‹ 2022 | ||||
United Kingdom general election, 2027 | ||||
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All 650 seats in the House of Commons | ||||
6 May 2027 | ||||
First party | Second party | Third party | ||
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Leader | Jeremy Corbyn | Dominic Raab | Ed Davey | |
Party | Labour Party | Conservative Party (UK) | Liberal Democrats | |
Leader's seat | Islington North | Esher and Walton | Kingston and Surbiton | |
Seats before | 412 | 147 | 32 | |
Seats won | 432 | 119 | 40 | |
Seat change | +20 | -28 | +8 | |
Prime Minister before election
Jeremy Corbyn Labour Party
Subsequent Prime Minister
Jeremy Corbyn Labour Party |
The United Kingdom general election of 2027 took place on Thursday 6 May, 2027. Popular Prime Minister Jeremy Corbyn and his Labour Party maintained a majority over Dominic Raab's Conservative Party and Layla Moran's LibDems.
Corbyn and the Labour Party had proved popular having sliced homelessness rates in half and having introduced mental health support reform. While Scotland had left the U.K years prior, voters did not blame Corbyn, and instead took out their anger on the Tories, blaming the policies of the still unpopular Theresa May for the Highlands' departure.
New Conservative Leader Dominic Raab moved the Party farther to the right in order to prevent the rise of UKIP or another alt-right splinter cell. The move was sucessful, and the Conservatives remained the dominant right-wing party.
Leadership elections[]
=== Conservative Party leadership election, 2023 ===