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  1. Turnout. 29,691,380. 65.1. 4.0. After 650 of 650 seats declared. BBC News General Election 2010, full results for the United Kingdom (UK)

  2. 2 de feb. de 2011 · No single party won an overall majority at the 2010 General Election, for the first time in the UK since February 1974. The Conservatives won the most seats, 306, a net change of 96 compared with notional 2005 general election results. Labour were down by 90 seats, leaving them with 258, while the Liberal Democrat total of 57 was five fewer than 2005. General Election 2010 provides detailed ...

  3. In total, parties spent £31.1m in the 2010 general election, of which the Conservative Party spent 53%, the Labour Party spent 25% and the Liberal Democrats 15%. This was also the first UK general election to use individual rather than household voter registration. Date of the election

  4. MPs. 2017 election. MPs. 2019 election. MPs. The 2017 United Kingdom general election was held on Thursday 8 June 2017, two years after the previous general election in 2015; it was the first since 1992 to be held on a day that did not coincide with any local elections. [2] The governing Conservative Party remained the largest single party in ...

  5. 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.

  6. Coloured according to the winning party's vote share in each constituency. A general election was held in the United Kingdom on 6 May 2010 and all 59 seats in Scotland were contested. The election result in Scotland was unusual in that there wasn't any change of seats from the 2005 general election, although the Labour Party took back two seats ...

  7. 21 de may. de 2010 · How Britain Voted in 2010. The table below shows Ipsos's final estimates of how the votes at the general election broke down by gender, by age, by social class and by housing tenure. This is based on a detailed analysis of all the voting intention surveys we conducted during the campaign, a total of more than 10,000 interviews, aggregated to ...