238] STV STV Pacific Quay, Glasgow Scotland TBA P
Carlaw
P
Leonard
P
Sturgeon
P
Rennie
NI NI NI
6 December BBC Maidstone Studios, Maidstone[239][240][241] UK 4.42 P
Johnson
P
Corbyn
NI NI NI NI NI
8 December[242][243] Channel 4
(everything but Brexit)
Leeds Beckett University, Leeds[244] UK TBA A S
Rayner
S
Whitford
P
Swinson
P
Price
P
Bartley
A
9 December[245] BBC
(Question Time Under 30)
University of York, York[246] UK TBA S
Jenrick
S
Rayner
S
Yousaf
P
Swinson
P
Price
P
Bartley
P
Farage
10 December[247] BBC Scotland BBC Pacific Quay, Glasgow Scotland TBA P
Carlaw
P
Leonard
P
Sturgeon
P
Rennie
NI NI NI
2019 United Kingdom general election debates in Northern Ireland
Date Organisers Venue Viewing figures
(millions)
 P  Present   S  Surrogate   NI  Not invited   A  Absent   I  Invited   N  No debate  
DUP SF SDLP UUP APNI
8 December UTV Queen's Film Theatre, Belfast[248] TBA S
Little-Pengelly
P
O'Neill
P
Eastwood
P
Aiken
P
Long
10 December[249] BBC Northern Ireland Broadcasting House, Belfast TBA S
Donaldson
P
O'Neill
P
Eastwood
P
Aiken
P
Long

Campaign events edit

Before candidate nominations closed, several planned candidates for Labour and for the Conservatives withdrew, principally because of past social media activity. At least three Labour candidates and one Conservative candidate stood down, with two of the Labour candidates doing so following allegedly antisemitic remarks.[250] Two other Conservative candidates were suspended from the Conservative Party over antisemitic social media posts, but retained their candidacy for the party.[251][252][253] The Liberal Democrats removed one of its candidates over antisemitic social media posts, and defended two others.[254]

Several former Labour MPs critical of Corbyn endorsed the Conservatives.[255] Meanwhile, several former Conservative MPs, including former deputy prime minister Michael Heseltine, endorsed the Liberal Democrats and independent candidates.[256] A week before election day, former Conservative prime minister John Major warned the public against enabling a majority Conservative government, to avoid what he saw as the damage a Johnson-led government could do to the country through Brexit. Major encouraged voters to vote tactically and to back former Conservative candidates instead of those put forward by the Conservative Party.[257]

The 2019–20 United Kingdom floods started hitting parts of England from 7 to 18 November. Johnson was criticised for what some saw as his late response to the flooding,[258][259] after he said they were not a national emergency.[260] The Conservatives banned Daily Mirror reporters from Johnson's campaign bus.[261][262] On 27 November, Labour announced it had obtained leaked government documents; they said these showed that the Conservatives were in trade negotiations with the US over the NHS. The Conservatives said Labour was peddling "conspiracy theories",[263] with Dominic Raab later suggesting this was evidence of Russian interference in the election.[264] The election also saw the 2019 London Bridge stabbing, a terrorist stabbing attack that occurred in London on 29 November; owing to this, the political parties suspended campaigning in London for a time.[265]

The 2019 London summit of NATO was held in Watford on 3–4 December 2019. It was attended by 29 heads of state and heads of government, including then United States president Donald Trump.[266] On 6 December, Labour announced it had obtained leaked government documents that they said showed that Johnson had misled the public about the Conservatives' Brexit deal with the EU, specifically regarding customs checks between Great Britain and Northern Ireland, which are part of the Good Friday Agreement and that Johnson had said would not exist.[267]

Third-party campaigns edit

In February 2021, an investigation by openDemocracy found that third-party campaign groups "pushed anti-Labour attack ads to millions of voters ahead of the 2019 general election spent more than £700,000 without declaring any individual donation".[268] These included Capitalist Worker and Campaign Against Corbynism, both of which were set up less than three months before the election and quickly disappeared thereafter.[268] A further investigation, also reported by the Daily Mirror, found that a group run by Conservative activist Jennifer Powers had spent around £65,000 on dozens of advertisements attacking Corbyn and Labour on housing policy without declaring any donations.[269]

During the campaign, i had reported that Powers was "a corporate lobbyist who is a former employee of the Conservative Party" and that her group had been one of "16 registrations completed since 5 November".[270] Meanwhile, openDemocracy reported on the new phenomenon of United States-style, Super PAC-esque groups in British elections.[271] Adam Ramsay, who wrote the article, contacted Powers and got her to admit to being an associate at the trade consultancy firm Competere, which was set up by lobbyist Shanker Singham, who works for the neoliberal think tank, the Institute for Economic Affairs.[271] Powers' group "Right to Rent, Right to Buy, Right to Own" made claims that Labour wanted to "attack property rights in the UK" and "your mortgage will be harder to pay under Labour".[269][272]

Additionally, openDemocracy reported that, during the election campaign, the pro-Labour group Momentum spent more than £500,000, the European Movement for the United Kingdom spent almost £300,000 and the anti-Brexit groups Led By Donkeys and Best for Britain spent £458,237 and more than one million pounds respectively.[268] Following these reports, former Liberal Democrats MP Tom Brake, who lost his seat in the election and was now director of the pressure group Unlock Democracy, wrote to the Electoral Commission, urging them to investigate.[269] These calls were echoed by John McDonnell, Labour MP and former Shadow Chancellor, who insisted that "a serious and in-depth inquiry into third-party campaigning" was needed.[273]

Religious groups' opinions on the parties edit

Ethnic minority and religious leaders and organisations made statements about the general election. Leaders of the Church of England stated people had a "democratic duty to vote", that they should "leave their echo chambers", and "issues need to be debated respectfully, and without resorting to personal abuse".[274]

Antisemitism in the Labour Party was persistently covered in the media in the lead up to the election. In his leader's interview with Jeremy Corbyn, Andrew Neil dedicated the first third of the 30-minute programme entirely to discussion of Labour's relationship with the Jewish community.[275] This interview drew attention as Corbyn refused to apologise for antisemitism in the Labour Party, despite having done so on previous occasions.[276] The British chief rabbi Ephraim Mirvis made an unprecedented intervention in politics, warning that antisemitism was a "poison sanctioned from the top" of the Labour Party, and saying that British Jews were gripped by anxiety about the prospect of a Corbyn-led government.[277] Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Muslim Council of Britain and the Hindu Council UK supported Mirvis's intervention, if not entirely endorsing it.[278][279] The Jewish Labour Movement said they would not be actively campaigning for Labour except for exceptional candidates.[280] The pro-Corbyn Morning Star reported that Jewish Voice for Labour and the Jewish Socialist Group said that Mirvis did not represent all Jews, with some people within the religious groups being keen to express that no one person or organisation represents the views of all the members of the faith.[281]

The Catholic Church in the United Kingdom urged voters to respect the right to life, opposing abortion, euthanasia, and assisted suicide, along with a peaceful solution to Brexit, support the poor, care for the homeless, and attention to human rights.[282] The Muslim Council of Britain (MCB) spokesman stated that Islamophobia "is particularly acute in the Conservative Party" and that Conservatives treat it "with denial, dismissal and deceit".[283] In addition they released a 72-page document, outlining what they assess are the key issues from a British Muslim perspective. The MCB specifically criticised those who "seek to stigmatise and undermine Muslims"; for example, by implying that Pakistanis ("often used as a proxy for Muslims") vote "en bloc as directed by Imams".[284] The Sunday Mirror stated that many of the candidates campaigning for the Brexit Party were Islamophobic.[285]

The Times of India reported that supporters of Narendra Modi's ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) were actively campaigning for the Conservatives in 48 marginal seats,[286] and the Today programme reported that it had seen WhatsApp messages sent to Hindus across the country urging them to vote Conservative.[287][288] Some British Indians spoke out against what they saw as the BJP's meddling in the election.[289] The Hindu Council UK was strongly critical of Labour, going as far as to say that Labour is "anti-Hindu",[290] and objected to the party's condemnation of the Indian government's actions resulting in the revocation of the special status of Jammu and Kashmir.[288] The perceived Labour parachute candidate for Leicester East saw many British Indians disappointed many with Indian heritage;[291] specifically, no candidates of Indian descent were interviewed. The party selected or re-selected one candidate of Indian descent among its 39 safest seats.[292]

Endorsements edit

Newspapers, organisations, and individuals had endorsed parties or individual candidates for the election.

Media coverage edit

Party representation edit

 
Overall evaluations in newspapers (weighted by circulation), 7–13 November 2019.[293] The Conservatives were the only party with an overall positive coverage, while Labour had the most negative coverage.

According to Loughborough University's Centre for Research in Communication and Culture (CRCC), media coverage of the first week of the campaign was dominated by the Conservatives and Labour, with the leaders of both parties being the most represented campaigners (Johnson with 20.8%; Corbyn with 18.8%).[293][294] Due to this, the election coverage was characterised as increasingly 'presidential' as smaller parties have been marginalised.[294]

In television coverage, Boris Johnson had a particularly high-profile (30.4% against Corbyn's 22.6%). Labour (32%) and the Conservative Party (33%) received about a third of TV coverage each. In newspapers, Labour received two-fifths (40%) of the coverage and the Conservatives 35%. Spokespeople from both parties were quoted near equally, with Conservative sources being the most prominent in both press and TV coverage in terms of frequency of appearance. Sajid Javid and John McDonnell featured prominently during the first week because the economy of the United Kingdom was a top story for the media. McDonnell had more coverage than Javid on both TV and in print.[293]

A large proportion of the newspaper coverage of Labour was negative.[295] Writing in the British Journalism Review, James Hanning said that, when reporting and commenting on Johnson, Conservative supporting newspapers made little mention of "a track record that would have sunk any other politician".[217] In the Loughborough analysis, during the first week of the campaign, for example, the Conservatives had a positive press coverage score of +29.7, making them the only party to receive a positive overall presentation in the press. Meanwhile, Labour, meanwhile had a negative score of -70, followed by the Brexit Party on -19.7 and the Liberal Democrats on -10.[293][296] Over the whole campaign, press hostility towards Labour had doubled compared with during the 2017 election, and negative coverage of the Conservatives halved.[185]

The Liberal Democrats were the party with the most TV coverage in the first week after Labour and the Conservatives, with an eighth of all reporting (13%). In newspapers, they received less coverage than the Brexit Party, whose leader Nigel Farage received nearly as much coverage (12.3%) as Johnson and Corbyn (17.4% each). Most of this coverage regarded the Brexit Party's proposed electoral pact with the Conservatives.[293] The Brexit Party (7%) and the SNP (5%) were fourth and fifth in terms of TV coverage, respectively.[293]

Dominant issues edit

As during the 2017 election and in line for British elections, the electoral process was the most covered media topic for this election at 31% of all coverage.[185] Brexit was the most prominent policy issue on both TV (18%) and in the press (11%), followed by the economy, and health (8% and 7% of all coverage, respectively).[185] There was little focused analysis of what the implementation of Brexit policies might mean, which contrasted with the more detailed analysis often undertaken of other manifesto commitments, such as those on the economy.[185] Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland's place within the United Kingdom received some prominence on TV but little coverage in the press.[185] "Standards/scandals" and "Minorities/religion" received relatively significant discussion in large part relating to allegations of antisemitism in the Labour party and in the prior case an incident when Johnson was accused of reacting unsympathetically to an image of an ill child without a bed in hospital.[185] Coverage of immigration and border controls fell overall from to 2017, while focus on environmental issues slightly increased.[185]

Gender balance edit

Of the 20 most prominent spokespeople in media coverage of the first week of the election period, five were women, with Nicola Sturgeon, the SNP leader and first minister of Scotland, in seventh place, the most featured.[293] Women including citizens, experts, pollsters, businesspeople, trade union representatives, and the like featured in 23.9% of coverage and men in 76.1%. Men spoke three times as much as women in TV coverage, and five times as much in newspaper coverage.[293][297]

Members of Parliament not standing for re-election edit

74 members of Parliament (MPs) who held seats at the end of Parliament did not stand for re-election. Of these, 32 were Conservative MPs, 20 were Labour, 3 were Liberal Democrats, and 16 were independents. The number of MPs retiring was higher than the 2017 general election, when 31 stood down.[298][299]

Opinion polling edit

The chart below depicts the results of opinion polls, mostly only of voters in Great Britain, conducted from the 2017 general election until the election. The line plotted is the average of the last 15 polls and the larger circles at the end represent the actual results of the election. The graph shows that the Conservatives and Labour polled to similar levels from mid-2017 to mid-2019. Following Johnson's election in July, the Conservatives established a clear lead over Labour, and simultaneously support for the Brexit Party declined from its peak in summer 2019. The Spreadex columns below cover bets on the number of seats each party would win, with the midpoint between asking and selling price.

 
Great Britain opinion polling; moving average is calculated from the last 15 polls.
  Conservatives
  Labour
  Liberal Democrats
  Brexit Party
  SNP & Plaid Cymru
  Greens
  Independent Group for Change
  UKIP

Predictions three weeks before the vote edit

The first-past-the-post system used in the United Kingdom general elections means that the number of seats won is not directly related to vote share. Thus, several approaches are used to convert polling data and other information into seat predictions. The table below lists some of the predictions.

Parties Electoral Calculus[300]
as of 20 November 2019
Election Maps UK[301]
as of 17 November 2019
Elections Etc.[302]
as of 20 November 2019
BritainElects[303]
as of 20 November 2019
Conservatives
365
346
354
346
Labour Party 201 211 206 211
SNP 46 51 45 51
Liberal Democrats 15 18 25 24
Plaid Cymru 4 4 4 4
Green Party 1 1 1 1
Brexit Party 0 0 0 0
Others 18[304] 19[305] 18 18
Overall result (probability) Conservative
80-seat majority
Conservative
42-seat majority
Conservative
58-seat majority
Conservative
42-seat majority

Predictions two weeks before the vote edit

Parties Electoral Calculus[300][306]
as of 27 November 2019
Election Maps UK[307]
as of 28 November 2019
Elections Etc.[308]
as of 27 November 2019
YouGov[309][310]
as of 27 November 2019
Conservatives
342
338
353
359
Labour Party 224 226 208 211
SNP 41 45 44 43
Liberal Democrats 19 14 23 13
Plaid Cymru 4 5 4 4
Green Party 1 1 1 1
Brexit Party 0 0 0 0
Others 19[311] 19[312] 19 19
Overall result Conservative
34-seat majority
Conservative
26-seat majority
Conservative
56-seat majority
Conservative
68-seat majority

Note: Elections Etc. does not add up to 650 seats due to rounding, the speaker is shown under "Others" and not "Labour", and majority figures assume all elected members take up their seats.

Predictions one week before the vote edit

Below are listed predictions based upon polls.

Parties Electoral Calculus[300]
as of 8 December 2019
Election Maps UK[313]
as of 6 December 2019
Elections Etc.[314]
as of 5 December 2019
UK-Elect[315]
as of 8 December 2019
Graphnile[316]
as of 11 December 2019
Spreadex[317]

as of 5 December 2019

Conservatives
348
345
346
354
352
341
Labour Party 225 224 218 212 221 220
SNP 41 43 45 43 52 44.5
Liberal Democrats 13 14 19 17 N/A 21
Plaid Cymru 4 4 4 4 N/A 4
Green Party 1 1 1 1 N/A 1.5
Brexit Party 0 0 0 0 N/A 1.75
Others 19 19[318] 19[319] 19[320] 25 N/A
Overall result Conservative
46-seat majority
Conservative
40-seat majority
Conservative
42-seat majority
Conservative
58-seat majority
Conservative
56-seat majority
Conservative
32-seat majority

Note: Elections Etc. does not add up to 650 seats due to rounding, the speaker is shown under "Others" and not "Labour", and majority figures assume all elected members take up their seats.

Below are listed predictions based upon betting odds, assuming the favourite wins in each constituency.

Parties Oddschecker[321]
Conservatives
351
Labour Party 210
SNP 44
Liberal Democrats 18
Plaid Cymru 4
Green Party 1
Brexit Party 0
Others 19[322]
Too close to call 3
Overall result Conservative
52-seat majority

Note: The speaker is shown under "Others" and not "Labour", and majority figures assume all elected members take up their seats.

Final predictions edit

Parties YouGov[323]
as of 10 December 2019
Electoral Calculus[324]
as of 12 December 2019
Election Maps UK[325]
as of 12 December 2019
Elections Etc.[326]
as of 12 December 2019
UK-Elect[327]
as of 11 December 2019
Spreadex[328]

as of 11 December 2019

Conservatives
339
351
344
341
348
340
Labour Party 231 224 223 224 217 222
SNP 41 41 45 43 44 43
Liberal Democrats 15 13 14 19 17 21
Plaid Cymru 4 2 4 4 4 4
Green Party 1 1 1 1 1 1.5
Brexit Party 0 0 0 1 0 1
Others 19 18[329] 18[330] 19 19[331] N/A
Overall result Conservative
28-seat majority
Conservative
52-seat majority
Conservative
38-seat majority
Conservative
32-seat majority
Conservative
46-seat majority
Conservative
30-seat majority

Exit poll edit

An exit poll conducted by Ipsos MORI for the BBC, ITV, and Sky News was published at the end of voting at 10 pm, predicting the number of seats for each party.[332][333]

Parties Seats Change
Conservative Party 368   51
Labour Party 191   71
Scottish National Party 55   20
Liberal Democrats 13   1
Plaid Cymru 3   1
Green Party 1  
Brexit Party 0 New party
Others 19  
Conservative 86-seat majority

Results edit

 
Equal-area projection of constituencies
 
Seats won in the election (outer ring) against number of votes (inner ring)
 
Results of the 2019 general election by party vote share
  Conservative >70%
  Conservative 60%–70%
  Conservative 50%–60%
  Conservative <50%
  Labour >70%
  Labour 60%–70%
  Labour 50%–60%
  Labour <50%
  Nationalist >50%
  Nationalist 45%–50%
  Nationalist 40%–45%
  Nationalist <40%
  Republican >50%
  Republican 45%–50%
  Republican 40%–45%
  Republican <40%
  Unionist 45%–50%
  Unionist 40%–45%
  Unionist <40%
  Liberal Democrats >50%
  Liberal Democrats <50%
  Others
 
Constituencies gained in the 2019 general election (animated version)
 
Map detailing constituencies in which the Labour Party gained in vote percentage in the 2019 general election

The Conservative Party won, securing 365 seats out of 650, giving them an overall majority of 80 seats in the House of Commons. They gained seats in several Labour Party strongholds in Northern England that had been held by the party for decades and which had formed the red wall; for instance, the constituency of Bishop Auckland, which elected a Conservative MP for the first time in its 134-year history. This marked a fourth consecutive general election defeat for the Labour Party. In the worst result for the party in 84 years,[334] despite a better vote share than other losses as in 1931, 1983, 1987, and 2010, Labour won 202 seats, which was the lowest number since 1935 and a loss of 60 compared to the previous election.[335][336] The Liberal Democrats won 11 seats, down 1, despite significantly increasing their share of the popular vote. Ed Davey, former Cameron–Clegg coalition cabinet minister and MP for Kingston and Surbiton, was the winner of the 2020 Liberal Democrats leadership election. This came after Jo Swinson lost her seat to Amy Callaghan of the SNP by 150 votes and was disqualified from continuing as leader of the party. Swinson also became the first party leader to lose their seat since Liberal Party leader Archibald Sinclair in 1945.[337]

While the Conservatives gained support in England and Wales, they lost support in Scotland in the face of a major SNP advance. The Conservatives won in England, advancing by 1.7% and gaining 48 seats to win 345 out of 533, while Labour fell back by 8% and lost 47 seats to win just 180.[338] Labour won in Wales but lost 8% of its 2017 vote share and six seats, retaining 22 out of 40, while the Conservatives advanced by 2.5% and gained six seats, winning 14 in total.[339] The SNP won by a landslide in Scotland, advancing by 8.1% and gaining 13 seats to win 48 out of 59, gaining several seats from the Conservatives and Labour. The Conservatives lost 3.5% of their 2017 vote share and half their seats, while Labour was reduced to one Scottish seat (Edinburgh South). This was the same Scottish seat from the 2015-17 Parliament that returned Ian Murray as the country's sole Labour MP.[340] Among the Labour MPs who lost their seats in Scotland was Lesley Laird, deputy leader of Scottish Labour and Shadow Secretary of State for Scotland.[341] In Northern Ireland, nationalist political parties won more seats than unionist ones for the first time. Nigel Dodds, the DUP's leader in Westminster, lost his seat in Belfast North.[342]

Analysis edit

The results have been attributed to Leave-supporting areas backing the Conservatives, the Conservatives broadening their appeal to working-class voters, and the Conservatives making gains in the Midlands and the north of England.[343] Most notable was the red wall turning blue in the election, which greatly contributed to the Conservative majority. In exit polls conducted by Opinium, 43% of voters who did not vote for the Labour party cited 'the leadership' as their reason.[344] Among those who did not vote for the Conservative party, the cited reason was equally split between 'their stance on Brexit' and 'the leadership', with both at 26%. Several commentators stated that the party's loss was due to a complicated manifesto and Brexit policy, a poor approach to campaigning, and the unpopularity of Corbyn's leadership.[345][346][347]

A YouGov post-election survey determined that the age over which voters were more likely to opt for the Conservatives than for Labour was 39, down from 47 in the 2017 election. In contrast to previous elections, the YouGov survey additionally found that a plurality of voters in the DE's NRS social grade — comprising the unemployed, state pensioners, and semi-skilled and unskilled workers — had opted for the Conservatives over Labour.[348] This change reflects the collapse of the 'Red Wall' which has a plurality of people in the DE classification according to the ONS.[349] Between 26% and 33% of voters engaged in tactical voting, as they said that they were trying to prevent a victory by the party they liked least.[350][351] Recommendation by tactical voting websites had some benefit for Liberal Democrat candidates.[352] The new Parliament reportedly had the highest number of openly LGBT MPs in the world, with 20 Conservative MPs, 15 Labour MPs, and 10 SNP MPs who identify as LGBT. For the first time in both cases, the majority of elected Labour and Liberal Democrat MPs were female.[353][354]

Summary edit

A summarised results of the parties that won seats at the election is shown below.

 
 
Party Leader MPs Votes
Of total Of total
Conservative Party Boris Johnson 365 56.2%
365 / 650
13,966,454 43.6%
Labour Party Jeremy Corbyn 202 31.1%
202 / 650
10,269,051 32.1%
Scottish National Party Nicola Sturgeon 48[n 4] 7.4%
48 / 650
1,242,380 3.9%
Liberal Democrats Jo Swinson 11 1.7%
11 / 650
3,696,419 11.6%
Democratic Unionist Party Arlene Foster 8 1.2%
8 / 650
244,128 0.8%
Sinn Féin Mary Lou McDonald 7 1.1%
7 / 650
181,853 0.6%
Plaid Cymru Adam Price 4 0.6%
4 / 650
153,265 0.5%
Social Democratic and Labour Party Colum Eastwood 2 0.3%
2 / 650
118,737 0.4%
Green Party of England and Wales Jonathan Bartley
Siân Berry
1 0.2%
1 / 650
835,597 2.61%
Alliance Party of Northern Ireland Naomi Long 1 0.2%
1 / 650
134,115 0.4%
Speaker Lindsay Hoyle 1 0.2%
1 / 650
26,831 0.1%

Full results edit

e • d Results of the December 2019 general election to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom[355][356]
 
Political party Leader Candidates MPs[357] Votes
Total Gained Lost Net Of total
(%)
Total Of total
(%)
Change
(%)
Conservative Boris Johnson 635 365 58 10  48 56.2 13,966,454 43.63 +1.2
Labour Jeremy Corbyn 631 202 1 61  60 31.1 10,269,051 32.08 −7.9
Liberal Democrats Jo Swinson 611 11 3 4  1 1.7 3,696,419 11.55 +4.2
Scottish National Party Nicola Sturgeon 59 48 14 1  13 7.4 1,242,380 3.88 +0.8
Green Party of England and Wales Siân Berry and Jonathan Bartley 472 1 0 0 0 0.2 835,597 2.61 +1.1
Brexit Party Nigel Farage 275 644,257 2.01
DUP Arlene Foster 17 8 0 2  2 1.2 244,128 0.76 −0.1
Sinn Féin Mary Lou McDonald 15 7 1 1 0 1.1 181,853 0.57 −0.2
Plaid Cymru Adam Price 36 4 0 0 0 0.6 153,265 0.48 0.0
Alliance Naomi Long 18 1 1 0  1 0.2 134,115 0.42 +0.2
SDLP Colum Eastwood 15 2 2 0  2 0.3 118,737 0.37 +0.1
Ulster Unionist Steve Aiken 16 93,123 0.29 0.0
Yorkshire Christopher Whitwood 28 29,201 0.09 0.0
Scottish Greens Patrick Harvie & Lorna Slater 22 28,122 0.09
Speaker Lindsay Hoyle 1 1 1 1 0 0.2 26,831 0.08 0.0
UKIP Patricia Mountain (interim) 44 22,817 0.07 −1.8
Ashfield Ind. Jason Zadrozny 1 13,498 0.04 0.0
Liberal Steve Radford 19 10,876 0.03 0.0
The Independent Group for Change Anna Soubry 3 10,006 0.03
Aontú Peadar Tóibín 7 9,814 0.03
Monster Raving Loony Howling Laud Hope 24 9,739 0.03 0.0
People Before Profit Collective 2 7,526 0.02
Birkenhead Social Justice Frank Field 1 7,285 0.02
CPA Sidney Cordle 29 6,486 0.02 0.0
Heavy Woollen Independents Aleksandar Lukic 1 6,432 0.02
SDP William Clouston 20 3,295 0.01 0.0
Animal Welfare Vanessa Hudson 6 3,086 0.01 0.0
North East Mark Burdon 2 2,637 0.01
Lincolnshire Independent Marianne Overton 1 1,999 0.01
Green Party Northern Ireland Clare Bailey 3 1,996 0.01
English Democrat Robin Tilbrook 5 1,987 0.01 0.0
Libertarian Adam Brown 6 1,780 0.01 0.0
Mebyon Kernow Dick Cole 1 1,660 0.01 0.0
Proud of Oldham and Saddleworth Paul Errock 2 1,606 0.01
Independent Network Ian Stephens 1 1,542 0.0
Gwlad Gwyn Wigley Evans 3 1,515 0.00
Cynon Valley Andrew Chainey 1 1,322 0.00
Veterans and People's Robin Horsfall 2 1,219 0.00
Burnley and Padiham Party Mark Payne 1 1,162 0.00
Shropshire Party Robert Jones 1 1,141 0.00
Putting Cumbria First Jonathan Davies 1 1,070 0.00
Peace John Morris 2 960 0.00
Wycombe Independents Matt Knight 1 926 0.00
Justice & Anti-Corruption Donald Jerrard 3 728 0.00
Christian Jeff Green 2 705 0.00 0.0
Renew Julie Girling 4 545 0.00 0.0
Workers Revolutionary Joshua Ogunleye 5 524 0.00 0.0
BNP Adam Walker 1 510 0.00 0.0
Parties with fewer than 500 votes each 40 5,697 0.02
Independent (non-party) candidates 224 1  1 206,486 0.64
Blank and invalid votes 117,919
Total 3320 650 0 100 32,014,110[358] 100 0.0
Registered voters, and turnout 47,587,254 67.52 −1.3


In total, the Green Party of England and Wales, Scottish Greens, and Green Party Northern Ireland received 865,715 votes. This may be unclear from the table and sources which cite the total of the Greens in the whole of the United Kingdom rather than by region.

 
National vote share as a percentage between 1997 and 2019
 
The parliamentary disproportionality in the 2019 election was 11.84 using the Gallagher Index.
Vote share
Conservative
43.6%
Labour
32.2%
Liberal Democrat
11.6%
Scottish National
3.9%
Green
2.7%
Brexit Party
2.0%
Democratic Unionist
0.8%
Sinn Féin
0.6%
Plaid Cymru
0.5%
SDLP
0.4%
Others
1.4%
Vote share of seats contested
Scottish National
45.5%
Conservative
44.9%
Labour
33.0%
Democratic Unionist
32.6%
Sinn Féin
27.2%
SDLP
17.8%
Liberal Democrat
12.3%
Plaid Cymru
11.2%
Brexit Party
5.1%
Green
3.4%
Parliamentary seats
Conservative
56.2%
Labour
31.1%
Scottish National
7.4%
Liberal Democrat
1.7%
Democratic Unionist
1.2%
Sinn Féin
1.1%
Plaid Cymru
0.6%
SDLP
0.3%
Green
0.2%
Alliance
0.2%
Speaker
0.2%
Parliamentary seats out of total contested
Scottish National
81.4%
Conservative
57.5%
Democratic Unionist
47.1%
Sinn Féin
46.7%
Labour
32.0%
SDLP
13.3%
Plaid Cymru
11.1%
Alliance
5.6%
Liberal Democrat
1.8%
Green
0.2%

Voter demographics edit

Ipsos MORI edit

Below is listed Ipsos MORI's demographic breakdown.

The 2019 UK general election vote in Great Britain[359]
Social group % Con % Lab % Lib Dem % Others % Lead
Total vote 45 33 12 10 12
Gender
Male 46 31 12 11 15
Female 43 34 12 11 9
Age
18–24 19 62 9 10 43
25–34 27 51 11 11 24
35–44 36 39 13 12 3
45–54 46 28 14 12 18
55–64 49 27 11 13 22
65+ 64 17 11 8 47
Men by age
18–24 22 59 10 9 37
25–34 31 48 10 11 17
35–54 45 30 14 11 15
55+ 58 21 11 10 37
Women by age
18–24 17 64 9 10 47
25–34 23 54 12 11 31
35–54 37 36 14 13 1
55+ 59 21 12 8 38
Social class
AB 45 30 16 9 15
C1 45 32 12 11 13
C2 47 32 9 12 15
DE 41 39 9 11 2
Men by social class
AB 47 29 15 9 18
C1 47 31 12 10 16
C2 48 30 8 14 18
DE 43 37 8 12 6
Women by social class
AB 43 31 17 10 11
C1 44 33 13 10 11
C2 46 33 9 12 13
DE 39 40 9 12 1
Housing tenure
Owned 57 22 12 9 35
Mortgage 43 33 14 10 10
Social renter 33 45 7 15 12
Private renter 31 46 11 12 15
Ethnic group
White 48 29 12 11 19
BME 20 64 12 4 44
Qualifications
No qualifications 59 23 7 11 36
Other qualifications 47 33 10 10 14
Degree or higher 34 39 17 10 5
EU referendum vote
Remain 20 48 21 11 28
Leave 73 15 3 9 58
Did not vote 26 52 10 12 26
2017 general election vote
Conservative 88 3 6 3 85
Labour 8 80 8 4 72
Lib Dem 11 19 63 7 44
Did not vote 33 46 9 12 13
Aged 18–34 by social class
AB 26 52 13 9 26
C1 24 55 10 11 31
C2 27 51 9 13 24
DE 18 63 8 11 45
Aged 35–54 by social class
AB 42 29 20 9 13
C1 44 32 13 11 12
C2 44 31 10 15 13
DE 35 42 9 14 7
Aged 55+ by social class
AB 60 17 14 9 43
C1 59 20 13 8 39
C2 61 21 8 10 40
DE 53 26 9 12 27

YouGov edit

Below is listed YouGov's demographic breakdown.

2019 UK general election vote in Great Britain (demographic breakdown)[360]
Social group Con % Lab % Lib Dem % SNP % Green % Brexit % Others % Lead %
Total vote 44 32 12 4 3 2 3 12
Gender
Male 46 31 12 4 3 2 2 15
Female 44 35 11 4 3 2 1 9
Age
18–24 21 56 11 6 4 1 1 35
25–29 23 54 12 4 4 1 1 31
30–39 30 46 14 5 3 1 2 16
40–49 41 35 13 5 3 2 2 6
50–59 49 28 12 4 3 3 2 21
60–69 57 22 11 3 2 3 2 35
70+ 67 14 11 2 2 2 2 53
Men by age
18–24 28 46 12 7 4 2 2 18
25–49 35 40 14 5 3 2 2 15
50–64 51 28 12 3 3 4 3 23
65+ 64 15 11 3 1 4 2 49
Women by age
18–24 15 65 10 5 4 1 50
25–49 32 45 12 5 3 1 1 13
50–64 50 28 12 4 3 2 1 22
65+ 64 18 10 2 2 2 2 46
Social class
AB 42 32 16 4 3 1 1 10
C1 43 34 12 4 3 2 2 9
C2 49 31 9 4 3 3 1 18
DE 47 34 8 4 2 3 1 13
Highest educational level
GCSE or lower 58 25 11 4 2 3 1 33
Medium 48 31 11 4 3 2 2 17
High (degree or above) 29 43 17 4 4 1 2 14
Household earnings
Less than £20,000 45 34 9 5 3 3 4 11
£20,000–39,999 47 31 11 4 2 2 3 16
£40,000–69,999 43 35 13 4 3 1 1 8
Greater than £70,000 40 31 20 4 3 1 1 9

Seats changing hands edit

Seats which changed allegiance edit

Reaction and aftermath edit

 
Boris Johnson making first statement outside 10 Downing Street after the election

In his victory speech, Johnson described the result as a mandate for leaving the EU and promised to do so by 31 January.[361] The United Kingdom left the EU on 31 January 2020.[362] It completed its separation from the organisation at the end of the year.[363] The election led to both Labour and the Liberal Democrats having leadership contests: the former as Corbyn resigned, the latter as Swinson failed to be elected as an MP. Corbyn portrayed the 2019 election results primarily as a consequence of attitudes surrounding Brexit rather than a rejection of Labour's social and economic policies. In an interview held 13 December 2019, Corbyn said the election was "taken over ultimately by Brexit", and said that he was "proud of the [Labour] manifesto".[364]

The Labour leadership campaign was marked by conflicting analyses of what had gone wrong for the party in the general election.[365] There was debate as to whether Corbyn's unpopularity or their position on Brexit was more significant.[366] The 2020 Labour Together report, published by internal Labour party figures after Keir Starmer was elected as leader, highlighted issues like Corbyn's unpopularity, the party's Brexit policy, and poor seat targeting, as well as long-term changes in Labour's electoral coalition.[367] In openDemocracy, Jo Michell and Rob Calvert Jump argued that the report underplayed the fact the geographical redistributions, stating that "Labour's decline in the North, Midlands and Wales is not the result of a dramatic collapse in its vote share, but changes in the distribution of votes between parties and constituencies."[368]

Successful Liberal Democrats MPs were critical in private of how the party had decided to advocate revoking the exercise of Article 50, and the communication of that policy. Some criticised the election campaign for being hubristic, with its initial defining message that Swinson could be the country's next prime minister.[369] Ed Davey, the party's co-acting leader after the election, argued that the unpopularity of Corbyn lost the Liberal Democrats votes to the Conservatives.[370] Wera Hobhouse, who was re-elected by a majority of 12,322,[371] argued that the party had been wrong to pursue a policy of equidistance between Labour and the Conservatives in the general election campaign. Instead, she argued that the party should have concentrated more on campaigning against the Conservatives.[372] The SNP's leader Nicola Sturgeon described the result as a clear mandate to hold a new referendum for Scottish independence.[9] The British government said that it would not agree to a referendum being held and the Scottish government announced a few months later that it would put the issue on hold due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom.[373]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Given that Sinn Féin members of Parliament (MPs) practise abstentionism and do not take their seats, while the Speaker and deputies do not vote, the number of MPs needed for a majority is in practice slightly lower.[1] Sinn Féin won 7 seats, meaning a practical majority requires 322 MPs.
  2. ^ The figure does not include Sir Lindsay Hoyle, the speaker of the House of Commons, who was included in the Labour seat total by some media outlets. By longstanding convention, the speaker severs all ties to their affiliated party upon being elected as speaker.
  3. ^ a b Nicola Sturgeon sits in the Scottish Parliament for Glasgow Southside. Ian Blackford, MP for Ross, Skye and Lochaber, was the SNP leader at Westminster.
  4. ^ a b The number includes Neale Hanvey, who was suspended from the party at the time of his election and thus took his seat as an independent.
  5. ^ Given that the 7 Sinn Féin MPs practise abstentionism do not take their seats and the speaker and deputies do not vote, they effectively had an 87-seat working majority.[1]
  6. ^ Persons without a permanent or fixed address can make a declaration of local connection to a particular location in order to register.[31]
  7. ^ In the case of a British citizen who moved abroad before the age of 18, they can vote if their parent or guardian was on the Electoral Register in the last fifteen years.
  8. ^ The deadline for the receipt and determination of anonymous electoral registration applications is one working day before the publication date of the notice of alteration to the Electoral Register (that is the sixth working day before polling day).[37]
  9. ^ Adam Price sits in the Senedd for Carmarthen East and Dinefwr. The party's leader in the House of Commons is Liz Saville Roberts, the MP for Dwyfor Meirionnydd.
  10. ^ Bartley sits as a councillor on Lambeth Council, while Berry sits on the London Assembly. Bartley stood in the Dulwich and West Norwood constituency as the Green Party and Unite to Remain candidate. The party's sole member in the House of Commons is Caroline Lucas, MP for Brighton Pavilion and two-time former party leader.
  11. ^ Farage was sitting as a member of the European Parliament (MEP) for South East England. The party has no MPs in the House of Commons. All British MEPs vacated their seats on 31 January 2020.
  12. ^ Arlene Foster is a member of the Northern Ireland Assembly for Fermanagh and South Tyrone. The party's leader in the House of Commons is Jeffrey Donaldson, the MP for Lagan Valley.
  13. ^ Mary Lou McDonald sits as a member of the Dáil Éireann for Dublin Central. Sinn Féin adopts an abstentionist policy at Westminster, and none of its seven MPs has taken their seat.
  14. ^ In addition to being a Westminster MP, Colum Eastwood is a member of the Northern Ireland Assembly for Foyle.
  15. ^ Steve Aiken is a member of the Northern Ireland Assembly for South Antrim.
  16. ^ Naomi Long is a member of the Northern Ireland Assembly for Belfast East, and was previously one of the three MEPs for Northern Ireland. The party's sole representative at Westminster is Stephen Farry, who is MP for North Down.
  17. ^ Sylvia Hermon was originally elected as the Ulster Unionist Party MP for North Down in 2001, before becoming an independent in 2010 due to her opposition to the Ulster Conservatives and Unionists alliance. She stood down at the 2019 election.
  18. ^ Channel 4 described this as a leaders-only debate and refused to accept Michael Gove as substitute.[232]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "StackPath". Institute for Government. 20 December 2019.
  2. ^ "Results of the 2019 General Election". BBC News. 12 December 2019. Retrieved 14 December 2019.
  3. ^ "Election results 2019: Boris Johnson hails 'new dawn' after historic victory". BBC News. 13 December 2019. Retrieved 13 December 2019.
  4. ^ "UK set for 12 December general election". BBC News. 29 October 2019. Retrieved 22 December 2019.
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2019, united, kingdom, general, election, held, thursday, december, 2019, elect, members, house, commons, conservative, party, landslide, victory, with, majority, seats, gain, popular, vote, highest, percentage, party, since, 1979, general, election, 2017, dec. The 2019 United Kingdom general election was held on Thursday 12 December 2019 to elect members of the House of Commons The Conservative Party won a landslide victory with a majority of 80 seats n 5 a net gain of 48 on 43 6 of the popular vote the highest percentage for any party since the 1979 general election 3 2019 United Kingdom general election 2017 12 December 2019 Next outgoing memberselected members All 650 seats in the House of Commons326 n 1 seats needed for a majorityOpinion pollsRegistered47 568 611Turnout67 3 1 5 pp 2 First party Second party Leader Boris Johnson Jeremy CorbynParty Conservative LabourLeader since 23 July 2019 12 September 2015Leader s seat Uxbridge andSouth Ruislip Islington NorthLast election 317 seats 42 4 262 seats 40 0 Seats won 365 202 n 2 Seat change 48 60Popular vote 13 966 454 10 269 051Percentage 43 6 32 1 Swing 1 2 pp 7 9 pp Third party Fourth party Leader Nicola Sturgeon Jo SwinsonParty SNP Liberal DemocratsLeader since 14 November 2014 22 July 2019Leader s seat Did not stand n 3 East Dunbartonshire defeated Last election 35 seats 3 0 12 seats 7 4 Seats won 48 n 4 11Seat change 13 1Popular vote 1 242 380 3 696 419Percentage 3 9 11 6 Swing 0 8 pp 4 2 ppA map presenting the results of the election by party of the MP elected from each constituencyComposition of the House of Commons after the electionPrime Minister before electionBoris JohnsonConservative Prime Minister after election Boris JohnsonConservativeHaving failed to obtain a majority at the 2017 general election the Conservative Party governed in minority with the support of the Democratic Unionist Party DUP This led to the resignation of Prime Minister Theresa May with Boris Johnson becoming Conservative leader and Prime Minister in July 2019 Johnson could not persuade Parliament to approve a revised Brexit withdrawal agreement by the end of October and chose to call for a snap election which the House of Commons supported under the Early Parliamentary General Election Act 2019 4 Opinion polls showed a firm lead for the Conservatives against the opposition Labour Party throughout the campaign 5 The Conservatives won 365 seats their highest number and proportion since 1987 and recorded their highest share of the popular vote since 1979 many of their gains were made in long held Labour seats dubbed the red wall which had voted strongly for Leave in the 2016 United Kingdom European Union membership referendum Labour won 202 seats its lowest number and proportion since 1935 6 7 8 The Scottish National Party SNP made a net gain of 13 seats with 45 of the vote in Scotland winning 48 of the 59 seats there 9 The Liberal Democrats improved their vote share to 11 6 but won only 11 seats a net loss of one since the last election 10 The DUP won a plurality of seats in Northern Ireland The Social Democratic and Labour Party and the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland regained parliamentary representation as the DUP lost seats The election result gave Johnson the mandate he sought from the electorate to formally implement the Exit Day of the Withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union on 31 January 2020 and repeal the European Communities Act 1972 thereby ending hopes of the Remain movement and those opposed to Brexit Labour s defeat led to Jeremy Corbyn announcing his intention to resign triggering a leadership election that was won by Keir Starmer 8 11 For the Liberal Democrats leader Jo Swinson the loss of her constituency seat in East Dunbartonshire disqualified her as party leader under the party s rules triggering a leadership election 10 which was won by Ed Davey 12 Jane Dodds the party s leader in Wales was also unseated in Brecon and Radnorshire 13 In Northern Ireland Irish nationalist MPs outnumbered unionists for the first time although the unionist popular vote remained higher at 43 1 and the seven Sinn Fein MPs did not take their seats due to their tradition of abstentionism This was the eighteenth and final general election to be held during the reign of Queen Elizabeth II as she died three years later and was succeeded by her son Charles III Contents 1 Background 2 Date of the election 2 1 Voting eligibility 2 2 Timetable 3 Contesting political parties and candidates 3 1 Great Britain 3 2 Northern Ireland 3 3 Electoral pacts and unilateral decisions 3 4 Marginal seats 3 5 2017 2019 MPs standing under a different political affiliation 3 6 Withdrawn or disowned candidates 4 Campaign 4 1 Campaign background 4 2 Policy positions 4 2 1 Brexit 4 2 2 The environment 4 2 3 Tax and spending commitments 4 2 3 1 Institute for Fiscal Studies analysis 4 2 4 Other issues 4 3 Party positions in the event of a hung parliament 4 4 Tactical voting 4 5 Canvassing and leafleting 4 6 Online campaigning 4 6 1 Veracity of statements by political parties 4 7 Television debates 4 8 Campaign events 4 9 Third party campaigns 5 Religious groups opinions on the parties 6 Endorsements 7 Media coverage 7 1 Party representation 7 2 Dominant issues 7 3 Gender balance 8 Members of Parliament not standing for re election 9 Opinion polling 9 1 Predictions three weeks before the vote 9 2 Predictions two weeks before the vote 9 3 Predictions one week before the vote 9 4 Final predictions 9 5 Exit poll 10 Results 10 1 Analysis 10 2 Summary 10 3 Full results 10 4 Voter demographics 10 4 1 Ipsos MORI 10 4 2 YouGov 11 Seats changing hands 11 1 Seats which changed allegiance 12 Reaction and aftermath 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External links 17 1 Early Parliamentary General Election Act 2019 17 2 Party manifestosBackground editIn July 2016 Theresa May became the Prime Minister having taken over from David Cameron who had resigned in the wake of the 2016 Brexit referendum Her party the Conservative and Unionist Party had governed since the 2010 general election initially in coalition with the Liberal Democrats and then alone with a small majority following the 2015 general election In the 2017 general election May lost her majority but was able to resume office as a result of a confidence and supply agreement with Northern Ireland s Democratic Unionist Party DUP known as the Conservative DUP agreement In the face of opposition from the DUP and Conservative backbenchers the second May ministry was unable to pass its Brexit withdrawal agreement by 29 March 2019 so some political commentators considered that an early general election was likely 14 The opposition Labour Party called for a 2019 vote of confidence in the May ministry but the motion held in January failed 15 May resigned following her party s poor performance in the 2019 European Parliament election during the first extension granted by the European Union for negotiations on the withdrawal agreement Boris Johnson won the 2019 Conservative leadership election and became the prime minister on 24 July 2019 Along with attempting to revise the withdrawal agreement arranged by his predecessor s negotiations Johnson made three attempts to hold a snap election under the process defined in the Fixed term Parliaments Act 2011 16 which requires a two thirds supermajority in order for an election to take place 17 18 19 All three attempts to call an election failed to gain support Parliament insisted that Johnson take a no deal Brexit off the table first and secure a negotiated Withdrawal Agreement expressed in particular by its enactment against his will of the European Union Withdrawal No 2 Act 2019 often called the Benn Act after Labour MP Hilary Benn who introduced the bill After failing to pass a revised deal before the first extension s deadline of 31 October 2019 Johnson agreed to a second extension on negotiations with the European Union and finally secured a revised withdrawal agreement Parliament agreed to an election through a motion proposed by the Liberal Democrats and the Scottish National Party SNP on 28 October The Early Parliamentary General Election Act 2019 EPGEA was passed in the House of Commons by 438 votes to 20 an attempt to pass an amendment by opposition parties for the election to be held on 9 December failed by 315 votes to 295 20 21 The House of Lords followed suit on 30 October 22 with royal assent made the day after for the ratification of the EPGEA 23 Date of the election editFurther information Early Parliamentary General Election Act 2019 The deadline for candidate nominations was 14 November 2019 24 with political campaigning for four weeks until polling day on 12 December On the day of the election polling stations across the country were open from 7 am and closed at 10 pm 25 The date chosen for the 2019 general election made it the first to be held in December since the 1923 general election 26 27 Voting eligibility edit Individuals eligible to vote had to be registered to vote by midnight on 26 November 28 To be eligible to vote individuals had to be aged 18 or over 29 30 residing as an Irish or Commonwealth citizen at an address in the United Kingdom n 6 or be a British citizen overseas who registered to vote in the last 15 years 32 33 n 7 and not legally excluded on grounds of detainment in prison a mental hospital or on the run from law enforcement 34 or disqualified from voting 35 36 Anyone who qualified as an anonymous elector had until midnight on 6 December to register n 8 Timetable edit Key dates 38 Date EventTuesday 29 October Passage of the Early Parliamentary General Election Act 2019 through the House of Commons Wednesday 30 October Passage of the Early Parliamentary General Election Act 2019 through the House of Lords Thursday 31 October Early Parliamentary General Election Act 2019 received royal assent and comes into force immediately The Act set 12 December as the date for the next parliamentary general election Wednesday 6 November Dissolution of parliament and official start of the campaign Beginning of purdah Royal Proclamation issued summoning a new Parliament and setting the date for its first meeting Thursday 7 November Receipt of writ of election legal documents declaring election issued Friday 8 November Notices of election were given in constituencies Thursday 14 November Nominations of candidates closed Saturday 16 November Lists of candidates were published for each constituency Thursday 21 November Deadline to register for a postal vote at 5pm in Northern Ireland 39 Tuesday 26 November Deadline to register for a postal vote at 5pm Great Britain 39 as well as registering to vote across the United Kingdom at 11 59pm 39 Wednesday 4 December Deadline to register for a proxy vote at 5pm Exemptions applied for emergencies Thursday 12 December Polling Day polls opened at 7 am to 10 pm Friday 13 December Results announced for all the 650 constituencies End of purdah Tuesday 17 December First meeting of the new Parliament of the United Kingdom for the formal election of Speaker of the House of Commons and the swearing in of members ahead of the State Opening of Parliament s first session 40 41 42 Thursday 19 December State Opening of Parliament and queen s speech Contesting political parties and candidates editMain article Candidates in the 2019 United Kingdom general election Most candidates are representatives of a political party which must be registered with the Electoral Commission s Register Those who do not belong to one must use the label Independent or none In the 2019 election 3 415 candidates stood 206 being independents the rest representing one of 68 political parties Great Britain edit Major parties those with multiple MPs at dissolution or of multiple MEPs before withdrawal from the European Union that contested this election are shown in the table with their results at the 2017 general election ordered by seat quantity at dissolution Party Party leader s Leader since Leader s seat 2017 election Seats atdissolution Contested seats ofvotes SeatsConservative Party Boris Johnson July 2019 Uxbridge amp South Ruislip 42 4 317 298 635 seats in the United Kingdom 43 Labour Party Jeremy Corbyn September 2015 Islington North 40 0 262 244 631 seats in Great BritainScottish National Party Nicola Sturgeon November 2014 None n 3 3 0 35 35 59 seats in ScotlandLiberal Democrats Jo Swinson July 2019 East Dunbartonshire 7 4 12 21 611 seats in Great BritainChange UK Anna Soubry June 2019 Broxtowe New party 5 3 seats in EnglandPlaid Cymru Adam Price September 2018 None n 9 0 5 4 4 36 seats in WalesGreen Party of England and Wales Jonathan Bartley September 2016 None n 10 1 6 1 1 474 seats in England and WalesSian Berry September 2018Brexit Party Nigel Farage March 2019 None n 11 New party 0 276 seats in Great BritainConservatives had been governing in coalition or on their own since 2010 and led by Boris Johnson since July 2019 Jeremy Corbyn had been Labour Party leader since 2015 and was the first Labour leader since Tony Blair to contest consecutive general elections and the first since Neil Kinnock to do so after losing the first The Liberal Democrats contested seats across Great Britain They were led by Tim Farron at the 2017 election before he was replaced by Vince Cable In the 2019 Liberal Democrats leadership election Cable was succeeded by Jo Swinson in July 2019 44 45 The Brexit Party contested somewhat under half the seats It was founded in early 2019 by Nigel Farage former leader of the UK Independence Party UKIP and largely replaced UKIP in British politics with UKIP losing almost all its support after they gained 12 6 of the vote but just one MP at the 2015 general election for the 2019 general election UKIP stood in 42 seats in Great Britain and two seats in Northern Ireland The Brexit Party won the most votes at the 2019 European Parliament election 46 The Green Party of England and Wales had been led by Jonathan Bartley and Sian Berry since 2018 with its counterpart the Scottish Greens standing in Scottish seats The two parties stood in a total of 495 seats The third largest party in seats won at the 2017 election was the Scottish National Party led by Nicola Sturgeon since 2014 which stands only in Scotland where it won 35 out of 59 seats at the 2017 election Similarly Plaid Cymru led by Adam Price stands only in Wales where it held 4 of 40 seats Price was elected as the party leader in September 2018 47 Northern Ireland edit Main article 2019 United Kingdom general election in Northern Ireland While a number of UK parties organise in Northern Ireland including the Labour Party in Northern Ireland which does not field candidates and others field candidates for election most notably the Northern Ireland Conservatives the main Northern Ireland parties are different from those in the rest of the United Kingdom Some parties in Northern Ireland operate on an all Ireland basis including Sinn Fein and Aontu who are abstentionist parties and do not take up any Commons seats to which they are elected Sylvia Hermon the only independent politician elected to Parliament in 2017 represented North Down but did not stand in 2019 The election result was particularly notable in Northern Ireland as the first Westminster election in which the number of nationalists elected exceeded the number of unionists In the 2019 election there were a total of 102 candidates in Northern Ireland 48 Party Leader Leader since Leader sseat 2017 election Seats atdisso lution Contested seats out of 18 2019 election in NI Seats in NI Seats wonDemocratic Unionist Party Arlene Foster December 2015 None n 12 36 0 10 10 17 seats 30 6 8 nbsp 2 Sinn Fein Mary Lou McDonald February 2018 None n 13 29 4 7 7 15 seats 22 8 7 nbsp 0 Social Democratic and Labour Party Colum Eastwood November 2015 Foyle n 14 11 7 0 0 15 seats 14 9 2 nbsp 2 Ulster Unionist Party Steve Aiken November 2019 None n 15 10 3 0 0 16 seats 11 7 0 nbsp 0 Alliance Party Naomi Long October 2016 None n 16 7 9 0 0 18 seats 16 8 1 nbsp 1 Independent Sylvia Hermon None n 17 5 6 1 1 0 N A 0 nbsp 1 Electoral pacts and unilateral decisions edit Further information Unite to Remain nbsp Constituencies where the Unite to Remain pact was active Coloured by which party stood a candidate nbsp Constituencies highlighted which the Brexit Party contested at the 2019 election In England and Wales the Liberal Democrats Plaid Cymru and the Green Party of England and Wales parties sharing an anti Brexit position arranged a Unite to Remain pact Labour declined to be involved This agreement meant that in 60 constituencies only one of these parties the one considered to have the best chance of winning stood This pact aimed to maximise the total number of anti Brexit MPs returned under the first past the post system by avoiding the spoiler effect 49 In addition the Liberal Democrats did not run against Dominic Grieve independent formerly Conservative 50 Gavin Shuker independent formerly Labour 51 and Anna Soubry The Independent Group for Change formerly Conservative 52 53 The Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage had suggested the Brexit and Conservative parties could form an electoral pact to maximise the seats taken by Brexit supporting MPs this was rejected by Johnson 54 On 11 November Farage announced that his party would not stand in any of the 317 seats won by the Conservatives at the last election This was welcomed by the Conservative Party chairman James Cleverly and he insisted there had been no contact between them and the Brexit Party over the plan 55 Newsnight reported that conversations between members of the Brexit Party and the Conservative pro Brexit research support group European Research Group led to this decision 56 The Brexit Party reportedly requested that Johnson publicly state he would not extend the Brexit transition period beyond the planned end of December 2020 date and that he wished for a Canada style free trade agreement with the European Union Johnson made a statement covering these two issues something which Farage referenced as key when announcing he was standing down some candidates Both the Brexit Party and the Conservatives denied any deal was done between the two 56 57 58 Farage later claimed that he and eight other prominent Brexit Party figures were offered a peerage two days before making the announcement to stand down in 317 seats 59 The claim led to complaints to the Electoral Commission CPS and Metropolitan Police nbsp Map showing electoral pacts in Northern IrelandThe Green Party did not stand in two Conservative held seats Chingford and Woodford Green and Calder Valley in favour of Labour 60 61 The Green Party had also unsuccessfully attempted to form a progressive alliance with the Labour Party prior to Unite to Remain 62 The Women s Equality Party stood aside in two seats in favour of the Liberal Democrats after they adopted some of its policies 63 The DUP did not contest Fermanagh and South Tyrone and the UUP did not contest Belfast North so as not to split the unionist vote Other parties stood down in selected seats so as not to split the anti Brexit vote The nationalist and anti Brexit parties the SDLP and Sinn Fein agreed a pact whereby the SDLP did not stand in Belfast North in favour of Sinn Fein while Sinn Fein did not stand in Belfast South in favour of SDLP neither party stood in Belfast East or North Down 64 and advised their supporters to vote Alliance in those two constituencies The Green Party in Northern Ireland did not stand in any of the four Belfast constituencies 65 backing the SDLP in Belfast South Sinn Fein in Belfast North and West 66 and Alliance in Belfast East and North Down 67 68 69 the party only stood in the safe seats of East Antrim Strangford and West Tyrone Alliance did not stand down in any seats 70 describing the plans as sectarian 71 Marginal seats edit Main article List of target seats in the 2019 United Kingdom general election At the 2017 election more than one in eight seats was won by a margin of 5 or less of votes 72 while almost one in four was won by 10 or less 73 These seats were seen as crucial in deciding the election 74 2017 2019 MPs standing under a different political affiliation edit The 2017 2019 Parliament was defined by a significant amount of political instability and consequently a large number of defections and switching between parties This was due to issues such as disquiet over antisemitism in the Labour Party and divisions over Brexit in the Conservative Party Eighteen MPs elected in 2017 contested the election for a different party or as an independent candidate five stood for a different seat All of these candidates failed to be re elected Outgoing MP 2017 party 2017 constituency 2019 party 2019 constituencyLuciana Berger Labour Liverpool Wavertree Liberal Democrats Finchley and Golders GreenFrank Field Labour Birkenhead Birkenhead Social Justice BirkenheadMike Gapes Labour Ilford South Change UK Ilford SouthDavid Gauke Conservative South West Hertfordshire Independent South West HertfordshireRoger Godsiff Labour Birmingham Hall Green Independent Birmingham Hall GreenDominic Grieve Conservative Beaconsfield Independent BeaconsfieldSam Gyimah Conservative East Surrey Liberal Democrats KensingtonPhillip Lee Conservative Bracknell Liberal Democrats WokinghamChris Leslie Labour Nottingham East Change UK Nottingham EastIvan Lewis Labour Bury South Independent Bury SouthAnne Milton Conservative Guildford Independent GuildfordAntoinette Sandbach Conservative Eddisbury Liberal Democrats EddisburyGavin Shuker Labour Luton South Independent Luton SouthAngela Smith Labour Penistone and Stocksbridge Liberal Democrats Altrincham and Sale WestAnna Soubry Conservative Broxtowe Change UK BroxtoweChuka Umunna Labour Streatham Liberal Democrats Cities of London and WestminsterChris Williamson Labour Derby North Independent Derby NorthSarah Wollaston Conservative Totnes Liberal Democrats TotnesWithdrawn or disowned candidates edit Below are listed the candidates who withdrew from campaigning or had support from their party withdrawn after the close of nominations and so they remained on the ballot paper in their constituency Only Hanvey was elected 75 Candidate Party Constituency Reason for withdrawal DateSafia Ali Labour Falkirk Alleged prior antisemitic posts on Facebook 76 28 NovemberAmjad Bashir Conservative Leeds North East Comments made in 2014 saying Jews were radicalised by visiting Israel 77 78 20 November 79 80 Sophie Cook Independent East Worthing and Shoreham Reported experience of abuse and harassment 81 19 NovemberVictor Farrell Brexit Party Glenrothes Homophobic comments in 2017 82 18 NovemberNeale Hanvey SNP Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath Allegations of antisemitism based on criticism of Israel and George Soros in a 2016 Facebook post 83 28 NovemberRyan Houghton Conservative Aberdeen North Allegations of Antisemitic Islamophobic and homophobic tweets in 2012 84 19 NovemberBen Mathis Liberal Democrats Hackney North and Stoke Newington Tweets that included references to hot young boys whiny bitches and conjuring images of Katie Hopkins losing several kilos of unpleasant fat with an axe or a guillotine before 2019 85 24 NovemberWaheed Rafiq Liberal Democrats Birmingham Hodge Hill Antisemitic comments before 2015 86 20 NovemberAntony Calvert Conservative Wakefield Stepped down over historic offensive social media posts about a Labour MP Muammar Gaddafi and food poverty 87 10 NovemberFlora Scarabello Conservative Glasgow Central Islamophobic comment recorded private words 88 27 NovemberCampaign editCampaign background edit Further information Brexit and Brexit negotiations in 2019 Donations to political parties inlast quarter of 2019 89 Party Donations millions Conservative 37 7Liberal Democrats 13 6Labour 10 7Brexit 7 2SNP 0 2The Conservative Party and Labour Party have been the two biggest political parties and have supplied every Prime Minister since the 1922 general election The Conservative Party have governed since the 2010 election in coalition with the Liberal Democrats from 2010 to 2015 At the 2015 general election the Conservative Party committed to offering a referendum on whether the United Kingdom should leave the European Union EU and won a majority in that election A referendum was held in June 2016 and the Leave campaign won by 51 9 to 48 1 United Kingdom invocation of Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union came in March 2017 and Theresa May triggered a snap election in 2017 in order to demonstrate support for her planned negotiation of Brexit Instead the Conservative Party lost seats they won a plurality of MPs but not a majority and the result was a hung parliament They formed a minority government with the Democratic Unionist Party DUP as their confidence and supply partner Neither May nor her successor Boris Johnson the winner of the 2019 Conservative leadership election 90 91 was able to secure parliamentary support either for a deal on the terms of the country s exit from the EU or for exiting the EU without an agreed deal Johnson later succeeded in bringing his withdrawal agreement to a second reading in Parliament following another extension until January 2020 92 after Johnson s 2019 win a new Withdrawal Agreement Bill was introduced in 2020 Compared to its 2019 October predecessor this bill offered in the words of political scientist Meg Russell significantly weaker parliamentary oversight of Brexit giving parliament no formal role in agreeing the future relationship negotiating objectives and a diminished role in approving any resulting treaty 93 During the lifespan of the 2017 Parliament twenty MPs resigned from their parties mostly due to disputes with their party leaderships some formed new parties and alliances In February 2019 eight Labour and three Conservative MPs left their parties to sit together as The Independent Group 94 Having undergone a split and two name changes at dissolution this group numbered five MPs who sat as the registered party The Independent Group for Change under the leadership of Anna Soubry 95 96 Two MPs sat in a group called The Independents which at its peak had five members one MP created the Birkenhead Social Justice Party while a further 20 MPs who began as Labour or Conservative ended Parliament as unaffiliated independents Seven MPs from both the Conservatives and Labour joined the Liberal Democrats during Parliament in combination with a gain after the 2019 Brecon and Radnorshire by election By the time Parliament was dissolved the Liberal Democrats had raised their number from 12 at the election to 20 at dissolution 97 One reason for the defections from the Labour Party was the ongoing row over alleged antisemitism in the Labour Party Labour entered the election campaign while under investigation by the Equality and Human Rights Commission 98 The Jewish Labour Movement declared that it would not generally campaign for Labour 99 The Conservative Party was also criticised for not doing enough to tackle the alleged Islamophobia in the Conservative Party 100 Additionally The Conservatives ended the previous parliamentary period with fewer seats than they had started with because of defections and also saw the 2019 suspension of rebel Conservative MPs for going against the party line by voting to prevent a no deal Brexit 101 Of the 21 expelled 10 were subsequently reinstated while the others continued as independents 102 Policy positions edit Brexit edit The major parties had a wide variety of stances on Brexit The Conservative Party supported leaving under the terms of the withdrawal agreement as negotiated by Johnson amending May s previous agreement and this agreement formed a central part of the Conservative campaign via the slogan Get Brexit Done 103 The Brexit Party was in favour of a no deal Brexit with its leader Nigel Farage calling for Johnson to drop the deal 104 The Labour Party proposed a renegotiation of the withdrawal agreement towards a closer post withdrawal relationship with the EU and would then put this forward as an option in a referendum alongside the option of remaining in the EU 105 The Labour Party s campaigning stance in that referendum would be decided at a special conference 106 In a Question Time special featuring four party leaders Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said that he would stay neutral in the referendum campaign 107 The Liberal Democrats Scottish National Party Plaid Cymru The Independent Group for Change and the Green Party of England and Wales were all opposed to Brexit and proposed that a further referendum be held with the option for which they would campaign to remain in the EU 108 The Liberal Democrats originally pledged that if they formed a majority government which was considered a highly unlikely outcome by observers 109 they would revoke the Article 50 notification immediately and cancel Brexit 110 111 Part way through the campaign the Liberal Democrats dropped the policy of revoking Article 50 after the party realised it was not going to win a majority in the election 112 The Democratic Unionist Party was in favour of a withdrawal agreement in principle but opposed the deals negotiated by both May and Johnson believing that they create too great a divide between Northern Ireland and the rest of the United Kingdom 113 114 Sinn Fein the Social Democratic and Labour Party the Ulster Unionist Party UUP 115 and the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland all favoured remaining in the EU The UUP did not see a second referendum as a necessary route to achieving this goal 115 The environment edit The Labour Party promised what they described as a green industrial revolution This included support for renewable energies and a promise to plant 2 billion trees by 2040 The party also promised to transition to electrify the United Kingdom s bus fleet by 2030 116 The Liberal Democrats promised to put the environment at the heart of their agenda with a promise to plant 60 million trees a year They also promised to significantly reduce carbon emissions by 2030 and hit zero carbon emissions by 2045 By 2030 they planned to generate 80 of the country s energy needs from renewable energies such as solar power and wind and retrofit 26 million homes with insulation by 2030 They also promised to build more environmentally friendly homes and to establish a new Department for the Climate Crisis 117 The Conservatives pledged net zero emissions by 2050 with investment in clean energy solutions and green infrastructure to reduce carbon emissions and pollution They also pledged to plant 30 million trees 118 The Conservatives were judged the worst of the main parties on climate change by Friends of the Earth with a manifesto which mentioned it only ten times 119 Tax and spending commitments edit In September 2019 the Conservative government performed a spending review where they announced plans to increase public spending by 13 8 billion a year and reaffirmed plans to spend another 33 9 billion a year on the National Health Service NHS by 2023 Chancellor Sajid Javid said the government had turned the page on 10 years of austerity in the United Kingdom 120 During the election the parties produced manifestos that outlined spending in addition to those already planned The Conservative Party manifesto was described as having little in the way of changes to tax by the Institute for Fiscal Studies IFS The decision to keep the rate of corporation tax at 19 and not reduce it to 17 as planned was expected to raise 6 billion a year The plan to increase the national insurance threshold for employees and self employed to 9 500 would cost 2 billion a year 121 They also committed to not raise rates of income tax National Insurance or VAT 122 There were increased spending commitments of 3 billion current spending and 8 billion investment spending Overall this would have led to the country s debt as a percentage of GDP remaining stable the IFS assessed that it would rise in the event of a no deal Brexit 123 The Labour Party manifesto planned to raise an extra 78 billion a year from taxes over the course of Parliament with sources including 121 24bn raising the headline rate of corporation tax to 26 6 3bn tax the global profits of multinationals according to the United Kingdom s share of global employment assets and sales not British profits 4 0bn abolish patent box and R amp D tax credit for large companies 4 3bn cutting unspecified corporation tax reliefs 9bn financial transactions tax 14bn dividends and capital gains 6bn anti avoidance 5bn increases in income tax rates above 80 000 a year 5bn otherIn addition Labour was to obtain income from the Inclusive Ownership Fund windfall tax on oil companies and some smaller tax changes There were increased spending commitments of 98 billion current spending and 55 billion investment spending Overall this would have led to the national debt as a percentage of GDP rising 123 Labour s John McDonnell said borrowing would only be for investment and one offs e g compensating WASPI women not shown above and not for day to day spending 124 The Liberal Democrats manifesto planned to raise an extra 36 billion per year from taxes over the course of Parliament with sources including 121 10bn raising corporation tax to 20 7bn 1 point rise in all rates of income tax 5bn abolish the capital gains tax allowance 5bn air passenger duty on frequent flyers 6bn anti avoidance 3bn otherThere were increased commitments of 37 billion current spending and 26 billion investment spending which would overall lead to the debt as a percentage of GDP falling partly due to improved economic conditions which would result from staying in the EU 123 Institute for Fiscal Studies analysis edit The Institute of Fiscal Studies IFS an influential research body released on 28 November its in depth analysis of the manifestos of the three main national political parties 125 126 The analysis provided a summary of the financial promises made by each party and an inspection of the accuracy of claims around government income and expenditure 127 128 121 The IFS reported that neither the Conservatives nor the Labour Party had published a properly credible prospectus 125 Its analysis of the Conservative manifesto concluded there was essentially nothing new in the manifesto that there was little in the way of changes to tax spending welfare or anything else and that they had already promised increased spending for health and education whilst in government The Labour manifesto was described as introducing enormous economic and social change and increasing the role of the state to be bigger than anything in the last 40 years 129 The IFS highlighted a raft of changes in including free childcare university personal care and prescriptions as well nationalisations labour market regulations increases in the minimum wage and enforcing effective ownership of 10 of large companies from current owners to a combination of employees and government The IFS said that Labour s vision is of a state not so dissimilar to those seen in many other successful Western European economies and presumed that the manifesto should be seen as a long term prospectus for change rather than a realistic deliverable plan for a five year parliament 129 They said that the Liberal Democrats manifesto was not as radical as the Labour manifesto but was a decisive move away from the policies of the past decade 125 The Conservative manifesto was criticised for a commitment not to raise rates of income tax National Insurance or VAT as this put a significant constraint on reactions to events that might affect government finances One such event could be the die in a ditch promise to terminate the Brexit transition period by the end of 2020 which risked harming the economy 129 The IFS also stated that it is highly likely spending under a Conservative government would be higher than in that party s manifesto partly due to a number of uncosted commitments 125 Outside of commitments to the NHS the proposals would leave public service spending 14 lower in 2023 2024 than it was in 2010 2011 which the IFS described as no more austerity perhaps but an awful lot of it baked in 130 The IFS stated it had serious doubt that tax rises proposed would raise the amount Labour suggested and said that they would need to introduce more broad based tax increases They assessed that the public sector does not have the capacity to increase investment spending as Labour would want The IFS further assessed the claim that tax rises would only hit the top 5 of earners as certainly progressive but clearly not true with those under that threshold impacted by changes to the marriage allowance taxes on dividends or capital gains and lower wages or higher prices that might be passed on from corporation tax changes Some of Labour s proposals were described as huge and complex undertakings where significant care is required in implementation The IFS was particularly critical of the policy to compensate the WASPI women announced after the manifesto which was a 58bn promise to women who are relatively well off on average and would result in public finances going off target 127 They said that Labour s manifesto would not increase UK public spending as a share of national income above Germany 127 They found that Labour s plan to spend and invest would boost economic growth but that the impact of tax rises government regulation nationalisations and the inclusive ownership fund could reduce growth meaning the overall impact of Labour s plan on growth was uncertain 127 129 The IFS described the plans of the Liberal Democrats as a radical tax and spend package and said that the proposals would require lower borrowing than Conservative or Labour plans The report said they were the only party whose proposals would put debt on a decisively downward path praising their plan to put 1p on income tax to go to the NHS as simple progressive and would raise a secure level of revenue The IFS also said plans to virtually quintuple current spending levels on universal free childcare amounted to creating a whole new leg of the universal welfare state 131 127 The IFS said that the SNP s manifesto was not costed Their proposals on spending increases and tax cuts would mean the government would have to borrow to cover day to day spending They concluded that the SNP s plans for Scottish independence would likely require increased austerity 132 Other issues edit The Conservatives proposed increasing spending on the NHS although not as much of an increase as Labour and Liberal Democrats proposals 133 They also proposed increased funding for childcare and on the environment They proposed more funding for care services and to work with other parties on reforming how care is delivered They wished to maintain the triple lock on pensions They proposed investing in local infrastructure including building a new rail line between Leeds and Manchester 122 Labour proposed significantly increasing government spending to 45 of national output which would be high compared to most of British history but is comparable with other European countries 134 This was to pay for an increased NHS budget stopping state pension age rises introducing a National Care Service providing free personal care move to a net zero carbon economy by the 2030s nationalising key industries scrapping Universal Credit free bus travel for under 25s building 100 000 council houses per year and other proposals 135 Within this the Labour Party proposed to take rail operating companies energy supply networks Royal Mail sewerage infrastructure and England s private water companies back into public ownership Labour proposed nationalising part of the BT Group and to provide free broadband to everyone 136 along with free education for six years during each person s adult life 137 138 Over a decade Labour planned to reduce the average full time weekly working hours to 32 with resulting productivity increases facilitating no loss of pay 139 The main priority of the Liberal Democrats was opposing Brexit Other policies included increased spending on the NHS free childcare for two to four year olds recruiting 20 000 more teachers generating 80 of electricity from renewable sources by 2030 freezing train fares and legalising cannabis 140 The Brexit Party was also focused on Brexit It opposed privatising the NHS It sought to reduce immigration cutting net migration to 50 000 per year cutting VAT on domestic fuel banning the exporting of waste free broadband in deprived regions scrapping the BBC licence fee and abolishing inheritance tax interest on student loans and High Speed 2 It also wanted to move to a United States style supreme court 141 The policies of the SNP included a second referendum on Scottish independence to be held in 2020 as well as one on Brexit removing the Trident nuclear deterrent and devolution across issues like as employment law drug policy and migration 142 The Liberal Democrats the Greens the SNP and Labour all supported a ban on fracking in the United Kingdom whilst the Conservatives proposed approving fracking on a case by case basis 143 144 Party positions in the event of a hung parliament edit The Conservatives and Labour insisted they were on course for outright majorities while smaller parties were quizzed about what they would do in the event of a hung parliament The Liberal Democrats said that they would not actively support Johnson or Corbyn becoming Prime Minister but that they could if an alternative could not be achieved abstain on votes allowing a minority government to form if there was support for a second referendum on Brexit 145 The SNP ruled out either supporting the Conservatives or a coalition with Labour but spoke about a looser form of support such as a confidence and supply arrangement with the latter if they supported a second referendum on Scottish independence 146 The DUP previously supported the Conservative government but withdrew that support given their opposition to Johnson s proposed Brexit deal It said that it would never support Corbyn as prime minister but could work with Labour if that party were led by someone else Labour s position on a hung parliament was that it would do no deals with any other party citing Corbyn to say We are out here to win it At the same time it was prepared to adopt key policies proposed by the SNP and Liberal Democrats to woo them into supporting a minority government 147 148 The UUP said they would never support Corbyn as prime minister with their leader Steve Aiken also saying that he can t really see any situation in which they would support a Conservative government either Their focus would be on remaining in the EU 115 Tactical voting edit Under the first past the post electoral system there is often concern especially in marginal seats that if voters of similar ideological leanings are split between multiple different parties they may allow a victory for a candidate with significantly different views 149 150 In the early stages of the campaign there was considerable discussion of tactical voting generally in the context of support or opposition to Brexit and whether parties would stand in all seats or not 151 There were various electoral pacts and unilateral decisions The Brexit Party chose not to stand against sitting Conservative candidates but stood in most other constituencies The Brexit Party alleged that pressure was put on its candidates by the Conservatives to withdraw including the offer of peerages which would be illegal This was denied by the Conservative Party 152 Under the banner of Unite to Remain the Liberal Democrats Plaid Cymru and the Green Party of England and Wales agreed an electoral pact in some seats some commentators criticised the Liberal Democrats for not standing down in some Labour seats 153 nbsp A sticker in Bournemouth calling for tactical voting with an anti Conservative billboard in the backgroundA number of tactical voting websites were set up in an attempt to help voters choose the candidate in their constituency who would be best placed to beat the Conservative one 154 155 The websites did not always give the same advice which Michael Savage political editor of The Guardian said had the potential to confuse voters 154 One of the websites named GetVoting org and set up by Best for Britain was accused of giving bogus advice in Labour Conservative marginal seats 156 157 The website which had links to the Liberal Democrats 157 was criticised for advising pro Remain voters to back the Liberal Democrats when doing so risked pulling voters away from Labour candidates and enabling the Conservative candidate to gain most votes 156 157 They changed their controversial recommendation in Kensington to Labour which had won it in 2017 by 20 votes 158 and lined up with Tacticalvote co uk in this seat describing themselves as a progressive grassroots campaign not affiliated with any political party Tacticalvote co uk were previously known as Tactical2017 Gina Miller s Remain United and People s Vote kept their recommendation for the Liberal Democrats This caused a lot of confusion around tactical voting 154 159 as it was reported that the sites did not match one another s advice Further into the election period tactical voting websites that relied on multilevel regression with poststratification such as Best for Britain People s Vote Remain United 160 and Survation 161 changed their recommendations on other seats because of new data 162 The effectiveness of their tactical voting has also been questioned 163 and the loss of Kensington which was a Labour gain in 2017 was blamed by Labour MPs on Liberal Democrats for splitting the vote 164 In the final weekend before voting The Guardian cited a poll suggesting that the Conservative Party held a 15 lead over Labour 165 on the same day the Conservative backing Daily Telegraph emphasised a poll indicating a lower 8 lead 166 Senior opposition politicians from Labour the Liberal Democrats and the SNP launched a late stage appeal to anti Conservative voters to consider switching allegiance in the general election amid signs that tactical voting in a relatively small number of marginal seats could deprive Johnson of a majority in parliament 167 Shortly before the election The Observer newspaper recommended Remainers tactically vote for 50 Labour Liberal Democrats SNP and independent candidates across Great Britain 168 of these 13 triumphed 9 of which were SNP gains in Scotland in line with a broader trend of relative success for the party along with four in England divided equally between Labour and the Liberal Democrats The pollster responsible argued in the aftermath that the unpopularity of the Labour leadership limited the effectiveness of tactical voting 169 Other research suggested it would have taken 78 of people voting tactically to prevent a Conservative majority completely and it would not have been possible to deliver a Labour majority 170 Canvassing and leafleting edit Predictions of an overall Conservative majority were based on their targeting of primarily Labour held Brexit backing seats in the Midlands and the north of England 171 At the start of the election period Labour supporting organisation Momentum held what was described as the largest mobilising call in UK history involving more than 2 000 canvassers 172 The organisation challenged Labour supporters to devote a week or more to campaigning full time by 4 December 1 400 people had signed up Momentum also developed an app called My Campaign Map that updated members about where they could be more effective particularly in canvassing in marginal constituencies Over one weekend during the campaign period 700 Labour supporters campaigned in Iain Duncan Smith s constituency Chingford and Woodford Green which was regarded as a marginal with a majority of 2 438 votes at the 2017 general election 172 The Liberal Democrats were considered possible winners of a number of Conservative held southern English constituencies with a large swing that could even topple Dominic Raab in Esher and Walton 173 At the beginning of the 2019 campaign they had been accused of attempting to mislead voters by using selective opinion polling data 174 and use of a quotation attributed to The Guardian rather than to their leader Jo Swinson 175 They were also accused of making campaign leaflets look like newspapers although this practice had been used by all major British political parties for many years including by Labour and the Conservatives during this election 176 The Liberal Democrats won a court case stopping the SNP from distributing a potentially defamatory leaflet in Swinson s constituency over false claims about funding she had received 177 Two Labour Party campaigners both in their seventies were verbally abused and physically assaulted in separate unprovoked attacks on the weekend of 23 24 November One attack occurred in Bromyard Herefordshire and the other in Rotherham South Yorkshire Party officials in Bromyard where Labour campaigners suffered red baiting and had been called Marxists 178 179 decided that activists should only canvass in pairs 180 181 Online campaigning edit The use of social media advertising was seen as particularly useful to political parties as it could be used to target people of particular demographics 182 Labour was reported to have the most interactions withThe Times describing Labour s aggressive anti establishment messages as beating clever Tory memes In the first week of November Labour was reported to have four of the five most liked tweets by political parties many of the top interactions of Facebook posts as well as doing very well on Instagram where younger voters are particularly active 183 Bloomberg News reported that between 6 and 21 November the views on Twitter Facebook were 18 7 31 0 million for Labour 10 15 5 million for the Conservatives 2 9 2 0 million for the Brexit Party and 0 4 1 4 million for the Liberal Democrats 184 Brexit was the most tweeted topic for the Conservative Party 45 of tweets the Liberal Democrats and the Brexit Party 40 each Labour focused on health care 24 1 the environment and business mentioning Brexit in less than 5 per cent of its tweets 185 Devolution was the topic most tweeted about by the SNP 29 8 and Plaid Cymru 21 4 and the environment was the top issue for the Green Party 45 9 on Twitter The Conservatives were unique in their focus on taxation 16 2 and the Brexit Party on defence 14 185 Prior to the campaign the Conservatives contracted New Zealand marketing agency Topham Guerin which had been credited with helping Australia s Liberal National Coalition unexpectedly win the 2019 Australian federal election The agency s social media approach was described as purposefully posting badly designed social media material that becomes viral and so would be seen by a wider audience 186 Some of the Conservative social media activity created headlines challenging whether it was deceptive 187 188 including by the BBC 189 amid disinformation concerns 190 191 This included editing a clip of Keir Starmer to give the appearance that he was unable to answer a question about Labour s Brexit policy 188 In response to criticism over the doctored Starmer footage Conservative Party chairman James Cleverly said the clip of Starmer was satire and obviously edited 188 Veracity of statements by political parties edit During the 19 November debate between Johnson and Corbyn hosted by ITV the press office of the Conservative Campaign Headquarters CCHQ re branded their Twitter account CCHQPress as factcheckUK with from CCHQ in small text appearing underneath the logo in the account s banner image which critics suggested could be mistaken for that of an independent fact checking body and published posts supporting the Conservative s position 192 193 194 In defence Conservative chairman Cleverly stated The Twitter handle of the CCHQ press office remained CCHQPress so it s clear the nature of the site and as calling out when the Labour Party put what they know to be complete fabrications in the public domain 187 In response to the re branding on Twitter the Electoral Commission which does not have a role in regulating election campaign content called on all campaigners to act responsibly 195 196 197 fact checking body Full Fact criticised this behaviour as inappropriate and misleading and Twitter stated that it would take decisive corrective action if there were further attempts to mislead people 195 198 199 First Draft News released an analysis of Facebook ads posted by political parties between 1 and 4 December The analysis reported that 88 of the 6 749 posts the Conservatives made had been challenged by fact checker Full Fact 5 000 of these ads related to a 40 new hospitals claim of which Full Fact concluded only six had been costed with the others only receiving money for planning with building uncosted and due to occur after 2025 4 000 featured inaccurate claims about the cost of Labour s spending plans to the tax payer 500 related to a 50 000 more nurses pledge consisting of 31 500 new nurses and convincing 18 500 nurses already in post to remain 200 201 16 5 of Liberal Democrats posts were highlighted which related to claims they are the only party to beat Labour the Conservatives or the SNP in seats like yours 201 None of the posts made by Labour in the period were challenged although posts made on 10 December stating that a Labour government would save households thousands in bills and the Conservative Party had cut 8bn from social care since 2010 were flagged as misleading 201 202 According to the BBC Labour supporters had been more likely to share unpaid for electioneering posts some of which included misleading claims 203 Television debates edit 2017 debates 2019ITV aired a head to head election debate between Johnson and Corbyn on 19 November hosted by Julie Etchingham 204 ITV Cymru Wales aired a debate featuring representatives from the Conservatives Labour the Liberal Democrats Plaid Cymru and the Brexit Party on 17 November hosted by Adrian Masters 205 Johnson cancelled his ITV interview with Etchingham scheduled for 6 December whilst the other major party leaders agreed to be interviewed 206 On the BBC broadcaster Andrew Neil was due to separately interview party leaders in The Andrew Neil Interviews and BBC Northern Ireland journalist Mark Carruthers to separately interview the five main Northern Irish political leaders 207 The leaders of the SNP Labour Plaid Cymru the Liberal Democrats and the Brexit Party were all interviewed by Neil and the leader of the Conservative Party was not 208 leading Neil to release a challenge to Johnson to be interviewed 209 The Conservatives dismissed Neil s challenge 210 BBC Scotland BBC Cymru Wales and BBC Northern Ireland also hosted a variety of regional debates 211 Channel 4 cancelled a debate scheduled for 24 November after Johnson would not agree to a head to head with Corbyn 212 A few days later the network hosted a leaders debate focused on the climate Johnson and Farage did not attend and were replaced on stage by ice sculptures with their party names written on them 213 The Conservatives alleged this was part of a pattern of bias at the channel complained to Ofcom that Channel 4 had breached due impartiality rules as a result of their refusal to allow Michael Gove to appear as a substitute 214 and suggested that they might review the channel s broadcasting licence 215 In response the Conservatives as well as the Brexit Party did not send a representative to Channel 4 s Everything but Brexit on 8 December 216 and Conservative ministers were briefed not to appear on Channel 4 News 217 Ofcom rejected the Conservatives complaint on 3 December 218 Sky News was due to hold a three way election debate on 28 November inviting Johnson Corbyn and Swinson 219 Swinson confirmed she would attend the debate 220 which was later cancelled after agreements could not be made with Corbyn or Johnson 221 2019 United Kingdom general election debates in Great BritainDate Organisers Venue Region Viewing figures millions P Present S Surrogate NI Not invited A Absent I Invited N No debate Con Lab SNP LD Plaid GPEW Brexit17 November 222 ITV Cymru Wales ITV Wales Studios Cardiff 205 Wales 0 28 SDavies SThomas Symonds NI PDodds SSaville Roberts NI SGill19 November 223 ITV dock10 studios Salford 224 UK 7 34 PJohnson PCorbyn NI NI NI NI NI22 November 225 BBC Question Time Octagon Centre Sheffield 226 225 UK 4 62 PJohnson PCorbyn PSturgeon PSwinson NI NI NI24 November cancelled 227 228 Channel 4 N A UK N A NJohnson NCorbyn NI NI NI NI NI26 November BBC Wales Wales Live Pembrokeshire CountyShowground Haverfordwest 229 Wales TBA SDavies SGriffith NI PDodds SSaville Roberts NI SWells28 November cancelled 221 Sky News N A UK N A NJohnson NCorbyn NI NSwinson NI NI NI28 November 230 Channel 4 climate and nature ITN Headquarters London 231 UK TBA A n 18 Johnson PCorbyn PSturgeon PSwinson PPrice PBerry AFarage29 November 233 BBC Senedd Cardiff 234 UK TBA SSunak SLong Bailey PSturgeon PSwinson PPrice SLucas STice1 December 235 ITV Dock10 Salford 236 UK TBA SSunak SBurgon PSturgeon PSwinson PPrice PBerry PFarage3 December 237 BBC Wales Wrexham Glyndŵr University Wrexham Wales TBA SJones SHanson NI SJohn Sap Iorwerth NI PGill3 December 238 STV STV Pacific Quay Glasgow Scotland TBA PCarlaw PLeonard PSturgeon PRennie NI NI NI6 December BBC Maidstone Studios Maidstone 239 240 241 UK 4 42 PJohnson PCorbyn NI NI NI NI NI8 December 242 243 Channel 4 everything but Brexit Leeds Beckett University Leeds 244 UK TBA A SRayner SWhitford PSwinson PPrice PBartley A9 December 245 BBC Question Time Under 30 University of York York 246 UK TBA SJenrick SRayner SYousaf PSwinson PPrice PBartley PFarage10 December 247 BBC Scotland BBC Pacific Quay Glasgow Scotland TBA PCarlaw PLeonard PSturgeon PRennie NI NI NI2019 United Kingdom general election debates in Northern IrelandDate Organisers Venue Viewing figures millions P Present S Surrogate NI Not invited A Absent I Invited N No debate DUP SF SDLP UUP APNI8 December UTV Queen s Film Theatre Belfast 248 TBA SLittle Pengelly PO Neill PEastwood PAiken PLong10 December 249 BBC Northern Ireland Broadcasting House Belfast TBA SDonaldson PO Neill PEastwood PAiken PLongCampaign events edit Before candidate nominations closed several planned candidates for Labour and for the Conservatives withdrew principally because of past social media activity At least three Labour candidates and one Conservative candidate stood down with two of the Labour candidates doing so following allegedly antisemitic remarks 250 Two other Conservative candidates were suspended from the Conservative Party over antisemitic social media posts but retained their candidacy for the party 251 252 253 The Liberal Democrats removed one of its candidates over antisemitic social media posts and defended two others 254 Several former Labour MPs critical of Corbyn endorsed the Conservatives 255 Meanwhile several former Conservative MPs including former deputy prime minister Michael Heseltine endorsed the Liberal Democrats and independent candidates 256 A week before election day former Conservative prime minister John Major warned the public against enabling a majority Conservative government to avoid what he saw as the damage a Johnson led government could do to the country through Brexit Major encouraged voters to vote tactically and to back former Conservative candidates instead of those put forward by the Conservative Party 257 The 2019 20 United Kingdom floods started hitting parts of England from 7 to 18 November Johnson was criticised for what some saw as his late response to the flooding 258 259 after he said they were not a national emergency 260 The Conservatives banned Daily Mirror reporters from Johnson s campaign bus 261 262 On 27 November Labour announced it had obtained leaked government documents they said these showed that the Conservatives were in trade negotiations with the US over the NHS The Conservatives said Labour was peddling conspiracy theories 263 with Dominic Raab later suggesting this was evidence of Russian interference in the election 264 The election also saw the 2019 London Bridge stabbing a terrorist stabbing attack that occurred in London on 29 November owing to this the political parties suspended campaigning in London for a time 265 The 2019 London summit of NATO was held in Watford on 3 4 December 2019 It was attended by 29 heads of state and heads of government including then United States president Donald Trump 266 On 6 December Labour announced it had obtained leaked government documents that they said showed that Johnson had misled the public about the Conservatives Brexit deal with the EU specifically regarding customs checks between Great Britain and Northern Ireland which are part of the Good Friday Agreement and that Johnson had said would not exist 267 Third party campaigns edit In February 2021 an investigation by openDemocracy found that third party campaign groups pushed anti Labour attack ads to millions of voters ahead of the 2019 general election spent more than 700 000 without declaring any individual donation 268 These included Capitalist Worker and Campaign Against Corbynism both of which were set up less than three months before the election and quickly disappeared thereafter 268 A further investigation also reported by the Daily Mirror found that a group run by Conservative activist Jennifer Powers had spent around 65 000 on dozens of advertisements attacking Corbyn and Labour on housing policy without declaring any donations 269 During the campaign i had reported that Powers was a corporate lobbyist who is a former employee of the Conservative Party and that her group had been one of 16 registrations completed since 5 November 270 Meanwhile openDemocracy reported on the new phenomenon of United States style Super PAC esque groups in British elections 271 Adam Ramsay who wrote the article contacted Powers and got her to admit to being an associate at the trade consultancy firm Competere which was set up by lobbyist Shanker Singham who works for the neoliberal think tank the Institute for Economic Affairs 271 Powers group Right to Rent Right to Buy Right to Own made claims that Labour wanted to attack property rights in the UK and your mortgage will be harder to pay under Labour 269 272 Additionally openDemocracy reported that during the election campaign the pro Labour group Momentum spent more than 500 000 the European Movement for the United Kingdom spent almost 300 000 and the anti Brexit groups Led By Donkeys and Best for Britain spent 458 237 and more than one million pounds respectively 268 Following these reports former Liberal Democrats MP Tom Brake who lost his seat in the election and was now director of the pressure group Unlock Democracy wrote to the Electoral Commission urging them to investigate 269 These calls were echoed by John McDonnell Labour MP and former Shadow Chancellor who insisted that a serious and in depth inquiry into third party campaigning was needed 273 Religious groups opinions on the parties editEthnic minority and religious leaders and organisations made statements about the general election Leaders of the Church of England stated people had a democratic duty to vote that they should leave their echo chambers and issues need to be debated respectfully and without resorting to personal abuse 274 Antisemitism in the Labour Party was persistently covered in the media in the lead up to the election In his leader s interview with Jeremy Corbyn Andrew Neil dedicated the first third of the 30 minute programme entirely to discussion of Labour s relationship with the Jewish community 275 This interview drew attention as Corbyn refused to apologise for antisemitism in the Labour Party despite having done so on previous occasions 276 The British chief rabbi Ephraim Mirvis made an unprecedented intervention in politics warning that antisemitism was a poison sanctioned from the top of the Labour Party and saying that British Jews were gripped by anxiety about the prospect of a Corbyn led government 277 Justin Welby the Archbishop of Canterbury the Muslim Council of Britain and the Hindu Council UK supported Mirvis s intervention if not entirely endorsing it 278 279 The Jewish Labour Movement said they would not be actively campaigning for Labour except for exceptional candidates 280 The pro Corbyn Morning Star reported that Jewish Voice for Labour and the Jewish Socialist Group said that Mirvis did not represent all Jews with some people within the religious groups being keen to express that no one person or organisation represents the views of all the members of the faith 281 The Catholic Church in the United Kingdom urged voters to respect the right to life opposing abortion euthanasia and assisted suicide along with a peaceful solution to Brexit support the poor care for the homeless and attention to human rights 282 The Muslim Council of Britain MCB spokesman stated that Islamophobia is particularly acute in the Conservative Party and that Conservatives treat it with denial dismissal and deceit 283 In addition they released a 72 page document outlining what they assess are the key issues from a British Muslim perspective The MCB specifically criticised those who seek to stigmatise and undermine Muslims for example by implying that Pakistanis often used as a proxy for Muslims vote en bloc as directed by Imams 284 The Sunday Mirror stated that many of the candidates campaigning for the Brexit Party were Islamophobic 285 The Times of India reported that supporters of Narendra Modi s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party BJP were actively campaigning for the Conservatives in 48 marginal seats 286 and the Today programme reported that it had seen WhatsApp messages sent to Hindus across the country urging them to vote Conservative 287 288 Some British Indians spoke out against what they saw as the BJP s meddling in the election 289 The Hindu Council UK was strongly critical of Labour going as far as to say that Labour is anti Hindu 290 and objected to the party s condemnation of the Indian government s actions resulting in the revocation of the special status of Jammu and Kashmir 288 The perceived Labour parachute candidate for Leicester East saw many British Indians disappointed many with Indian heritage 291 specifically no candidates of Indian descent were interviewed The party selected or re selected one candidate of Indian descent among its 39 safest seats 292 Endorsements editMain article Endorsements in the 2019 United Kingdom general election Newspapers organisations and individuals had endorsed parties or individual candidates for the election Media coverage editParty representation edit This section is missing information about coverage outside the first week of the campaign Please expand the section to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page June 2021 nbsp Overall evaluations in newspapers weighted by circulation 7 13 November 2019 293 The Conservatives were the only party with an overall positive coverage while Labour had the most negative coverage According to Loughborough University s Centre for Research in Communication and Culture CRCC media coverage of the first week of the campaign was dominated by the Conservatives and Labour with the leaders of both parties being the most represented campaigners Johnson with 20 8 Corbyn with 18 8 293 294 Due to this the election coverage was characterised as increasingly presidential as smaller parties have been marginalised 294 In television coverage Boris Johnson had a particularly high profile 30 4 against Corbyn s 22 6 Labour 32 and the Conservative Party 33 received about a third of TV coverage each In newspapers Labour received two fifths 40 of the coverage and the Conservatives 35 Spokespeople from both parties were quoted near equally with Conservative sources being the most prominent in both press and TV coverage in terms of frequency of appearance Sajid Javid and John McDonnell featured prominently during the first week because the economy of the United Kingdom was a top story for the media McDonnell had more coverage than Javid on both TV and in print 293 A large proportion of the newspaper coverage of Labour was negative 295 Writing in the British Journalism Review James Hanning said that when reporting and commenting on Johnson Conservative supporting newspapers made little mention of a track record that would have sunk any other politician 217 In the Loughborough analysis during the first week of the campaign for example the Conservatives had a positive press coverage score of 29 7 making them the only party to receive a positive overall presentation in the press Meanwhile Labour meanwhile had a negative score of 70 followed by the Brexit Party on 19 7 and the Liberal Democrats on 10 293 296 Over the whole campaign press hostility towards Labour had doubled compared with during the 2017 election and negative coverage of the Conservatives halved 185 The Liberal Democrats were the party with the most TV coverage in the first week after Labour and the Conservatives with an eighth of all reporting 13 In newspapers they received less coverage than the Brexit Party whose leader Nigel Farage received nearly as much coverage 12 3 as Johnson and Corbyn 17 4 each Most of this coverage regarded the Brexit Party s proposed electoral pact with the Conservatives 293 The Brexit Party 7 and the SNP 5 were fourth and fifth in terms of TV coverage respectively 293 Dominant issues edit As during the 2017 election and in line for British elections the electoral process was the most covered media topic for this election at 31 of all coverage 185 Brexit was the most prominent policy issue on both TV 18 and in the press 11 followed by the economy and health 8 and 7 of all coverage respectively 185 There was little focused analysis of what the implementation of Brexit policies might mean which contrasted with the more detailed analysis often undertaken of other manifesto commitments such as those on the economy 185 Wales Scotland and Northern Ireland s place within the United Kingdom received some prominence on TV but little coverage in the press 185 Standards scandals and Minorities religion received relatively significant discussion in large part relating to allegations of antisemitism in the Labour party and in the prior case an incident when Johnson was accused of reacting unsympathetically to an image of an ill child without a bed in hospital 185 Coverage of immigration and border controls fell overall from to 2017 while focus on environmental issues slightly increased 185 Gender balance edit Of the 20 most prominent spokespeople in media coverage of the first week of the election period five were women with Nicola Sturgeon the SNP leader and first minister of Scotland in seventh place the most featured 293 Women including citizens experts pollsters businesspeople trade union representatives and the like featured in 23 9 of coverage and men in 76 1 Men spoke three times as much as women in TV coverage and five times as much in newspaper coverage 293 297 Members of Parliament not standing for re election editMain article List of MPs who stood down at the 2019 United Kingdom general election 74 members of Parliament MPs who held seats at the end of Parliament did not stand for re election Of these 32 were Conservative MPs 20 were Labour 3 were Liberal Democrats and 16 were independents The number of MPs retiring was higher than the 2017 general election when 31 stood down 298 299 Opinion polling editMain article Opinion polling for the 2019 United Kingdom general election The chart below depicts the results of opinion polls mostly only of voters in Great Britain conducted from the 2017 general election until the election The line plotted is the average of the last 15 polls and the larger circles at the end represent the actual results of the election The graph shows that the Conservatives and Labour polled to similar levels from mid 2017 to mid 2019 Following Johnson s election in July the Conservatives established a clear lead over Labour and simultaneously support for the Brexit Party declined from its peak in summer 2019 The Spreadex columns below cover bets on the number of seats each party would win with the midpoint between asking and selling price nbsp Great Britain opinion polling moving average is calculated from the last 15 polls Conservatives Labour Liberal Democrats Brexit Party SNP amp Plaid Cymru Greens Independent Group for Change UKIPPredictions three weeks before the vote edit The first past the post system used in the United Kingdom general elections means that the number of seats won is not directly related to vote share Thus several approaches are used to convert polling data and other information into seat predictions The table below lists some of the predictions Parties Electoral Calculus 300 as of 20 November 2019 Election Maps UK 301 as of 17 November 2019 Elections Etc 302 as of 20 November 2019 BritainElects 303 as of 20 November 2019Conservatives 365 346 354 346Labour Party 201 211 206 211SNP 46 51 45 51Liberal Democrats 15 18 25 24Plaid Cymru 4 4 4 4Green Party 1 1 1 1Brexit Party 0 0 0 0Others 18 304 19 305 18 18Overall result probability Conservative 80 seat majority Conservative 42 seat majority Conservative 58 seat majority Conservative 42 seat majorityPredictions two weeks before the vote edit Parties Electoral Calculus 300 306 as of 27 November 2019 Election Maps UK 307 as of 28 November 2019 Elections Etc 308 as of 27 November 2019 YouGov 309 310 as of 27 November 2019Conservatives 342 338 353 359Labour Party 224 226 208 211SNP 41 45 44 43Liberal Democrats 19 14 23 13Plaid Cymru 4 5 4 4Green Party 1 1 1 1Brexit Party 0 0 0 0Others 19 311 19 312 19 19Overall result Conservative 34 seat majority Conservative 26 seat majority Conservative 56 seat majority Conservative 68 seat majorityNote Elections Etc does not add up to 650 seats due to rounding the speaker is shown under Others and not Labour and majority figures assume all elected members take up their seats Predictions one week before the vote edit Below are listed predictions based upon polls Parties Electoral Calculus 300 as of 8 December 2019 Election Maps UK 313 as of 6 December 2019 Elections Etc 314 as of 5 December 2019 UK Elect 315 as of 8 December 2019 Graphnile 316 as of 11 December 2019 Spreadex 317 as of 5 December 2019Conservatives 348 345 346 354 352 341Labour Party 225 224 218 212 221 220SNP 41 43 45 43 52 44 5Liberal Democrats 13 14 19 17 N A 21Plaid Cymru 4 4 4 4 N A 4Green Party 1 1 1 1 N A 1 5Brexit Party 0 0 0 0 N A 1 75Others 19 19 318 19 319 19 320 25 N AOverall result Conservative 46 seat majority Conservative 40 seat majority Conservative 42 seat majority Conservative 58 seat majority Conservative 56 seat majority Conservative 32 seat majorityNote Elections Etc does not add up to 650 seats due to rounding the speaker is shown under Others and not Labour and majority figures assume all elected members take up their seats Below are listed predictions based upon betting odds assuming the favourite wins in each constituency Parties Oddschecker 321 Conservatives 351Labour Party 210SNP 44Liberal Democrats 18Plaid Cymru 4Green Party 1Brexit Party 0Others 19 322 Too close to call 3Overall result Conservative 52 seat majorityNote The speaker is shown under Others and not Labour and majority figures assume all elected members take up their seats Final predictions edit Parties YouGov 323 as of 10 December 2019 Electoral Calculus 324 as of 12 December 2019 Election Maps UK 325 as of 12 December 2019 Elections Etc 326 as of 12 December 2019 UK Elect 327 as of 11 December 2019 Spreadex 328 as of 11 December 2019Conservatives 339 351 344 341 348 340Labour Party 231 224 223 224 217 222SNP 41 41 45 43 44 43Liberal Democrats 15 13 14 19 17 21Plaid Cymru 4 2 4 4 4 4Green Party 1 1 1 1 1 1 5Brexit Party 0 0 0 1 0 1Others 19 18 329 18 330 19 19 331 N AOverall result Conservative 28 seat majority Conservative 52 seat majority Conservative 38 seat majority Conservative 32 seat majority Conservative 46 seat majority Conservative 30 seat majorityExit poll edit An exit poll conducted by Ipsos MORI for the BBC ITV and Sky News was published at the end of voting at 10 pm predicting the number of seats for each party 332 333 Parties Seats ChangeConservative Party 368 nbsp 51Labour Party 191 nbsp 71Scottish National Party 55 nbsp 20Liberal Democrats 13 nbsp 1Plaid Cymru 3 nbsp 1Green Party 1 nbsp Brexit Party 0 New partyOthers 19 nbsp Conservative 86 seat majorityResults editFor further results see Results breakdown of the 2019 United Kingdom general election For complete results by individual constituency see Results of the 2019 United Kingdom general election Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org nbsp Equal area projection of constituencies nbsp Seats won in the election outer ring against number of votes inner ring nbsp Results of the 2019 general election by party vote share Conservative gt 70 Conservative 60 70 Conservative 50 60 Conservative lt 50 Labour gt 70 Labour 60 70 Labour 50 60 Labour lt 50 Nationalist gt 50 Nationalist 45 50 Nationalist 40 45 Nationalist lt 40 Republican gt 50 Republican 45 50 Republican 40 45 Republican lt 40 Unionist 45 50 Unionist 40 45 Unionist lt 40 Liberal Democrats gt 50 Liberal Democrats lt 50 Others nbsp Constituencies gained in the 2019 general election animated version nbsp Map detailing constituencies in which the Labour Party gained in vote percentage in the 2019 general electionThe Conservative Party won securing 365 seats out of 650 giving them an overall majority of 80 seats in the House of Commons They gained seats in several Labour Party strongholds in Northern England that had been held by the party for decades and which had formed the red wall for instance the constituency of Bishop Auckland which elected a Conservative MP for the first time in its 134 year history This marked a fourth consecutive general election defeat for the Labour Party In the worst result for the party in 84 years 334 despite a better vote share than other losses as in 1931 1983 1987 and 2010 Labour won 202 seats which was the lowest number since 1935 and a loss of 60 compared to the previous election 335 336 The Liberal Democrats won 11 seats down 1 despite significantly increasing their share of the popular vote Ed Davey former Cameron Clegg coalition cabinet minister and MP for Kingston and Surbiton was the winner of the 2020 Liberal Democrats leadership election This came after Jo Swinson lost her seat to Amy Callaghan of the SNP by 150 votes and was disqualified from continuing as leader of the party Swinson also became the first party leader to lose their seat since Liberal Party leader Archibald Sinclair in 1945 337 While the Conservatives gained support in England and Wales they lost support in Scotland in the face of a major SNP advance The Conservatives won in England advancing by 1 7 and gaining 48 seats to win 345 out of 533 while Labour fell back by 8 and lost 47 seats to win just 180 338 Labour won in Wales but lost 8 of its 2017 vote share and six seats retaining 22 out of 40 while the Conservatives advanced by 2 5 and gained six seats winning 14 in total 339 The SNP won by a landslide in Scotland advancing by 8 1 and gaining 13 seats to win 48 out of 59 gaining several seats from the Conservatives and Labour The Conservatives lost 3 5 of their 2017 vote share and half their seats while Labour was reduced to one Scottish seat Edinburgh South This was the same Scottish seat from the 2015 17 Parliament that returned Ian Murray as the country s sole Labour MP 340 Among the Labour MPs who lost their seats in Scotland was Lesley Laird deputy leader of Scottish Labour and Shadow Secretary of State for Scotland 341 In Northern Ireland nationalist political parties won more seats than unionist ones for the first time Nigel Dodds the DUP s leader in Westminster lost his seat in Belfast North 342 Analysis edit The results have been attributed to Leave supporting areas backing the Conservatives the Conservatives broadening their appeal to working class voters and the Conservatives making gains in the Midlands and the north of England 343 Most notable was the red wall turning blue in the election which greatly contributed to the Conservative majority In exit polls conducted by Opinium 43 of voters who did not vote for the Labour party cited the leadership as their reason 344 Among those who did not vote for the Conservative party the cited reason was equally split between their stance on Brexit and the leadership with both at 26 Several commentators stated that the party s loss was due to a complicated manifesto and Brexit policy a poor approach to campaigning and the unpopularity of Corbyn s leadership 345 346 347 A YouGov post election survey determined that the age over which voters were more likely to opt for the Conservatives than for Labour was 39 down from 47 in the 2017 election In contrast to previous elections the YouGov survey additionally found that a plurality of voters in the DE s NRS social grade comprising the unemployed state pensioners and semi skilled and unskilled workers had opted for the Conservatives over Labour 348 This change reflects the collapse of the Red Wall which has a plurality of people in the DE classification according to the ONS 349 Between 26 and 33 of voters engaged in tactical voting as they said that they were trying to prevent a victory by the party they liked least 350 351 Recommendation by tactical voting websites had some benefit for Liberal Democrat candidates 352 The new Parliament reportedly had the highest number of openly LGBT MPs in the world with 20 Conservative MPs 15 Labour MPs and 10 SNP MPs who identify as LGBT For the first time in both cases the majority of elected Labour and Liberal Democrat MPs were female 353 354 Summary edit A summarised results of the parties that won seats at the election is shown below nbsp Results by constituencies nbsp Results by regionsParty Leader MPs VotesOf total Of totalConservative Party Boris Johnson 365 56 2 365 650 13 966 454 43 6 Labour Party Jeremy Corbyn 202 31 1 202 650 10 269 051 32 1 Scottish National Party Nicola Sturgeon 48 n 4 7 4 48 650 1 242 380 3 9 Liberal Democrats Jo Swinson 11 1 7 11 650 3 696 419 11 6 Democratic Unionist Party Arlene Foster 8 1 2 8 650 244 128 0 8 Sinn Fein Mary Lou McDonald 7 1 1 7 650 181 853 0 6 Plaid Cymru Adam Price 4 0 6 4 650 153 265 0 5 Social Democratic and Labour Party Colum Eastwood 2 0 3 2 650 118 737 0 4 Green Party of England and Wales Jonathan BartleySian Berry 1 0 2 1 650 835 597 2 61 Alliance Party of Northern Ireland Naomi Long 1 0 2 1 650 134 115 0 4 Speaker Lindsay Hoyle 1 0 2 1 650 26 831 0 1 Full results edit e d Results of the December 2019 general election to the House of Commons of the United Kingdom 355 356 nbsp Political party Leader Candidates MPs 357 VotesTotal Gained Lost Net Of total Total Of total Change Conservative Boris Johnson 635 365 58 10 nbsp 48 56 2 13 966 454 43 63 1 2Labour Jeremy Corbyn 631 202 1 61 nbsp 60 31 1 10 269 051 32 08 7 9Liberal Democrats Jo Swinson 611 11 3 4 nbsp 1 1 7 3 696 419 11 55 4 2Scottish National Party Nicola Sturgeon 59 48 14 1 nbsp 13 7 4 1 242 380 3 88 0 8Green Party of England and Wales Sian Berry and Jonathan Bartley 472 1 0 0 0 0 2 835 597 2 61 1 1Brexit Party Nigel Farage 275 644 257 2 01DUP Arlene Foster 17 8 0 2 nbsp 2 1 2 244 128 0 76 0 1Sinn Fein Mary Lou McDonald 15 7 1 1 0 1 1 181 853 0 57 0 2Plaid Cymru Adam Price 36 4 0 0 0 0 6 153 265 0 48 0 0Alliance Naomi Long 18 1 1 0 nbsp 1 0 2 134 115 0 42 0 2SDLP Colum Eastwood 15 2 2 0 nbsp 2 0 3 118 737 0 37 0 1Ulster Unionist Steve Aiken 16 93 123 0 29 0 0Yorkshire Christopher Whitwood 28 29 201 0 09 0 0Scottish Greens Patrick Harvie amp Lorna Slater 22 28 122 0 09Speaker Lindsay Hoyle 1 1 1 1 0 0 2 26 831 0 08 0 0UKIP Patricia Mountain interim 44 22 817 0 07 1 8Ashfield Ind Jason Zadrozny 1 13 498 0 04 0 0Liberal Steve Radford 19 10 876 0 03 0 0The Independent Group for Change Anna Soubry 3 10 006 0 03Aontu Peadar Toibin 7 9 814 0 03Monster Raving Loony Howling Laud Hope 24 9 739 0 03 0 0People Before Profit Collective 2 7 526 0 02Birkenhead Social Justice Frank Field 1 7 285 0 02CPA Sidney Cordle 29 6 486 0 02 0 0Heavy Woollen Independents Aleksandar Lukic 1 6 432 0 02SDP William Clouston 20 3 295 0 01 0 0Animal Welfare Vanessa Hudson 6 3 086 0 01 0 0North East Mark Burdon 2 2 637 0 01Lincolnshire Independent Marianne Overton 1 1 999 0 01Green Party Northern Ireland Clare Bailey 3 1 996 0 01English Democrat Robin Tilbrook 5 1 987 0 01 0 0Libertarian Adam Brown 6 1 780 0 01 0 0Mebyon Kernow Dick Cole 1 1 660 0 01 0 0Proud of Oldham and Saddleworth Paul Errock 2 1 606 0 01Independent Network Ian Stephens 1 1 542 0 0Gwlad Gwyn Wigley Evans 3 1 515 0 00Cynon Valley Andrew Chainey 1 1 322 0 00Veterans and People s Robin Horsfall 2 1 219 0 00Burnley and Padiham Party Mark Payne 1 1 162 0 00Shropshire Party Robert Jones 1 1 141 0 00Putting Cumbria First Jonathan Davies 1 1 070 0 00Peace John Morris 2 960 0 00Wycombe Independents Matt Knight 1 926 0 00Justice amp Anti Corruption Donald Jerrard 3 728 0 00Christian Jeff Green 2 705 0 00 0 0Renew Julie Girling 4 545 0 00 0 0Workers Revolutionary Joshua Ogunleye 5 524 0 00 0 0BNP Adam Walker 1 510 0 00 0 0Parties with fewer than 500 votes each 40 5 697 0 02Independent non party candidates 224 1 nbsp 1 206 486 0 64Blank and invalid votes 117 919 Total 3320 650 0 100 32 014 110 358 100 0 0Registered voters and turnout 47 587 254 67 52 1 3In total the Green Party of England and Wales Scottish Greens and Green Party Northern Ireland received 865 715 votes This may be unclear from the table and sources which cite the total of the Greens in the whole of the United Kingdom rather than by region nbsp National vote share as a percentage between 1997 and 2019 nbsp The parliamentary disproportionality in the 2019 election was 11 84 using the Gallagher Index Vote shareConservative 43 6 Labour 32 2 Liberal Democrat 11 6 Scottish National 3 9 Green 2 7 Brexit Party 2 0 Democratic Unionist 0 8 Sinn Fein 0 6 Plaid Cymru 0 5 SDLP 0 4 Others 1 4 Vote share of seats contestedScottish National 45 5 Conservative 44 9 Labour 33 0 Democratic Unionist 32 6 Sinn Fein 27 2 SDLP 17 8 Liberal Democrat 12 3 Plaid Cymru 11 2 Brexit Party 5 1 Green 3 4 Parliamentary seatsConservative 56 2 Labour 31 1 Scottish National 7 4 Liberal Democrat 1 7 Democratic Unionist 1 2 Sinn Fein 1 1 Plaid Cymru 0 6 SDLP 0 3 Green 0 2 Alliance 0 2 Speaker 0 2 Parliamentary seats out of total contestedScottish National 81 4 Conservative 57 5 Democratic Unionist 47 1 Sinn Fein 46 7 Labour 32 0 SDLP 13 3 Plaid Cymru 11 1 Alliance 5 6 Liberal Democrat 1 8 Green 0 2 Voter demographics edit Ipsos MORI edit Below is listed Ipsos MORI s demographic breakdown The 2019 UK general election vote in Great Britain 359 Social group Con Lab Lib Dem Others LeadTotal vote 45 33 12 10 12GenderMale 46 31 12 11 15Female 43 34 12 11 9Age18 24 19 62 9 10 4325 34 27 51 11 11 2435 44 36 39 13 12 345 54 46 28 14 12 1855 64 49 27 11 13 2265 64 17 11 8 47Men by age18 24 22 59 10 9 3725 34 31 48 10 11 1735 54 45 30 14 11 1555 58 21 11 10 37Women by age18 24 17 64 9 10 4725 34 23 54 12 11 3135 54 37 36 14 13 155 59 21 12 8 38Social classAB 45 30 16 9 15C1 45 32 12 11 13C2 47 32 9 12 15DE 41 39 9 11 2Men by social classAB 47 29 15 9 18C1 47 31 12 10 16C2 48 30 8 14 18DE 43 37 8 12 6Women by social classAB 43 31 17 10 11C1 44 33 13 10 11C2 46 33 9 12 13DE 39 40 9 12 1Housing tenureOwned 57 22 12 9 35Mortgage 43 33 14 10 10Social renter 33 45 7 15 12Private renter 31 46 11 12 15Ethnic groupWhite 48 29 12 11 19BME 20 64 12 4 44QualificationsNo qualifications 59 23 7 11 36Other qualifications 47 33 10 10 14Degree or higher 34 39 17 10 5EU referendum voteRemain 20 48 21 11 28Leave 73 15 3 9 58Did not vote 26 52 10 12 262017 general election voteConservative 88 3 6 3 85Labour 8 80 8 4 72Lib Dem 11 19 63 7 44Did not vote 33 46 9 12 13Aged 18 34 by social classAB 26 52 13 9 26C1 24 55 10 11 31C2 27 51 9 13 24DE 18 63 8 11 45Aged 35 54 by social classAB 42 29 20 9 13C1 44 32 13 11 12C2 44 31 10 15 13DE 35 42 9 14 7Aged 55 by social classAB 60 17 14 9 43C1 59 20 13 8 39C2 61 21 8 10 40DE 53 26 9 12 27YouGov edit Below is listed YouGov s demographic breakdown 2019 UK general election vote in Great Britain demographic breakdown 360 Social group Con Lab Lib Dem SNP Green Brexit Others Lead Total vote 44 32 12 4 3 2 3 12GenderMale 46 31 12 4 3 2 2 15Female 44 35 11 4 3 2 1 9Age18 24 21 56 11 6 4 1 1 3525 29 23 54 12 4 4 1 1 3130 39 30 46 14 5 3 1 2 1640 49 41 35 13 5 3 2 2 650 59 49 28 12 4 3 3 2 2160 69 57 22 11 3 2 3 2 3570 67 14 11 2 2 2 2 53Men by age18 24 28 46 12 7 4 2 2 1825 49 35 40 14 5 3 2 2 1550 64 51 28 12 3 3 4 3 2365 64 15 11 3 1 4 2 49Women by age18 24 15 65 10 5 4 1 5025 49 32 45 12 5 3 1 1 1350 64 50 28 12 4 3 2 1 2265 64 18 10 2 2 2 2 46Social classAB 42 32 16 4 3 1 1 10C1 43 34 12 4 3 2 2 9C2 49 31 9 4 3 3 1 18DE 47 34 8 4 2 3 1 13Highest educational levelGCSE or lower 58 25 11 4 2 3 1 33Medium 48 31 11 4 3 2 2 17High degree or above 29 43 17 4 4 1 2 14Household earningsLess than 20 000 45 34 9 5 3 3 4 11 20 000 39 999 47 31 11 4 2 2 3 16 40 000 69 999 43 35 13 4 3 1 1 8Greater than 70 000 40 31 20 4 3 1 1 9Seats changing hands editSeats which changed allegiance edit Main article List of MPs who lost their seat in the 2019 United Kingdom general election Labour to Conservative 54 Ashfield Barrow and Furness Bassetlaw Birmingham Northfield Bishop Auckland Blackpool South Blyth Valley Bolsover Bolton North East Bridgend Burnley Bury North Bury South Clwyd South Colne Valley Crewe and Nantwich Darlington Delyn Derby North Dewsbury Don Valley Dudley North Gedling Great Grimsby Heywood and Middleton High Peak Hyndburn Ipswich Keighley Kensington Leigh Lincoln Newcastle under Lyme North West Durham Penistone and Stocksbridge Peterborough Redcar Rother Valley Scunthorpe Sedgefield Stockton South Stoke on Trent Central Stoke on Trent North Stroud Vale of Clwyd Wakefield Warrington South West Bromwich East West Bromwich West Wolverhampton North East Wolverhampton South West Workington Wrexham Ynys Mon Conservative to SNP 7 Aberdeen South Angus Ayr Carrick and Cumnock East Renfrewshire Gordon Ochil and South Perthshire StirlingLabour to SNP 6 Coatbridge Chryston and Bellshill East Lothian Glasgow North East Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath Midlothian Rutherglen and Hamilton WestLiberal Democrat to Conservative 3 Carshalton and Wallington Eastbourne North NorfolkConservative to Liberal Democrat 2 Richmond Park St AlbansDUP to Sinn Fein 1 Belfast NorthDUP to SDLP 1 Belfast SouthSpeaker to Conservative 1 BuckinghamLabour to Speaker 1 ChorleyLiberal Democrat to SNP 1 East DunbartonshireSinn Fein to SDLP 1 FoyleIndependent to Alliance 1 North DownSNP to Liberal Democrat 1 North East FifeConservative to Labour 1 PutneyReaction and aftermath edit nbsp Boris Johnson making first statement outside 10 Downing Street after the electionIn his victory speech Johnson described the result as a mandate for leaving the EU and promised to do so by 31 January 361 The United Kingdom left the EU on 31 January 2020 362 It completed its separation from the organisation at the end of the year 363 The election led to both Labour and the Liberal Democrats having leadership contests the former as Corbyn resigned the latter as Swinson failed to be elected as an MP Corbyn portrayed the 2019 election results primarily as a consequence of attitudes surrounding Brexit rather than a rejection of Labour s social and economic policies In an interview held 13 December 2019 Corbyn said the election was taken over ultimately by Brexit and said that he was proud of the Labour manifesto 364 The Labour leadership campaign was marked by conflicting analyses of what had gone wrong for the party in the general election 365 There was debate as to whether Corbyn s unpopularity or their position on Brexit was more significant 366 The 2020 Labour Together report published by internal Labour party figures after Keir Starmer was elected as leader highlighted issues like Corbyn s unpopularity the party s Brexit policy and poor seat targeting as well as long term changes in Labour s electoral coalition 367 In openDemocracy Jo Michell and Rob Calvert Jump argued that the report underplayed the fact the geographical redistributions stating that Labour s decline in the North Midlands and Wales is not the result of a dramatic collapse in its vote share but changes in the distribution of votes between parties and constituencies 368 Successful Liberal Democrats MPs were critical in private of how the party had decided to advocate revoking the exercise of Article 50 and the communication of that policy Some criticised the election campaign for being hubristic with its initial defining message that Swinson could be the country s next prime minister 369 Ed Davey the party s co acting leader after the election argued that the unpopularity of Corbyn lost the Liberal Democrats votes to the Conservatives 370 Wera Hobhouse who was re elected by a majority of 12 322 371 argued that the party had been wrong to pursue a policy of equidistance between Labour and the Conservatives in the general election campaign Instead she argued that the party should have concentrated more on campaigning against the Conservatives 372 The SNP s leader Nicola Sturgeon described the result as a clear mandate to hold a new referendum for Scottish independence 9 The British government said that it would not agree to a referendum being held and the Scottish government announced a few months later that it would put the issue on hold due to the COVID 19 pandemic in the United Kingdom 373 See also edit2010s in United Kingdom political history 2019 in politics and government 2019 United Kingdom general election in England 2019 United Kingdom general election in Scotland 2019 United Kingdom general election in Wales 2019 United Kingdom general election in Northern Ireland Elections in the United Kingdom List of general elections in the United KingdomNotes edit Given that Sinn Fein members of Parliament MPs practise abstentionism and do not take their seats while the Speaker and deputies do not vote the number of MPs needed for a majority is in practice slightly lower 1 Sinn Fein won 7 seats meaning a practical majority requires 322 MPs The figure does not include Sir Lindsay Hoyle the speaker of the House of Commons who was included in the Labour seat total by some media outlets By longstanding convention the speaker severs all ties to their affiliated party upon being elected as speaker a b Nicola Sturgeon sits in the Scottish Parliament for Glasgow Southside Ian Blackford MP for Ross Skye and Lochaber was the SNP leader at Westminster a b The number includes Neale Hanvey who was suspended from the party at the time of his election and thus took his seat as an independent Given that the 7 Sinn Fein MPs practise abstentionism do not take their seats and the speaker and deputies do not vote they effectively had an 87 seat working majority 1 Persons without a permanent or fixed address can make a declaration of local connection to a particular location in order to register 31 In the case of a British citizen who moved abroad before the age of 18 they can vote if their parent or guardian was on the Electoral Register in the last fifteen years The deadline for the receipt and determination of anonymous electoral registration applications is one working day before the publication date of the notice of alteration to the Electoral Register that is the sixth working day before polling day 37 Adam Price sits in the Senedd for Carmarthen East and Dinefwr The party s leader in the House of Commons is Liz Saville Roberts the MP for Dwyfor Meirionnydd Bartley sits as a councillor on Lambeth Council while Berry sits on the London Assembly Bartley stood in the Dulwich and West Norwood constituency as the Green Party and Unite to Remain candidate The party s sole member in the House of Commons is Caroline Lucas MP for Brighton Pavilion and two time former party leader Farage was sitting as a member of the European Parliament MEP for South East England The party has no MPs in the House of Commons All British MEPs vacated their seats on 31 January 2020 Arlene Foster is a member of the Northern Ireland Assembly for Fermanagh and South Tyrone The party s leader in the House of Commons is Jeffrey Donaldson the MP for Lagan Valley Mary Lou McDonald sits as a member of the Dail Eireann for Dublin Central Sinn Fein adopts an abstentionist policy at Westminster and none of its seven MPs has taken their seat In addition to being a Westminster MP Colum Eastwood is a member of the Northern Ireland Assembly for Foyle Steve Aiken is a member of the Northern Ireland Assembly for South Antrim Naomi Long is a member of the Northern Ireland Assembly for Belfast East and was previously one of the three MEPs for Northern Ireland The party s sole representative at Westminster is Stephen Farry who is MP for North Down Sylvia Hermon was originally elected as the Ulster Unionist Party MP for North Down in 2001 before becoming an independent in 2010 due to her opposition to the Ulster Conservatives and Unionists alliance She stood down at the 2019 election Channel 4 described this as a leaders only debate and refused to accept Michael Gove as substitute 232 References edit a b StackPath 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