UK’s Labour on course for landslide election win: Exit polls

Britain’s main opposition, the Labour Party, looks set for a landslide election win. Exit polls were indicated on Thursday, with Keir Starmer replacing Rishi Sunak as prime minister, ending 14 years of Conservative rule.

As polling stations closed at 10:00 pm (2100 GMT), the survey for UK broadcasters suggested center-left Labour would win 410 seats in the 650-seat House of Commons, with the right-wing Tories managing only 131.

In another boost for the centrists, the smaller opposition Liberal Democrats would get 61 seats, but Nigel Farage’s anti-immigration Reform UK upstarts could secure 13.

Labour’s majority would be 170 — more than double than that won by Boris Johnson for the Tories at the last election in December 2019, dominated by Brexit.

“To everyone who has campaigned for Labour in this election, to everyone who voted for us and put their trust in our changed Labour Party — thank you,” Starmer wrote on social media.

Starmer’s deputy, Angela Rayner, told the BBC the numbers were “encouraging … but I’m not counting my chickens until we’ve got those results coming in.”

Tim Bale, politics professor at Queen Mary, University of London, called the projected result “a disaster for the Conservative party.”

But it was “not as catastrophic as some were predicting,” and he added that the Tories, riven by ideological infighting, now needed to decide which direction they would take.

The counting of ballots from some 40,000 polling stations nationwide stretches into the night, with official results expected by Friday morning.

The result bucks a rightward trend among Britain’s closest allies, with the far-right National Rally in France eyeing power and Donald Trump looking set for a return in the US.

Under Britain’s first-past-the-post electoral system, a party needs 326 seats to win an overall majority in parliament.

The winning party’s leader is expected to meet the head of state, King Charles III, on Friday morning, who will ask the leader of the largest party to form a government.

Ministerial appointments will follow soon after an acceptance speech in Downing Street.

Confirmation of the result would cap a remarkable rise to power for Starmer, 61, who was first elected as a member of parliament in 2015 — and a stunning turnaround for Labour.

The former human rights lawyer and chief public prosecutor was elected Labour leader in early 2020, succeeding the veteran leftist Jeremy Corbyn, who lost by a landslide to Johnson in 2019.

Since then, he has dragged the party back to the center ground, making it a more electable proposition and purging infighting with the hard-left and anti-Semitism that lost its support.

Opinion polls have given Labour a consistent 20-point lead over the Tories for almost the past two years, which a largely lackluster election campaign has failed to change.

Some polls predicted a virtual wipe-out for the Tories, given negative public opinion and the arrival of Reform UK to split the right-wing vote.

That gave an air of inevitability about a Labour win — the first at a general election since Tony Blair’s in 2005 — which the party feared could hit turn-out.

It also faces high expectations that it can fulfill its promise to change the country’s flagging fortunes for the better.

Starmer — the working-class son of a toolmaker and a nurse — has promised “a decade of national renewal” after post-financial crash austerity measures, Brexit upheaval, and a cost-of-living crisis.

But his to-do list is daunting, with economic growth anemic, public services overstretched and underfunded due to nearly a decade-and-a-half of swingeing cuts, and households squeezed financially.

The Labour leader has also promised a return to political integrity after a chaotic period of five Tory prime ministers, including three in four months.

His first days in office are set to be packed, representing Britain at the NATO conference in Washington next week, then hosting European leaders later this month at a summit in southern England.