2005 United Kingdom general election: Difference between revisions

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The '''[[general election (UK)|general election]]''' to select [[Member of Parliament (UK)|Members of Parliament]] in the [[House of Commons]] of the '''[[United Kingdom]]''' (UK) took place in June '''2005'''. The governing [[Labour Party (UK)|Labour Party]] under then-[[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister]] [[Tony Blair]] defended its win in the [[2001 United Kingdom General Election|2001 general election]] against the [[Official Opposition (UK)|Opposition]] party, the [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservatives]], led by [[Michael Howard]], the [[Leader of the Opposition (UK)|Leader of the Opposition]] at the time. The three main national parties - Labour, the Conservatives and the [[Liberal Democrats (UK)|Liberal Democrats]] - contested 646 seats using the [[first past the post]] [[voting system]] alongside smaller parties, including those fielding candidates only in particular regions, such as the [[Scottish National Party]] in [[Scotland]]. [[Northern Ireland]], being part of the UK, also elected MPs, but these parties do not contest seats in [[Great Britain]].
The '''[[general election (UK)|general election]]''' to select [[Member of Parliament (UK)|Members of Parliament]] in the [[House of Commons]] of the '''[[United Kingdom]]''' (UK) took place in June '''2005'''. The governing [[Labour Party (UK)|Labour Party]] under then-[[Prime Minister of the United Kingdom|Prime Minister]] [[Tony Blair]] defended its win in the [[2001 United Kingdom General Election|2001 general election]] against the [[Official Opposition (UK)|Opposition]] party, the [[Conservative Party (UK)|Conservatives]], led by [[Michael Howard]], the [[Leader of the Opposition (UK)|Leader of the Opposition]] at the time. The three main national parties - Labour, the Conservatives and the [[Liberal Democrats (UK)|Liberal Democrats]] - contested 646 seats using the [[first past the post]] [[voting system]] alongside smaller parties, including those fielding candidates only in particular regions, such as the [[Scottish National Party]] in [[Scotland]]. [[Northern Ireland]], being part of the UK, also elected MPs, but these parties do not contest seats in [[Great Britain]].



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The general election to select Members of Parliament in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom (UK) took place in June 2005. The governing Labour Party under then-Prime Minister Tony Blair defended its win in the 2001 general election against the Opposition party, the Conservatives, led by Michael Howard, the Leader of the Opposition at the time. The three main national parties - Labour, the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats - contested 646 seats using the first past the post voting system alongside smaller parties, including those fielding candidates only in particular regions, such as the Scottish National Party in Scotland. Northern Ireland, being part of the UK, also elected MPs, but these parties do not contest seats in Great Britain.

Results

The results of the 2005 UK general election after 646 seats were declared were as follows:[1]

PartySeatsChange[2]Number of votes% of votes% change[3]
Labour356-479,566,61835.3-5.4
Conservative198+338,785,94132.3+0.6
Liberal Democrat62+115,985,41422.1+3.8
DUP9+4241,8560.9+0.2
SNP6+2412,2671.5-0.3
Sinn Féin5+1174,5300.6-0.1
Plaid Cymru3-1174,8380.6-0.1
SDLP3-125,6260.5-0.1
UUP1-127,4140.5-0.3
Independent1-20,505[4]--
Respect1+168,0940.3-
Health Concern1-18,7390.1-

Footnotes

  1. BBC News: 'Full national scoreboard'. 24th June 2005.
  2. Number of seats gained or lost since the 2001 United Kingdom General Election.
  3. Percentage of votes gained or lost since the 2001 election.
  4. Total number of votes in the constituency where an independent candidate was elected, rather than the total number of votes for all candidates standing as independents.