LONDON, England
Sir Keir Starmer is set to become the UK's first Labour prime minister since 2010 after his party's landslide general election victory.
Labour is returning to power
with a huge parliamentary majority of 174, following a collapse in support for
the Conservatives.
Sir Keir will be formally
appointed by the King at Buckingham Palace later and then make his first speech
in Downing Street.
He is then expected to begin
appointing his new cabinet on Friday afternoon, before it meets for the first
time on Saturday.
Speaking in central London,
Sir Keir told a crowd of Labour supporters that "change begins now",
adding: "It feels good, I have to be honest."
Labour's victory has come
largely as a result in a dramatic 20 point drop in Tory support, with the party
down 249 seats to 119, a historic low.
It marks a dramatic turnaround
in fortunes for Sir Keir's party, which suffered its worst result in terms of
seats - 202 - at the last election in 2019 under Sir Keir's predecessor Jeremy
Corbyn.
Despite only increasing its
share of the national vote by around 2%, the party has won 411 seats with only
a handful set to declare, delivering a result just short of the historic 179
majority won by Tony Blair in 1997.
Its vote share increase came
entirely as a result of a 17 point increase in support in Scotland, where it
regained its status as the largest party as the SNP slumped from 48 to just
nine seats.
On a good night for smaller
parties, the Liberal Democrats won 71 seats, the party's best result in a
century, whilst Nigel Farage will become one of
four MPs for Reform UK, following a breakthrough night for the fledgling
party.
Sir Keir fought a cautious
campaign in which Labour made very few new policy pledges, but managed to
largely retain the large polling lead over the Tories it began with when
outgoing Tory PM Rishi Sunak called the election in May.
This polling lead had remained
steady since the disastrous premiership of Liz Truss, who lost her
previously safe seat of South West Norfolk.
Despite its resounding overall
victory, Labour lost a number of former strongholds to independent candidates
campaigning on pro-Gaza platforms.
In one of the biggest shocks
of the night, shadow minister Jonathan Ashworth lost his Leicester South seat,
which had a majority of more than 22,000.
And shadow health secretary
Wes Streeting - one of Labour's most high-profile figures during the campaign -
saw his majority in Ilford North slashed from more than 9,000 to just 528.
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