Results breakdown of the 2017 United Kingdom general election

This is the results breakdown of the 2017 general election.

2017 United Kingdom general election
United Kingdom
← 2015 8 June 2017 (2017-06-08) 2019 →

All 650 seats in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom
326 seats needed for a majority
Turnout68.7%
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
Conservative Theresa May 42.4% 317 −13
Labour Jeremy Corbyn 40.0% 262 +30
SNP Nicola Sturgeon 3.0% 35 −21
Liberal Democrats Tim Farron 7.4% 12 +4
DUP Arlene Foster 0.9% 10 +2
Sinn Féin Gerry Adams 0.8% 7 +3
Plaid Cymru Leanne Wood 0.5% 4 +1
Green Jonathan Bartley
Caroline Lucas
1.6% 1 0
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Prime Minister before Prime Minister after
Theresa May
Conservative
Theresa May
Conservative

Vote shares

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Change in vote share, by default order of total seats won in 2017
Party % votes won
in 2015
% votes won
in 2017
∆%
(i.e. change)
Conservative Party 36.8 42.4 +5.5
Labour Party 30.5 40.0 +9.6
Scottish National Party 4.7 3.0 −1.7
Liberal Democrats 7.9 7.4 −0.5
Green Party 3.8 1.6 −2.2
UKIP 12.7 1.8 −10.9
Other 3.6 3.8 +0.2
Total % 100.0 100.0

A post-election analysis of Lord Ashcroft of inter-party swing (between specific parties):

Poll: Expressed voting choice in 2017 of electors who say they voted in 2015[1]
Party New choice of party of sample-polled previous voters
Conservative Labour LD SNP UKIP Green Other
Conservative 82% 10% 5% 1% 1% 1%
Labour 9% 83% 5% 1% 1% 1%
Liberal Democrats 16% 30% 50% 1% 2% 1%
SNP 6% 12% 2% 80%
UKIP 57% 18% 3% 19% 2% 1%

Seats which changed hands

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England

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Party Seats Votes
Total Gained Lost Net Total % Change (%)
Conservative[n 2] 297 8 30 −22 12,376,530 45.6 +4.6
Labour 227 27 6 +21 11,386,624 41.9 +10.3
Liberal Democrats 8 5 3 +2 2,121,672 7.8 −0.4
Green 1 0 0 0 506,905 1.9 −2.3
UKIP 0 0 1 −1 557,174 2.1 −12.1
  Others 0 0 0 0 210,321 0.8 +0.6
Total 533 27,159,226 Turnout 69.1%

[2]

Northern Ireland

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Party Seats Votes
Total Gained Lost Net Total % Change (%)
DUP 10 2 0 +2 292,316 36.0 +10.3
Sinn Féin 7 3 0 +3 238,915 29.4 +4.9
SDLP 0 0 3 −3 95,419 11.7 −2.2
UUP 0 0 2 −2 83,280 10.3 −5.8
Alliance 0 0 0 0 64,553 7.9 −0.6
Green (NI) 0 0 0 0 7,452 0.9 −0.0
TUV 0 0 0 0 3,282 0.4 −1.9
  Others 1 0 0 0 26,966 3.3 −1.8
Total 18 812,183 Turnout 65.4%

Scotland

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Party Seats Votes
Total Gained Lost Net Total % Change (%)
SNP 35 0 21 −21 977,569 36.9 −13.1
Conservative 13 12 0 +12 757,949 28.6 +13.7
Labour 7 6 0 +6 717,007 27.1 +2.8
Liberal Democrats 4 3 0 +3 179,061 6.8 −0.8
Scottish Green 0 0 0 0 5,886 0.2 −1.1
UKIP 0 0 0 0 5,302 0.2 −1.4
  Others 0 0 0 0 6,920 0.3 +0.2
Total 59 2,649,695 Turnout 66.4%

[3]

Wales

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Party Seats Votes
Total Gained Lost Net Total % Change (%)
Labour 28 3 0 +3 771,354 48.9 +12.1
Conservative 8 0 3 −3 528,839 33.6 +6.3
Plaid Cymru 4 1 0 +1 164,466 10.4 −1.7
Liberal Democrats 0 0 1 −1 71,039 4.5 −2.0
UKIP 0 0 0 0 31,376 2.0 −11.6
Green 0 0 0 0 5,128 0.3 −2.2
  Others 0 0 0 0 3,612 0.2 −0.1
Total 40 1,575,814 Turnout 68.6%

Notes

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  1. ^ The seat had already been gained at a by-election in February. Gains at a general election are normally contrasted to the previous general election, ignoring by-elections in between.
  2. ^ Seat figure includes Speaker of the House of Commons John Bercow

References

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  1. ^ Lord Ashcroft (9 June 2017). "How did this result happen? My post-vote survey". Lord Ashcroft Polls.
  2. ^ "England Results". BBC News.
  3. ^ "Scotland Results". BBC News.