Francais | English | Espanõl

Next United Kingdom general election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
Image:Vote.png This article or section contains information about an upcoming or ongoing election.
Content may change dramatically as the election approaches and unfolds.
United Kingdom
Image:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg

This article is part of the series:
Politics and government of
the United Kingdom










Other countries • Politics Portal

view  talk  edit</div>

Under the provisions of the Parliament Acts of 1911 and 1949, the next United Kingdom general election must be held on or before 3 June 2010.<ref>Technically, the Parliament could vote to extend the lifetime of the current term beyond 5 years. This cannot be done by the House of Commons alone; it must be additionally approved by the House of Lords (the Parliament Acts may not be utilised in this case). Since 1911, extension of the maximum term of Parliaments has only been done during the First and Second World Wars). (Reference)</ref> The previous General Election in the UK was the General Election of 5 May 2005.

The Monarch (currently Queen Elizabeth II) can, usually on the request of the Prime Minister, order the dissolution of Parliament at any time within five years of the date of the previous general election, although typically not much less than four years since the previous election.<ref>http://election.scotsman.com/howitworks.cfm</ref>

It is possible that it may be held on 11 June 2009 in order to coincide with elections to the European Parliament; combining elections dates is a common practice in the UK with the intention of reducing costs and increasing turnout. In England, the elections for County Councils are on a four-year cycle and are set for 2009. Local elections are also due in Northern Ireland in 2009, although this is subject to the Northern Ireland Review of Public Administration. This would be keeping in line both with the recent practice for four-year terms, and the convention of holding parliamentary elections on a Thursday.

The general election will take place in all constituencies of the United Kingdom, for seats in the House of Commons. There are currently 646 seats in the house, under the proposals made by 3 of the 4 national Boundary Commissions, if approved by parliament, this would rise to 650 seats with a number of boundary changes from those used at the previous general election, especially in England and Wales where a ten-year review is due for completion in 2007.

Those constituencies recommended for the 2009/10 election are listed at Constituencies in the next United Kingdom general election.

Contents

[edit] Overview

The governing Labour Party will be looking to secure a fourth consecutive term in office and to maintain its majority. The Conservative Party will seek to regain its dominant position in politics against losses in the 1990s, replacing Labour as the governing party. The Liberal Democrats hope to make gains from both sides and although they too have hopes of forming a government their secondary and more realistic ambition is to emerge as the main Opposition party pushing either Labour or the Conservatives into third place.

Bookmakers have been taking bets almost since the counting of the votes in 2005. As is often the case, following the Local Elections held on 4 May 2006, odds make the Conservatives favourites to gain a majority in the next General Election. Given that elections are usually influenced mainly by events that happen after the last one, these predictions may be wholly inaccurate and will continue to be altered by immediate events.

[edit] Leadership of the main parties

David Cameron became Conservative leader in December 2005. Sir Menzies Campbell replaced Charles Kennedy as leader of the Lib Dems in March 2006. On Thursday 7 September 2006, Tony Blair declared his intention to stand down within twelve months[1] and that the 2006 Labour Party Conference and the 2006 TUC Conference would be the last he will attend as Labour Party Leader. The last time all three main parties went into a General Election with new leaders was in the 1979 election, when James Callaghan, Margaret Thatcher and David Steel led the three main parties.

Chancellor Gordon Brown is widely expected to succeed Tony Blair as leader of the Labour Party and Prime Minister after the next Labour leadership election, although he still has to stand for the leadership and see off any challenger to realise his ambition of being Labour leader (John Hutton, the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, is so far the only current cabinet minister to have said that it is essential there be a serious challenger to Gordon Brown for Labour's leadership)[2]. He has been criticised both for failing to act to remove Tony Blair from power and paradoxically for fermenting dissent in the party [3] [4], but also for apparently assuming he has a right to "inherit" the leadership.

David Cameron has faced criticism from figures on the right of his party, such as Norman Tebbit, for being too liberal and too much in the Blair mould.<ref>Cameron warned over tough stance on Tax Cuts</ref> Since assuming the leadership of the Liberal Democrats, Sir Menzies Campbell has been criticised for failing to maintain a media presence.

The leadership of each party may have implications beyond party popularity at the polls, especially if a hung parliament requires the formation of a coalition or minority government. Whereas Tony Blair courted the Lib Dems for possible coalition in the 1997 Parliament even though Labour had a clear majority, Gordon Brown is thought to be more resistant to co-operation with the Lib Dems. David Cameron is attempting to make a pitch towards what in the past had been referred to as Middle England or Middle Scotland - the people who it was held were attracted to Tony Blair and who also abandoned the Conservative Party since 1992 for the Liberal Democrats.<ref>Brown to stake all on Middle England</ref>

Menzies Campbell so far has continued the position of Charles Kennedy of not being prepared to form a coalition with either main party and of voting against any Queen's Speech unless there was an unambiguous commitment in it to introduce Proportional Representation <ref>Liberal Democrats under my leadership would vote against any Queens Speech without a clear and unambiguous commitment for Proportional Representation</ref>.

[edit] Other parties

Many constituencies will be contested by other, smaller parties. Parties with representation at the previous general election at Westminster include the Democratic Unionist Party, Sinn Féin (who do not take their seats as they will not swear the Oath of Allegiance to the Queen), the Social Democratic and Labour Party, and the Ulster Unionist Party from Northern Ireland; Scottish National Party and Plaid Cymru from Scotland and Wales respectively; and RESPECT The Unity Coalition and Health Concern, each of which hold one Parliamentary seat from England. There is one independent member of Parliament, Dai Davies (politician), elected in a by-election in succession to fellow independent Peter Law , who died in April 2006, and one Independent Labour member, Clare Short, who resigned the Labour whip in October 2006. Given vocal groups of opposition within both of the main parties, it is possible that the number of independent MPs will increase as members are expelled or resign.

Parties expected to contest the election that won no representatives at Westminster in 2005, but had seats in the devolved assemblies and/or European Parliament, include the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland, the United Kingdom Independence Party, the Green Party of England and Wales, the Scottish Green Party, the Scottish Socialist Party and Tommy Sheridan's new breakaway Solidarity Party.

UKIP's leader, Roger Knapman, retired as leader on his term ending in 2006 with the leadership election on 12 September 2006 electing Nigel Farage as his replacement. The Green Party has joint speakers.

Small parties and independents that fail to win a seat can still have an effect on the outcome of an election (as can larger parties in seats in which they have no realistic prospect of winning) by taking votes off candidates who have a reasonable prospect of winning that particular seat, especially in marginal seats possibly having an effect on who is elected MP and on the course of the campaign.

See also List of political parties in the United Kingdom

[edit] Opinion polls, and analysis of votes in relation to numbers of seats

The following benchmarks have been calculated on 2005 boundaries and assume a uniform swing across the country. This system is used by much of the media in the UK to assess electoral fortunes. Figures in brackets represents the headline lead)

Uniform swing Result
Any to Lab Increased Labour majority in Parliament (Labour lead greater than 3%)
Up to 1.56% to Con Labour loses its overall majority (Both parties tied)
1.56% - 4.39% to Con Labour hung parliament (A Conservative lead of up to 6%)
4.52% - 6.10% Con Conservative hung parliament (A Conservative lead of up to 9%)
More than 6.11% to Con Conservative overall majority (A Conservative lead of over 9%)

Note that these figures do not take into account the performance of the Liberal Democrats, minor or nationalist parties, Independent candidates, or localised effects caused by a change in the distribution of the Labour and Conservative vote and that of other parties.

Normally governments can easily survive for a full parliamentary term on a majority of more than 20 seats over all other parties. Below that level there is a danger of byelections and MPs crossing the floor of the House reducing the government to a minority such that it would be at increased risk of losing a vote of no confidence in the government.

The First Past the Post system seldom closely reflects actual vote shares across the parties, although sometimes individual parties achieve similar shares of votes and seats. In addition, it is not necessarily the party with the most votes that ends up the largest grouping, and since 1935 no single party has ever achieved more than 50% in a UK General Election. Numbers of seats won reflect a large and complex interaction of factors of distribution of votes attained by parties. With a widely distributed vote not concentrated in particular areas, a party is at risk of getting a large vote share but doing poorly in terms of numbers of seats, whereas parties with very strong localised votes can win seats with a relatively small share of the vote.

See also Exit poll, Opinion poll, Spoiler effect, Tactical voting, Voting system, Wasted vote

[edit] MPs who have announced their retirement at the next General Election

[edit] Labour

[edit] Conservative

[edit] Liberal Democrats

[edit] Other parties

to stand for Gordon MSP seat]", Buchan Observer, January 2006.</ref>

[edit] Boundary changes

The current list of constituencies likely to be used in the next United Kingdom general election (in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland) is in Constituencies in the next United Kingdom general election.

The four national Boundary Commissions are required by the Parliamentary Constituencies Act 1986 (as amended by the Boundary Commissions Act 1992) to conduct a general review of all the constituencies in its part of the United Kingdom every eight to twelve years to ensure the size and composition of constituencies are as fair as possible.

Scotland saw its most recent large-scale review completed in 2004, so the boundaries used in the 2005 General Election in Scotland will still apply at the next UK general election.

Constituencies in Wales were reviewed by the Boundary Commission for Wales, which has completed its latest review. The recommendations were laid before Parliament on 14 December 2005. The Welsh redistribution of Parliamentary seats has been given legal effect by The Parliamentary Constituencies and Assembly Electoral Regions (Wales) Order 2006 (SI 2006 No. 1041) made on 11 April 2006. The new constituencies will apply from the next general election.

In Wales, the total number of seats is to remain at 40, although new seats have been recommended by radical redrawing of boundaries in Clwyd and Gwynedd; Arfon and Dwyfor Meirionnydd replace Caernarfon and Meirionnydd Nant Conwy respectively; Aberconwy replaces Conwy. Currently Welsh constituencies have on average 25,000 fewer people than their counterparts in England

The Boundary Commission for England completed its previous general review on 12 April 1995, and the latest review, was required to be completed after 11 April 2003 and before 12 April 2007. The Commission’s recommendations throughout the review had, by law, to be based on the numbers of electors on the electoral registers in 2000 (when the 5th general review started).

In the event the recommendations were completed and sent to the Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs on 31 October 2006. The Secretary of State is required to put a draft Order in Council before Parliament. If Parliament approves the draft, then the Queen in Council will give legal effect to the new boundaries, which would be used for the next general election.

The Northern Ireland Boundary Commission announced in 2006 that minor changes would take place in the east of the province to its existing constituencies. As at 2 November 2006 these changes have not yet been given legal effect.

These changes in England, Wales and Northern Ireland will be the first major changes in the composition of UK Parliamentary constituencies (outside of Scotland) since 1997.

[edit] Top 10 targets for main parties

Following the Boundary Commissions' changes to seats in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, website UKPollingReport[5] has calculated the target seats for the main political parties. They are the seats where the party needs to overturn the lowest percentage majority to win the seat. These are not necesssarily the seats where it will be easiest to do so, or the only seats that the party will actually be targeting at the next election.

N.B. The 'Winning Party' is notional (except in the case of Scottish constituencies), calculated on the Boundary Commission changes made to the seat, and may not be the same as the party that won the seat in the 2005 General Election.

[edit] Conservative targets

Target Number Constituency Winning party
1 Finchley and Golders Green Labour
2 Crawley Labour
3 Croydon Central Labour
4 Battersea Labour
5 Aberconwy Labour
6 Harlow Labour
7 Milton Keynes South Labour
8 Hove Labour
9 Romsey and Southampton North Liberal Democrats
10 Cheltenham Liberal Democrats

[edit] Labour targets

Target Number Constituency Winning party
1 Portsmouth North Conservative
2 Sittingbourne and Sheppey Conservative
3 Ealing Central and Acton Conservative
4 Kettering Conservative
5 Clwyd West Conservative
6 Shipley Conservative
7 Rugby Conservative
8 Hemel Hempstead Conservative
9 Oxford East Liberal Democrats
10 Somerset North East Conservative

[edit] Liberal Democrat targets

Target Number Constituency Winning party
1 Solihull Conservative
2 Somerton and Frome Conservative
3 Guildford Conservative
4 Edinburgh South Labour
5 Islington South and Finsbury Labour
6 Eastbourne Conservative
7 Watford Labour
8 Hampstead and Kilburn Labour
9 Ealing Central and Acton Conservative
10 Aberdeen South Labour

[edit] Nationalist targets (Plaid Cymru and SNP)

Target Number Constituency Winning party
1 Arfon (Plaid Cymru) Labour
2 Ceredigion (Plaid Cymru) Liberal Democrats
3 Ynys Môn (Plaid Cymru) Labour
4 Ochil and South Perthshire (SNP) Labour
5 Dundee West (SNP) Labour

[edit] Note

<references />

[edit] External links

[edit] Boundary changes

1801 co-option | 1802 | 1806 | 1807 | 1812 | 1818 | 1820 | 1826 | 1830 | 1831 | 1832 | 1835 | 1837 | 1841 | 1847 | 1852 | 1857 | 1859 | 1865 | 1868 | 1874 | 1880 | 1885 | 1886 | 1892 | 1895 | 1900 | 1906 | 1910 (Jan) | 1910 (Dec) | 1918 | 1922 | 1923 | 1924 | 1929 | 1931 | 1935 | 1945 | 1950 | 1951 | 1955 | 1959 | 1964 | 1966 | 1970 | 1974 (Feb) | 1974 (Oct) | 1979 | 1983 | 1987 | 1992 | 1997 | 2001 | 2005 | Future: 54th
Personal tools