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Labour has won a historic landslide victory in the UK general election, returning to government after 14 years in opposition.

Speaking in Downing Street, new Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer told Britons that his administration would be “unburdened by doctrine” as he promised to “rebuild” the country.

How big is Labour’s majority?

As of 2.30pm, Labour had won 411 House of Commons seats out of a total of 650 and secured a majority of 172, despite gaining only about 34 per cent of the national vote, the lowest-ever winning share.

The result is similar in scale to the 179-seat majority won by Tony Blair in the 1997 election.

The Conservative party becomes the official opposition, having won 121 seats on 24 per cent of the vote — its worst-ever general election performance.

The centrist Liberal Democrats have secured 71 seats, beating their modern-era record of 62, while populist party Reform UK has four MPs, including Brexiter Nigel Farage.

The Scottish National party, long the dominant political force in Scotland, has won nine seats, down 39 from the 2019 election, and the Green party has won four seats.

Which MPs lost their seats?

High-profile Conservatives who will not return to parliament this month include former prime minister Liz Truss, Commons leader Penny Mordaunt and defence secretary Grant Shapps.

Truss, who had represented South West Norfolk since 2010, was pushed into second place by Labour by just over 600 votes. Forced out of Downing Street after just 49 days in 2022, she is the first former premier to lose in a general election in almost 90 years. 

Mordaunt, who stood for the Tory leadership in 2022 and had been tipped as a future contender, lost in her bid to remain MP for Portsmouth North. Shapps, MP for Welwyn Hatfield since 2005, came second to Labour.

Other Conservatives ejected include education secretary Gillian Keegan, justice secretary Alex Chalk, transport secretary Mark Harper, culture secretary Lucy Frazer and former cabinet ministers Thérèse Coffey and Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg.

Some prominent Labour figures also fell short. Shadow paymaster general Jonathan Ashworth lost out to a pro-Palestinian independent in Leicester South, while shadow culture secretary Thangam Debbonaire was defeated by the Green party in Bristol Central.

Political Fix host Lucy Fisher is joined by Inside Politics’ author Stephen Bush, political editor George Parker and columnists Robert Shrimsley and Miranda Green for a discussion and Q&A on the UK general election.

What was the most surprising result overnight?

Liz Truss lost her seat. One probably wouldn't have predicted that. And I think the success of Reform, Nigel Farage's Reform Party, has also struck us as something that began to become more obvious as the campaign went on. But again, two or three months out, you might not have seen that coming.

I think that some of the most interesting things are actually, when you look at the map, territory that has been blue forever that's now changed. And like Robert, I think the extent to which Reform, even though the number of seats that Nigel Farage will be able to count on in the Commons is lower than the exit poll suggested by quite a way, they're showing across the country these second places. They're second in 98 seats now. This makes them a serious, frightening presence in British politics.

So I think for me, actually, the most surprising result were the two gains the Green Party made against the Conservatives. Those were targets where they essentially came up almost out of nothing. For them to win those two seats, even allowing for the fact-- and of course, this is a very bad election for the Conservative Party, who lost everywhere to everyone. For the greens to break out of their inner city graduate liberal core and to gain kind of conservationist Conservative votes, that, to me, was the big and I think, possibly, one of the more long run significant results of the night.

FT's experts on the most suprising result of the election. © FT

How has the election result redrawn the UK political map?

The Conservatives lost swaths of the “blue wall” of traditional Tory-voting seats in the south of England to the Liberal Democrats, which heavily targeted that part of the country during the six-week campaign.

Labour reclaimed chunks of the “red wall” of working-class seats in the north of England that it lost to the Tories in the 2019 election.

Starmer’s party also won back large parts of Scotland, where it had been the main political force before being eclipsed by the SNP.

What was the turnout?

About 60 per cent of eligible UK voters cast a ballot, according to provisional figures published by the PA news agency.

The figure is a near-record low, pointing to the depth of the challenge facing Starmer in restoring voter confidence in the political system.

In the 2019 election turnout was 67.3 per cent, down from 68.8 per cent in 2017, according to the House of Commons library.

This general election was the first in which voters had to present a form of ID in order to take part, in line with a law change passed by the government in April 2022.

What happens next?

Rishi Sunak said on Friday that he would resign as Conservative party leader once the rules to select a successor had been decided. Speaking in Downing Street, the prime minister apologised to the country but said he was “proud” of his time in office.

Sunak spoke before travelling to Buckingham Palace for an audience with King Charles, where he tendered his resignation as head of the UK government. The king then received Starmer, who asked his permission to form a new government.

After this procedural requirement, Starmer arrived in Downing Street and told the nation that he wanted to rebuild trust between the public and politicians. He is expected to meet the staff of Number 10 and announce his cabinet on Friday afternoon.

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