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2024 United Kingdom general election

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Next United Kingdom general election
United Kingdom
← 2019 No later than 28 January 2025

All 650 seats in the House of Commons
326 seats needed for a majority
Party Leader Current seats
Conservative Rishi Sunak 348
Labour Keir Starmer 200
SNP Humza Yousaf 43
Liberal Democrats Ed Davey 15
DUP Jeffrey Donaldson 8
Sinn Féin Mary Lou McDonald 7
Plaid Cymru Rhun ap Iorwerth 3
SDLP Colum Eastwood 2
Alba Alex Salmond 2
Green Carla Denyer &
Adrian Ramsay
1
Alliance Naomi Long 1
Workers Party George Galloway 1
Reform UK Richard Tice 1
Independent n/a 16
Speaker Lindsay Hoyle 1
Incumbent Prime Minister
Rishi Sunak
Conservative

The next United Kingdom general election must be held no later than 28 January 2025.[1][2] It will determine the composition of the House of Commons, which determines the next Government of the United Kingdom. Significant constituency boundary changes will be in effect, the first such changes since before the 2010 general election. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has stated his intention to hold the election in the second half of 2024.

Background

The next election is scheduled to be held no later than 28 January 2025,[1] with Parliament being dissolved no later than 17 December 2024. The date falls on a Tuesday, and there is a convention that British general elections are held on Thursdays, but this is not a strict requirement of the law.[3] The election of 1931 was held on a Tuesday, and all UK general elections held since 1935 have been held on Thursdays.

Originally the next election was scheduled to take place on 2 May 2024, however the Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011 was repealed under the Dissolution and Calling of Parliament Act 2022, thus the incumbent prime minister can choose to dissolve Parliament before the fifth anniversary of its first meeting and call an early election.

The results of the 2019 general election are given below, alongside the current numbers in the House of Commons. Numbers have changed through 22 by-elections and a number of defections and suspensions of members from their party that have taken place throughout the present parliament.

This table relates to the composition of the House of Commons after the 2024 UK general election and summarises the changes in party affiliation that took place during the 2024–present Parliament.

Affiliation Members
Elected
in 2024
[4]
Current[5] Differ­ence
Labour[a] 411[b] 402 Decrease 9
Conservative 121 121 Steady
Liberal Democrats 72 72 Steady
Independent 6 15[c] Increase 9
SNP 9 9 Steady
Sinn Féin 7 7 Steady
DUP 5 5 Steady
Reform UK 5 5 Steady
Green (E&W) 4 4 Steady
Plaid Cymru 4 4 Steady
SDLP 2 2 Steady
Alliance 1 1 Steady
TUV 1 1 Steady
UUP 1 1 Steady
Speaker 1 1 Steady
Vacant 0 0 Steady
Total 650 650 Steady
Total voting[d] 639 639 Steady
Majority of voting 181 165[9] Steady

For full details of changes during the 2024–present Parliament, see By-elections and Defections, suspensions and resignations.

Before this general election, in March 2022 the Labour Party had abandoned all-women shortlists, citing legal advice that continuing to use them for choosing parliamentary candidates would be an unlawful practice under the Equality Act 2010, since the majority of Labour MPs were now women.[10]

In March 2024 Reform UK announced an electoral pact with the Northern Irish unionist party TUV.[11] As such, Reform will not stand any candidates in Northern Ireland.

Electoral system

General elections in the United Kingdom are organised using first-past-the-post voting. The Conservative Party, which won a majority at the 2019 general election, included pledges in its manifesto to remove the 15-year limit on voting for British citizens living abroad, and to introduce a voter identification requirement in Great Britain.[12] Provisions for these changes have been enacted in the Elections Act 2022.

Boundary reviews

The Sixth Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies, which proposed reducing the number of constituencies from 650 to 600, was commenced in 2011, but temporarily stopped in January 2013. Following the 2015 general election, each of the four parliamentary boundary commissions of the United Kingdom recommenced their review process in April 2016.[13][14][15] The four commissions submitted their final recommendations to the Secretary of State on 5 September 2018[16][17] and made their reports public a week later.[18][19][20][16] However, the proposals were never put forward for approval before the calling of the general election held on 12 December 2019, and in December 2020 the reviews were formally abandoned under the Schedule to the Parliamentary Constituencies Act 2020.[21]

A projection by psephologists Colin Rallings and Michael Thrasher of how the 2017 votes would have translated to seats under the 2018 boundaries suggested the changes would have been beneficial to the Conservative Party and detrimental to the Labour Party.[22][23]

In March 2020, Cabinet Office minister Chloe Smith confirmed that the 2023 Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies would be based on retaining 650 seats.[24][25] The previous relevant legislation was amended by the Parliamentary Constituencies Act 2020[26] and the four boundary commissions formally launched their 2023 reviews on 5 January 2021.[27][28][29][30] They were required to issue their final reports prior to 1 July 2023.[21] Once the reports have been laid before Parliament, Orders in Council giving effect to the final proposals must be made within four months, unless "there are exceptional circumstances". Prior to the Parliamentary Constituencies Act 2020, boundary changes could not be implemented until they were approved by both Houses of Parliament.

The boundary changes were approved at a meeting of the Privy Council on 15 November 2023,[31] and came into force on 29 November 2023,[32] meaning that the general election will be contested on these new boundaries.[33]

Notional 2019 results

The notional results of the 2019 election, if they had taken place under boundaries recommended by the Sixth Periodic Review.

The election will be contested under new constituency boundaries established by the Sixth Boundary Review in 2023. Consequently, media outlets tend to report seat gains and losses as compared to notional results. These are the results if all votes cast in 2019 were unchanged, but regrouped by new constituency boundaries.[34] Notional results in the UK are always estimated, usually with the assistance of local election results, because vote counts at parliamentary elections in the UK do not produce figures at any level below the whole constituency.

In England, seats will be redistributed away from Northern England and towards Southern England due to the different rates of population growth. North West England and North East England will lose two seats each whereas South East England will gain seven seats and South West England will gain three seats.[35] Based on historic voting patterns, this is expected to help the Conservatives.[36] Based on these new boundaries, different parties would have won several constituencies with unchanged names but changed boundaries in 2019. For example, the Conservatives would have won Wirral West and Leeds North West instead of the Labour Party, but Labour would have won Pudsey and Heywood & Middleton instead of the Conservatives. Westmorland and Lonsdale, the constituency represented by former Liberal Democrat leader Tim Farron, is now notionally a Conservative seat.

In Scotland, 57 MPs would be elected, down from the 59 in 2019, with the following notional partisan composition of Scotland's parliamentary delegation:[37] The Scottish National Party would remain steady on 48 seats, despite two of their constituencies being dissolved. The Scottish Conservatives would likewise remain unchanged on six seats. Scottish Labour would have retained Edinburgh South, the sole constituency they won in 2019. The Scottish Liberal Democrats would have only won two seats (Edinburgh West and Orkney and Shetland) under the new boundaries if they had been contested in the 2019 general election, instead of the four they did win in 2019, due to the expanded electorates in the other two overcoming their slender majorities.

Under the new boundaries, Wales will lose eight seats, electing 32 MPs instead of the 40 they elected in 2019. Welsh Labour would have won 18 instead of the 22 MPs they elected in 2019, and the Welsh Conservatives 12 instead of 14. Due to the abolition and merging of rural constituencies in West Wales, Plaid Cymru would have only won two seats instead of four. Nonetheless, the boundaries are expected to cause difficulty for the Conservatives as more Labour-favourable areas are added to some of their safest seats.[38]

In Northern Ireland, the notional results are identical to the actual results of the 2019 general election in Northern Ireland.

Notional 2019 results on 2023 boundaries
Party MPs
2019 actual result 2019 notional result Change
Conservative 365 372 Increase 7
Labour 202 200 Decrease 2
SNP 48 48 Steady
Liberal Democrats 11 8 Decrease 3
DUP 8 8 Steady
Sinn Féin 7 7 Steady
Plaid Cymru 4 2 Decrease 2
SDLP 2 2 Steady
Green 1 1 Steady
Alliance 1 1 Steady
Speaker 1 1 Steady

Date of the election

At the 2019 general election, in which the Conservatives won a majority of 80 seats, the manifesto of the party contained a commitment to repeal the Fixed-term Parliaments Act due to "paralysis at a time when the country has needed decisive action".[39] In December 2020, the government published a draft Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011 (Repeal) Bill, later retitled the Dissolution and Calling of Parliament Act 2022.[40] This entered into force on 24 March 2022. The prime minister can again request the monarch to dissolve Parliament and call an early election with 25 working days' notice. Section 4 of the Act provided: "If it has not been dissolved earlier, a Parliament dissolves at the beginning of the day that is the fifth anniversary of the day on which it first met."

The Electoral Commission has confirmed that the 2019 Parliament must be dissolved, at the latest, by 17 December 2024, and that the next general election must take place no later than 28 January 2025.[41][42]

Possible dates

As per the legal requirements above, the next election must take place in 2024, or in January 2025. The latter possibility is seen as unlikely by analysts, because it would require the general election campaign to encompass the Christmas holiday period. However, it is widely expected that the incumbent Conservative government will delay the election as long as possible while it trails the opposition Labour Party in opinion polling.[43][44][45] On 18 December 2023, Sunak told journalists that the general election will take place in 2024, rather than January 2025.[2] On 4 January, he suggested the general election would probably be in the second half of 2024,[46] and later confirmed that, contrary to widespread speculation, it would not be held on the same day as the local elections in England on 2 May.[47]

Whitehall officials discouraged the election being held around 5 November 2024, to prevent clashing with the 2024 United States presidential election, for major security and market implications could result if two Five Eyes countries were to hold elections at the same time. The last time elections in the two countries overlapped was in 1964, when the elections were held less than three weeks before the United States presidential election that year.[48][49]

Candidates

MPs not standing for re-election

As of 26 March 2024, a total of 96 current members of Parliament have announced their intention not to stand for re-election. Four MPs — Nadine Dorries, Nigel Adams, Chris Skidmore (all Conservative) and Chris Pincher (independent, elected as Conservative) — announced their intention not to stand again but later resigned from Parliament before the election.[50][51][52][53][54][55]

Number of MP retirements by party affiliation
Party MPs retiring
Elected[e] Current
Conservative 64 61
Labour 19 17
SNP 9 8
Independent 0 6
Sinn Féin 2 2
Green 1 1
Plaid Cymru 1 1
Total 96
Members of Parliament not standing for re-election
MP Seat First elected Party Date announced
Douglas Ross Moray 2017 Conservative 14 October 2021[56]
Alex Cunningham Stockton North 2010 Labour 25 November 2021[57]
Margaret Hodge Barking 1994 Labour 2 December 2021[58]
Barry Sheerman Huddersfield 1979 Labour 4 December 2021[59]
Harriet Harman Camberwell and Peckham 1982[f] Labour 7 December 2021[60]
Alan Whitehead Southampton Test 1997 Labour 14 January 2022[61]
Charles Walker Broxbourne 2005 Conservative 1 February 2022[62]
Ben Bradshaw Exeter 1997 Labour 3 February 2022[63]
Wayne David Caerphilly 2001 Labour 11 February 2022[64]
Paul Blomfield Sheffield Central 2010 Labour 21 February 2022[65]
Rosie Winterton Doncaster Central 1997 Labour 27 February 2022[66]
Margaret Beckett Derby South 1974[g] Labour 25 March 2022[67]
Crispin Blunt Reigate 1997 Independent[h] 1 May 2022[68]
Mike Penning Hemel Hempstead 2005 Conservative 17 May 2022[69]
Adam Afriyie Windsor 2005 Conservative 22 July 2022[70]
Jon Cruddas Dagenham and Rainham 2001 Labour 28 July 2022[71]
Colleen Fletcher Coventry North East 2015 Labour 5 September 2022[72]
Andrew Percy Brigg and Goole 2010 Conservative 8 November 2022[73]
Hywel Williams Arfon 2001 Plaid Cymru 11 November 2022[74]
Chloe Smith Norwich North 2009 Conservative 22 November 2022[75]
William Wragg Hazel Grove 2015 Conservative 22 November 2022[76]
Gary Streeter South West Devon 1992[i] Conservative 25 November 2022[77]
Dehenna Davison Bishop Auckland 2019 Conservative 25 November 2022[78]
Sajid Javid Bromsgrove 2010 Conservative 2 December 2022[79]
Mark Pawsey Rugby 2010 Conservative 5 December 2022[80]
Matt Hancock West Suffolk 2010 Independent[h] 7 December 2022[81]
George Eustice Camborne and Redruth 2010 Conservative 18 January 2023[82]
Edward Timpson Eddisbury 2008[j] Conservative 1 February 2023[83]
Jo Gideon Stoke-on-Trent Central 2019 Conservative 9 February 2023[84]
Paul Beresford Mole Valley 1992[k] Conservative 13 February 2023[85]
Stephen McPartland Stevenage 2010 Conservative 13 February 2023[86]
Robin Walker Worcester 2010 Conservative 3 March 2023[87]
Graham Brady Altrincham and Sale West 1997 Conservative 7 March 2023[88]
Pauline Latham Mid Derbyshire 2010 Conservative 9 March 2023[89]
Gordon Henderson Sittingbourne and Sheppey 2010 Conservative 17 March 2023[90]
Craig Whittaker Calder Valley 2010 Conservative 21 March 2023[91]
Nicola Richards West Bromwich East 2019 Conservative 28 March 2023[92]
Henry Smith Crawley 2010 Conservative 31 March 2023[93]
John Howell Henley 2008 Conservative 11 April 2023[94]
Robert Goodwill Scarborough and Whitby 2005 Conservative 13 April 2023[95]
Julian Knight Solihull 2015 Independent[h] 21 April 2023[96]
Jonathan Djanogly Huntingdon 2001 Conservative 21 April 2023[97]
Matthew Offord Hendon 2010 Conservative 2 May 2023[98]
Conor McGinn St Helens North 2015 Independent[l] 5 May 2023[99]
Alister Jack Dumfries and Galloway 2017 Conservative 17 May 2023[100]
Richard Bacon South Norfolk 2001 Conservative 19 May 2023[101]
Dominic Raab Esher and Walton 2010 Conservative 22 May 2023[102]
Philip Dunne Ludlow 2005 Conservative 22 May 2023[103]
Margaret Greenwood Wirral West 2015 Labour 23 May 2023[104]
Andy Carter Warrington South 2019 Conservative 30 May 2023[105]
George Howarth Knowsley 1986[m] Labour 5 June 2023[106]
Ian Blackford Ross, Skye and Lochaber 2015 SNP 6 June 2023[107]
Caroline Lucas Brighton Pavilion 2010 Green Party 8 June 2023[108]
Will Quince Colchester 2015 Conservative 9 June 2023[109]
Royston Smith Southampton Itchen 2015 Conservative 9 June 2023[110]
Bill Cash Stone 1984[n] Conservative 10 June 2023[111]
Lucy Allan Telford 2015 Conservative 15 June 2023[112]
Peter Grant Glenrothes 2015 SNP 21 June 2023[113]
Angela Crawley Lanark and Hamilton East 2015 SNP 23 June 2023[114]
Steve Brine Winchester 2010 Conservative 23 June 2023[115]
Douglas Chapman Dunfermline and West Fife 2015 SNP 26 June 2023[116]
Chris Clarkson Heywood and Middleton 2019 Conservative 27 June 2023[117]
Greg Knight East Yorkshire 1983[o] Conservative 27 June 2023[118]
Stewart Hosie Dundee East 2005 SNP 28 June 2023[119]
Mhairi Black Paisley and Renfrewshire South 2015 SNP 4 July 2023[120]
John McNally Falkirk 2015 SNP 10 July 2023[121]
Ben Wallace Wyre and Preston North 2005[p] Conservative 15 July 2023[122]
Philippa Whitford Central Ayrshire 2015 SNP 18 July 2023[123]
Trudy Harrison Copeland 2017 Conservative 24 July 2023[124]
Stephen Hammond Wimbledon 2005 Conservative 14 September 2023[125]
David Jones Clwyd West 2005 Conservative 20 September 2023[126]
Alok Sharma Reading West 2010 Conservative 26 September 2023[127]
Chris Grayling Epsom and Ewell 2001 Conservative 6 October 2023[128]
Lisa Cameron East Kilbride, Strathaven and Lesmahagow 2015 Conservative[q] 17 October 2023[129]
John Baron Basildon and Billericay 2001[r] Conservative 25 October 2023[130]
Patrick Grady Glasgow North 2015 SNP 7 November 2023[131]
Nick Gibb Bognor Regis and Littlehampton 1997 Conservative 13 November 2023[132]
Bob Stewart Beckenham 2010 Independent[h] 18 November 2023[133]
James Duddridge Rochford and Southend East 2005 Conservative 20 November 2023[134]
Nick Brown Newcastle upon Tyne East 1983 Independent[l] 12 December 2023[135]
Karen Buck Westminster North 1997[s] Labour 19 January 2024[136]
Oliver Heald North East Hertfordshire 1992[t] Conservative 22 January 2024[137]
Mike Freer Finchley and Golders Green 2010 Conservative 31 January 2024[138]
Christina Rees Neath 2015 Labour 1 February 2024[139]
Bob Neill Bromley and Chislehurst 2006 Conservative 1 February 2024[140]
Kwasi Kwarteng Spelthorne 2010 Conservative 6 February 2024[141]
Nickie Aiken Cities of London and Westminster 2019 Conservative 7 February 2024[142]
Tracey Crouch Chatham and Aylesford 2010 Conservative 12 February 2024[143]
Francie Molloy Mid Ulster 2013 Sinn Féin 13 February 2024[144]
Kieran Mullan Crewe and Nantwich 2019 Conservative 13 February 2024[145]
Mickey Brady Newry and Armagh 2015 Sinn Féin 19 February 2024[146]
Ian Mearns Gateshead 2010 Labour 21 February 2024[147]
Paul Scully Sutton and Cheam 2015 Conservative 4 March 2024[148]
Theresa May Maidenhead 1997 Conservative 8 March 2024[149]
Brandon Lewis Great Yarmouth 2010 Conservative 14 March 2024[150]
James Heappey Wells 2015 Conservative 15 March 2024[151]
Robert Halfon Harlow 2010 Conservative 26 March 2024[152]

MPs deselected or seeking a new constituency

Some sitting MPs have not been selected by their party to recontest their seat (or a successor seat). Options available to these MPs include standing down, challenging their non-selection, seeking selection for another seat, and contesting the election under a different banner.

Members of Parliament deselected, suspended or expelled
MP Constituency First elected Party (as elected) Reason
Richard Bacon South Norfolk 2001 Conservative Deselected by the constituency's Conservative Association and subsequently announced he would stand down[153][101]
Andrew Bridgen North West Leicestershire 2010 Conservative Expelled from the Conservative Party and now sits as an independent MP after joining the Reclaim Party for a time; he plans to contest his current seat at the next election as an independent[154][155]
Jeremy Corbyn Islington North 1983 Labour Excluded from selection by the National Executive Committee of the Labour Party; Corbyn sits as an independent but remains a party member[156]
Jonathan Djanogly Huntingdon 2001 Conservative Deselected by the Conservative Association and subsequently announced his retirement
Patrick Grady Glasgow North 2015 SNP Deselected by the local party in favour of MP for Glasgow Central Alison Thewliss[157]
Neil Hudson Penrith and The Border 2019 Conservative Sought selection for the new seat of Penrith and Solway, losing to fellow MP Mark Jenkinson; he subsequently applied for the West Suffolk seat, losing to former political adviser Nick Timothy[158][159]
Angus MacNeil Na h-Eileanan an Iar 2005 SNP Expelled from the SNP and sits as an independent with the Scotland United grouping with the Alba Party; he plans to contest the next election[160]
Christina Rees Neath 2015 Labour Co-op Excluded from selection by the National Executive Committee of the Labour Party;[161] in January 2024, she announced that she would stand down at the next general election[139]
Sam Tarry Ilford South 2019 Labour Deselected by the Constituency Labour Party in favour of Jas Athwal[162]
Claudia Webbe Leicester East 2019 Labour Expelled from the Labour Party due to a criminal conviction and sits as an independent[163]
Mick Whitley Birkenhead 2019 Labour Sought selection for the redrawn seat of Birkenhead, losing to fellow MP Alison McGovern[164]
Beth Winter Cynon Valley 2019 Labour Sought selection for the new seat of Merthyr Tydfil and Aberdare, losing to fellow MP Gerald Jones[165]

MPs changing constituencies

Due to boundary changes, most MPs standing for re-election will seek to represent a seat at least slightly different from their present seat. However, in some cases sitting MPs have secured selection to stand in a substantially or completely different seat from their present seat. They may happen because their seat is marginal and is likely to be lost by their party, boundary changes abolish their present seat or their present seat is redrawn in an unfavourable way in boundary changes.

Members of Parliament changing constituencies
MP Current constituency First elected Party (as elected) New constituency Note
Stuart Anderson Wolverhampton South West 2019 Conservative South Shropshire While there are no significant changes to Anderson's current seat, it is a marginal Conservative seat, whereas South Shropshire is likely a safe Conservative seat. He had initially announced he would not stand for re-election but subsequently reversed his decision.[92]
Stuart Andrew Pudsey 2010 Conservative TBC Has announced that he will not stand in any of the successor seats to the abolished Pudsey constituency, but has not ruled out standing elsewhere.[166]
Simon Baynes Clwyd South 2019 Conservative North Shropshire Selected for North Shropshire after his current seat is being abolished in boundary changes. North Shropshire, which the Liberal Democrats gained in a 2021 by-election, contains none of Baynes' present seat.[167]
Mims Davies Mid Sussex[u] 2019 Conservative East Grinstead and Uckfield Selected for East Grinstead and Uckfield due to boundary changes in her current seat.[168]
Flick Drummond Meon Valley 2019 Conservative Winchester Selected for Winchester in July 2023 as her present seat is being abolished. The reconfigured Winchester seat contains about 25% of the Meon Valley seat. Drummond sought selection for the proposed Fareham and Waterlooville seat, which contains a larger proportion of her current seat and is forecast to be much safer for the Conservatives than Winchester (a key Liberal Democrat target), but was defeated by Suella Braverman, the MP for Fareham and then–Home Secretary.
Damien Egan Kingswood 2024 Labour Bristol North East Selected for Bristol North East in July 2023. Elected in the 2024 Kingswood by-election triggered by the resignation of Chris Skidmore in January 2024.
Paul Holmes Eastleigh 2019 Conservative Hamble Valley Selected to the new Hamble Valley seat. The new seat contains 48% of his current seat.[169]
Eddie Hughes Walsall North 2017 Conservative Tamworth Selected for Tamworth as his current constituency is being abolished, and the main successor seat of Walsall and Bloxwich was considered significantly more vulnerable to the Labour Party than Tamworth, where the incumbent MP Chris Pincher announced he would be standing down following a scandal.[170] Pincher resigned in September 2023 and Labour's Sarah Edwards won the subsequent by-election; Hughes has nevertheless since maintained his candidacy for this constituency.
Jeremy Hunt South West Surrey 2005 Conservative Godalming and Ash Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt was selected for the newly created Godalming and Ash constituency in January 2023,[171] as his current constituency is set to be abolished. The western part of the existing seat, comprising the majority of the electorate and including the towns of Farnham and Haslemere will be combined with parts of the District of East Hampshire to create the new Farnham and Bordon constituency. The Godalming and Ash seat will comprise Godalming and the area of the North Downs to the south of the existing constituency.[172]
Alison McGovern Wirral South 2010 Labour Birkenhead Selected for Birkenhead due the abolition of her present constituency, defeating incumbent MP for Birkenhead Mick Whitley in the selection process.[173] The reconfigured Birkenhead contains a small part of her present seat.[174]
Alec Shelbrooke Elmet and Rothwell 2010 Conservative Wetherby and Easingwold Selected for Wetherby and Easingwold due to his current seat being abolished and broken up between four other seats. Wetherby and Easingwold will take in the Harewood and Wetherby wards of Leeds, but is otherwise based in North Yorkshire rather than West Yorkshire.[175]
Iain Stewart Milton Keynes South 2010 Conservative Buckingham and Bletchley Selected for the new Buckingham and Bletchley seat, as his present seat is being abolished.[176]
Alistair Strathern Mid Bedfordshire 2023 Labour Hitchin Elected for Mid Bedfordshire at a by-election in October 2023. Announced in January 2024 that he would contest the new constituency of Hitchin which will include a small part of his current seat around his home town of Shefford.[177]
Alison Thewliss Glasgow Central 2015 SNP Glasgow North Selected for Glasgow North due to her current seat being abolished.[178] This was after unsuccessfully challenging David Linden for the nomination in Glasgow East.[179]
Jamie Wallis Bridgend 2019 Conservative TBC Has announced that he is looking for a new constituency following boundary changes to his current seat.[180]

Opinion polling

The chart below shows opinion polls conducted since the 2024 general election. The trend lines are local regressions (LOESS). The bar on the left represents the previous election, and the bar on the right represents the latest possible date of the next election.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Includes 43 MPs sponsored by the Co-operative Party, who are designated Labour and Co-operative.[6]
  2. ^ Some media sources, such as BBC News, listed Labour's total as 412, by including the Speaker (who, to demonstrate his neutrality, had resigned his Labour Party membership on taking office).
  3. ^ Nine were elected as Labour MPs but seven of these have been suspended from the parliamentary party until December 2024. A further MP, Mike Amesbury, was suspended on 27 October 2024. Rosie Duffield resigned from the Labour Party on 28 September 2024. Five Independent MPs form the Independent Alliance technical group.
  4. ^ In the current (2024–present) Parliament, the seven members of Sinn Féin follow a policy of abstentionism. They do not swear into the house, and do not take part in its formal processes (doing so would also compel a by-election).[7] The Speaker and deputy speakers (two Conservative and one Labour) by convention exercise only a casting vote.[8]
  5. ^ Party affiliation of retiring MPs at the time of the 2019 general election.
  6. ^ Originally elected as the MP for Peckham in the 1982 by-election.
  7. ^ Originally elected the MP for Lincoln in the October 1974 election but lost her seat in the 1979 general election; elected for Derby South at the 1983 general election.
  8. ^ a b c d Elected as Conservative.
  9. ^ Originally elected as the MP for Plymouth Sutton.
  10. ^ Originally elected as the MP for Crewe and Nantwich in the 2008 by-election but lost his seat in the 2017 general election; elected for Eddisbury at the 2019 general election.
  11. ^ Originally elected as the MP for Croydon Central.
  12. ^ a b Elected as Labour.
  13. ^ Originally elected as the MP for Knowsley North in the 1986 by-election.
  14. ^ Originally elected as the MP for Stafford in a by-election in 1984.
  15. ^ Originally elected as the MP for Derby North.
  16. ^ Originally elected as the MP for Lancaster and Wyre.
  17. ^ Originally elected as an SNP MP.
  18. ^ Originally elected as the MP for Billericay.
  19. ^ Originally elected as the MP for Regent's Park and Kensington North.
  20. ^ Originally elected as the MP for North Hertfordshire.
  21. ^ Previously served as the MP for Eastleigh from 2015 to 2019.

References

  1. ^ a b Kelly, Richard (20 April 2023). "Dissolution of Parliament". House of Commons Library. Retrieved 30 August 2023.
  2. ^ a b "Rishi Sunak confirms election will be next year, despite legal right to wait until January 2025". Politics.co.uk. 18 December 2023.
  3. ^ "Why are British elections always held on Thursdays?", The Guardian, accessed 23 February 2024
  4. ^ "UK General election 2024 Results". BBC News. Retrieved 26 October 2024.
  5. ^ Cracknell, Richard; Baker, Carl; Pollock, Loui (26 July 2024). "General election 2024 results – House of Commons Library". UK Parliament. Retrieved 10 August 2024.
  6. ^ "About: Members of Parliament". Co-operative Party. Retrieved 10 May 2024.
  7. ^ Kelly, Conor (19 August 2019). "Understanding Sinn Féin's Abstention from the UK Parliament". E-International Relations. Retrieved 16 December 2019.
  8. ^ Boothroyd, David. "House of Commons: Tied Divisions". United Kingdom Election Results. Archived from the original on 6 March 2008. Retrieved 3 June 2024.
  9. ^ Zodgekar, Ketaki; Baker, Finn; McAlary, Patrick (5 July 2024). "How big is the Labour government's majority?". Institute for Government. Retrieved 13 November 2024.
  10. ^ Rogers, Alexandra (7 March 2022). "Exclusive: Labour Drops All-Women Shortlists For Next General Election". HuffPost. Retrieved 26 March 2022.
  11. ^ Crisp, James (16 March 2024). "Reform strikes election pact with hardline Northern Ireland party". The Telegraph. Retrieved 17 March 2024.
  12. ^ "Our Plan - Conservative Manifesto 2019". Conservative Party. Retrieved 17 December 2019.
  13. ^ "Boundary review launched". Boundary Commission for England. 24 February 2016. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
  14. ^ "2018 Review of Westminster Parliamentary constituencies". Boundary Commission for Scotland. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
  15. ^ "2018 Review". Boundary Commission for Wales. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
  16. ^ a b "2018 Review". Boundary Commission for Northern Ireland. 16 February 2016. Retrieved 17 September 2018.
  17. ^ "Towards final recommendations (and beyond)". Boundary Commission for England. Retrieved 8 July 2018.
  18. ^ "2018 Review". Boundary Commission for England. Archived from the original on 10 September 2018. Retrieved 17 September 2018.
  19. ^ "2018 Review of Westminster Constituencies". Boundary Commission for Scotland. Retrieved 17 September 2018.
  20. ^ "2018 Review of Parliamentary constituencies". Boundary Commission for Wales. Archived from the original on 18 October 2016. Retrieved 17 September 2018.
  21. ^ a b "Parliamentary Constituencies Act 2020". Archived from the original on 6 August 2021.
  22. ^ Jones, Ian [@ian_a_jones] (10 September 2018). "New constituency boundaries could have given the Tories a majority of 16 at the last election (projection: Rallings/Thrasher)" (Tweet). Retrieved 30 October 2019 – via Twitter.
  23. ^ "New parliamentary map would have given Tories a majority of 16 at last election". ITV News. 10 September 2018. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
  24. ^ "Correspondence with Chloe Smith MP" (PDF). parliament.uk.
  25. ^ Proctor, Kate (26 March 2020). "MPs no longer to get automatic vote on constituency boundary plans". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077.
  26. ^ "Parliamentary Constituencies Act". legislation.gov.uk. Retrieved 17 December 2020.
  27. ^ "2023 Review launched". Boundary Commission for England. Retrieved 7 January 2021.
  28. ^ "2023 Review of UK Parliament Constituencies". Boundary Commission for Scotland. Retrieved 7 January 2021.
  29. ^ "2023 Review". Boundary Commission for Wales. Retrieved 7 January 2021.
  30. ^ "2023 Review: Electoral Quota and Allocation of Constituencies Announced". Boundary Commission for Northern Ireland. 5 January 2021. Retrieved 7 January 2021.
  31. ^ "List of Business - 15th November 2023" (PDF).
  32. ^ "The Parliamentary Constituencies Order 2023", legislation.gov.uk, The National Archives, SI 2023/1230, retrieved 20 November 2023
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