2024 election The
2024 general election resulted in a
landslide victory for the
Labour Party led by
Keir Starmer, but with the smallest share of the electoral vote of any majority government since record-keeping of the popular vote began
in 1830. The combined vote share for Labour and the Conservatives reached a record low, with smaller parties doing well. Labour returned to being the largest party in Scotland and remained so in Wales. The election was noted as the most disproportionate in modern British history, mainly as a result of the
first-past-the-post voting system. The
Conservative Party under
Rishi Sunak lost 251 seats and suffered their worst ever defeat, ending their 14-year tenure as the primary governing party. The Conservatives won no seats in Wales and only one seat in North East England. On 2 November 2024,
Kemi Badenoch won the
2024 Conservative leadership election to succeed Sunak becoming the first
Black British person to become the Conservative leader.
Reform UK, led by
Nigel Farage, came third in the share of the vote in the 2024 election and had MPs elected to the Commons for the first time. Meanwhile, the
Liberal Democrats, led by
Ed Davey, made significant gains especially in seat terms to reach their highest number of seats since (as their predecessor
Liberal Party) the 1920s (and highest since the merger with the
SDP). The
Green Party of England and Wales also won a record number of votes and seats alongside a number of independent MPs.
Current composition of the House of Commons Events since 2024 The
2025 United Kingdom local elections led to a rise in the number of seats held by smaller parties at the expense of the Conservatives and Labour. On 2 September 2025,
Zack Polanski was
elected as leader of the Green Party of England and Wales in a landslide, with 85% of the vote share The by-election was characterised in the media as a fight between Labour and Reform UK. Labour would select Karen Shore, a former teacher and deputy leader of
Cheshire West and Chester Council, as their candidate, as Reform UK picked
Sarah Pochin, a former
Cheshire East Conservative Party councillor before being expelled from the party in 2020. Meanwhile minor candidates included the Conservatives standing Sean Houlston, a
National Federation of Builders executive and former candidate for the neighbouring seat of
Widnes and Halewood, and the Greens picked Chris Copeman, a local councillor in
Helsby as their candidate. Other candidates included Michael Williams as an independent, Danny Clarke for the
Liberal Party, and Jason Hughes for
Volt UK. Pochin and Reform UK won the by-election, overturning Labour's 14,696-vote majority from the last general election with Pochin being the first non-Labour MP to hold the seat in 50 years. The initial vote count saw Pochin win by just 4 votes, which was extended to 6 votes following a Labour requested recount. It was the
closest by-election result since at least the Second World War, the previous narrowest being a majority of 57. The results were seen as a major upset for Reform UK with Labour pinning their defeat on cuts to the
winter fuel payment.
Gorton and Denton On 23 January 2026, incumbent
Labour Co-op MP for Gorton and Denton,
Andrew Gwynne, formally resigned from Parliament citing significant ill health, triggering a by-election. The by-election was characterised in the media as a three-horse race between the Green Party, Reform UK and Labour. The Greens selected
Hannah Spencer, a local councillor and community activist, as their candidate. Reform UK picked
Matt Goodwin, a high-profile commentator, while Labour chose
Angeliki Stogia, a Manchester councillor. Spencer and the Green Party won the by-election with 14,980 votes and a majority of 4,402, overturning Labour’s 13,413-vote majority from the 2024 general election and marking the first ever Westminster by-election victory for the Greens.
Matt Goodwin finished second with 10,578 votes, while
Angeliki Stogia came third with 9,364. The result was seen as a historic upset and a major blow to the Labour government under
Keir Starmer. == Electoral system ==