At 04:28 BST, it was announced that Labour had won
Corby, giving them 324 seats in the House of Commons out of those then declared and an overall majority, Labour's total reaching 355 seats out of the 646 House of Commons seats. Labour received 35.3% of the
popular vote, equating to approximately 22% of the electorate on a 61.3% turnout, up from 59.4% turnout in 2001. As expected, voter disenchantment led to an increase of support for many opposition parties, and caused many eligible to vote, not to turn out. Labour achieved a third successive term in office for the first time in their history, though with reduction of the Labour majority from 167 to 67 (as it was before the declaration of
South Staffordshire). As it became clear that Labour had won an overall majority,
Michael Howard, the leader of the Conservative Party, announced his intention to retire from frontline politics. The final seat to declare was the delayed poll in South Staffordshire, at just after 1 am, Friday 24 June. The election was followed by further criticism of the UK electoral system. Calls for reform came particularly from Lib Dem supporters, citing that they received only just over 10% of the overall seats with 22.1% of the popular vote. The only parties to win a substantially higher percentage of seats than they achieved in votes were
Health Concern (which ran only one candidate) Labour, the Democratic Unionist Party, and Sinn Féin. The results of the election give a
Gallagher index of disproportionality of 16.76. Labour's vote declined to 35.3%, a decline of 5.4% and the second lowest share of the popular vote to have formed a majority government in the House of Commons. In many areas the collapse in the Labour vote resulted in a host of seats changing hands. Labour also failed to gain any new seats, almost unique in any election since 1945. As well as losing seats to the Tories and the Liberal Democrats, Labour also lost
Blaenau Gwent, its safest seat in Wales, to Independent
Peter Law, and
Bethnal Green and Bow to Respect candidate
George Galloway. Nevertheless, the Labour government claimed that being returned to office for a third term for the first time ever showed the public approval of
Labour's governance and the continued unpopularity of the Conservatives. The Conservatives asserted that their increased number of seats showed disenchantment with the Labour government. The election result was later considered a precursor to the Conservative breakthrough at the next election. Following three consecutive elections of declining representation, and then in 2001 a net gain of just one seat, 2005 was the first general election since their famous
1983 landslide victory where the number of Conservative seats increased appreciably – although the party's vote share increased only slightly, by 0.6%. The Liberal Democrats claimed that their continued increase in seats and percentage vote share over the past several elections showed they were in a position to make further gains from both parties. They pointed in particular to the fact that they were now in second place in roughly one hundred and ninety constituencies and that, after having suffered a net loss to Labour in the
1992 general election and having not taken a single seat off Labour in
1997, they had in this election built on their gains off Labour from the 2001 election. The Liberal Democrats also managed to take three seats from the Conservatives, one notable victory being that of
Tim Farron over
Tim Collins in
Westmorland and Lonsdale, through the use of a 'decapitation strategy' which targeted senior Tories. The party increased their percentage of the vote by 3.7% nationwide. Meanwhile, the
Scottish National Party improved its position in Scotland, regaining the
Western Isles and
Dundee East from Labour, having lost both seats in 1987. In Wales, Plaid Cymru failed to gain any seats and lost
Ceredigion to the Liberal Democrats. In Northern Ireland the Ulster Unionists were all but wiped out, only keeping
North Down, with leader David Trimble losing his seat in
Upper Bann. For the first time, the DUP became the biggest party in Northern Ireland. It was the first general election since
1929 in which no party received more than ten million votes. It was the most 'three-cornered' election since
1923, though the Liberal Democrats failed to match the higher national votes of the
SDP–Liberal Alliance in the 1980s. In fact, the total combined vote for Labour, the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats proved to be the lowest main three-party vote since
1922. The figure of 355 seats for Labour does not include the Speaker
Michael Martin. See also the
list of parties standing in Northern Ireland. == Seats changing hands ==