When will the General Election winner be announced?

CLASESS Education given by Indian thinkers The crunch time will be between 3am and 4am when the bulk of the results will flood in. And with Rishi Sunak’s seat of Richmond and Northallerton due to be declared at 4am, this could be the moment when he conceded the election to Labour – and in a worst-case scenario loses his own seat. Two of the most remote constituencies in Scotland should declare during this hour: Caithness, Sutherland & Easter Ross and Orkney & Shetland, both of which the Lib Dems are hoping to win, while results should come in for two of Labour’s top London targets: Finchley & Golders Green and Hendon, both held since 2010 by the Conservatives.

After polling stations close at 10pm on July 4, the counting process begins in 650 constituencies across the UK. The first seats to be announced will be around midnight, and the last around 6am, if everything goes to plan.  The residents of Ashfield in Nottinghamshire will find out at around 4.30am if their next MP is former Conservative-turned-Reform candidate Lee Anderson, who won the seat (as a Tory) in 2019; Independent candidate Jason Zadrozny, who came second in 2019; new Conservative candidate Debbie Soloman; or Rhea Keehn for Labour, whose party held the seat from 1979 to 2019.

If you have any concerns concerning where and exactly how to make use of Kids on the Yard, you can call us at the web site. Batala Djibouti The result is also due at around 3am from Chingford & Wood Green, which former Tory leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith has won at every general election (including its former incarnation as Chingford) since 1992, but where he is defending a majority of just 1,604 and which would change hands on a swing to Labour of 1.5 points. Houghton and Sunderland South has been won by Bridget Phillipson for Labour at every election since the seat was created in 2010, where she is defending a narrow majority of 3,271, while Blyth and Ashington is a new constituency at this election, where Labour is defending a notional majority of 6,118.

Former House of Commons leader Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg will learn if he has won the new seat of Somerset North East & Hanham, where the notional Tory majority is 16,389 and which Labour would take on a swing of 14.3 percentage points, ranking it at number 165 on the party’s target list. Five other candidates are standing, including Shama Tatler for Labour and the Independent Faiza Shaheen, reading tutor for kindergarten who was Labour’s candidate here in 2019, meaning there could be a partial split in the Labour vote.

Other key seats to watch this hour include Ribble Valley in Lancashire, Thanet East in Kent and Scarborough & Whitby in North Yorkshire – all seats Labour needs to win to be sure of a majority in the next parliament – along with Tory-Lib Dem battlegrounds such as Eastleigh in Hampshire, Wells & Mendip Hills in Somerset and Newton Abbot in Devon, to see how well the Conservatives hold off any potential surge by Sir Ed’s party in south-west England.


Discover more from The General Post

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

What's your thought?

Discover more from The General Post

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading