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The 2019 European Parliament election was the United Kingdom s component of the 2019 European Parliament election It was held on Thursday 23 May 2019 and the results announced on Sunday 26 and Monday 27 May 2019 after all the other EU countries had voted This was the United Kingdom s final participation in a European Parliament election before leaving the European Union on 31 January 2020 and was also the last election to be held under the provisions of the European Parliamentary Elections Act 2002 before its repeal under the European Union Withdrawal Act 2018 and was the first European election in the United Kingdom to be held on a day that did not coincide with any local elections since 1999 This was the first of two national elections that would be held in the United Kingdom in 2019 with the 2019 general election being held six months later in December 2019 2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom 2014 23 May 2019 outgoing memberselected members All 73 United Kingdom seats in the European ParliamentOpinion pollsRegistered46 550 683Turnout37 2 1 4 First party Second party Third party Leader Nigel Farage Catherine Bearder Richard CorbettParty Brexit Party Liberal Democrats LabourAlliance Non Inscrits ALDE S amp DLeader since 22 March 2019 2 July 2014 25 October 2017Leader s seat South East England South East England Yorkshire and the HumberLast election Did not contest 1 seat 6 6 20 seats 24 4 Seats won 29 16 10Seat change New party 15 10Popular vote 5 248 533 3 367 284 2 347 255Percentage 30 5 19 6 13 6 Swing New party 13 0 10 8 Fourth party Fifth party Sixth party Leader Jonathan Bartley and Sian Berry Ashley Fox Alyn SmithParty Green Conservative SNPAlliance Greens EFA ECR Greens EFALeader since 4 September 2018 25 November 2014 April 2019Leader s seat Did not stand South West England lost seat ScotlandLast election 3 seats 6 9 19 seats 23 9 2 seats 2 5 Seats won 7 4 3Seat change 4 15 1Popular vote 1 881 306 1 512 809 594 553Percentage 11 8 8 8 3 6 Swing 4 9 15 1 1 1Results of the 2019 EU Election in the UK by local authorities Leader of Largest Party before election Gerard Batten UKIP Subsequent Leader of Largest Party Nigel Farage Brexit Party Initially no election was planned in the United Kingdom as Brexit following the 2016 referendum was set for 29 March 2019 However at the European summit on 11 April 2019 the British government and the European Council agreed to delay British withdrawal until 31 October 2019 From then on it was the default position in UK and EU law for the election to take place however the UK Government continued making attempts to avoid participation by seeking agreement on a withdrawal to take place before 23 May On 7 May 2019 the UK government conceded despite their opposition that the election would have to go ahead The election was the ninth time the United Kingdom had elected MEPs to the European Parliament and the fourth for Gibraltar Candidate nominations were submitted by 16 00 on 25 April 2019 and voter registration was completed on 7 May 2019 The British MEPs sat until 31 January 2020 Brexit was the central issue of the election campaign arguments were made that it was a proxy for a second Brexit referendum The election was won by the Brexit Party which won the most votes and became the largest single national party in the European Parliament being the dominant choice of those who had voted to leave the European Union The votes of those who had voted to remain were more fragmented the Liberal Democrats made substantial gains finishing second nationally while the Green Party of England and Wales and Scottish National Party also improved on their 2014 results however Change UK failed to win any seats Compared to the 2014 result the Labour Party suffered heavy losses while the Conservative Party lost all but four of its MEPs The previously dominant UK Independence Party failed to elect any MEPs In Northern Ireland the Republican pro Remain Sinn Fein and the Unionist pro Leave Democratic Unionist Party both held their seats while the Ulster Unionist Party lost its seat to the pro Remain non sectarian Alliance Party In Scotland the Scottish National Party elected three MEPs while Labour lost both its MEPs and failed to win a seat in Scotland at a European election for the first time in its history In Wales the Brexit Party became the largest party while the nationalist pro Remain Plaid Cymru came second The Liberal Democrats became the largest party in London The election was the first national poll in the United Kingdom since December 1910 in which a successor party to the Liberal Party reached higher than third place in the number of votes or seats and the first ever national election in which the Conservative Party received less than 10 of the votes cast Voting eligibilityTo vote in the election individuals had to be on the Electoral Register aged 18 or over on election day a British Irish Commonwealth or European Union citizen resident at an address in the UK or a British citizen living abroad who has been registered to vote in the UK in the 15 years before the election and not legally excluded from voting for example a convicted person detained in prison or a mental hospital or unlawfully at large if they would otherwise have been detained or a person found guilty of certain corrupt or illegal practices Individuals had to be registered to vote by midnight on 7 May 2019 A person with two homes such as a university student with a term time address but living at home during holidays could be registered to vote at both addresses as long as they are not in the same electoral area but could vote in only one constituency at the election European Union citizens except for British Irish Cypriot and Maltese citizens also had to submit a European Parliament voter registration form also known as Form UC1 or Form EC6 by midnight on 7 May 2019 to confirm that they would vote in the European Parliament election only in the UK and not in their home country However in the top 10 local authorities with EU citizens only 21 of EU citizens who were on the Electoral Register returned this form by the deadline EU citizens who did not submit this form were unable to vote in the election ConstituenciesThe United Kingdom was divided into 12 multi member constituencies the nine regions of England plus Scotland Wales and Northern Ireland Gibraltar was assigned to the South West England constituency As had been the case since 1999 the English electoral constituencies were based on the government s nine English regions The seat allocation was the same as in 2014 The breakdown of seats just prior to the election was Party Faction in European ParliamentLabour Party 18 Socialists and Democrats 185Conservative Party 18 European Conservatives and Reformists 74Brexit Party 14 Europe of Freedom and Direct Democracy 43Independent 6 31 Europe of Nations and Freedom 361 European People s Party 2181 Non Inscrits 21UK Independence Party 3 2 Europe of Nations and Freedom 361 Non Inscrits 21Green Party of England and Wales 3 Greens European Free Alliance 52Scottish National Party 2Plaid Cymru 1Liberal Democrats 1 Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe 68Social Democratic Party 1 Europe of Freedom and Direct Democracy 43Ulster Unionist Party 1 European Conservatives and Reformists 74Sinn Fein 1 European United Left Nordic Green Left 52Democratic Unionist Party 1 Non Inscrits 21Change UK 1 European People s Party 218 Vacant 2 Vacant 2Total 73 Total 750Electoral methodA polling station in Moorpool Harborne Birmingham within the West Midlands constituency on 23 May 2019 In Great Britain candidates stood on either a party list known as a closed list in a set order of priority decided by that party or as an independent Voters chose a party not an individual party candidate or an independent candidate Seats would then be allocated proportionally to the share of votes cast for each party or individual candidate in the electoral region using the D Hondt method of calculation The first seat was allocated to the party or individual with the highest number of votes After each seat was allocated to a party for the purpose of allocating further seats that party s total votes would then be divided by one plus the number of seats already allocated to that party to give the party s quotient The second and subsequent seats were allocated in turn to the party or independent candidate with the greatest quotient The Northern Ireland constituency used the single transferable vote STV system to allocate its three MEPs Voters ranked the candidates sequentially in the order of their choice BackgroundExpected cancellation and contingency planning The United Kingdom invoked Article 50 of the Treaty on the European Union on 29 March 2017 following a referendum on 23 June 2016 to leave the European Union As a result the country was due to leave the EU on 29 March 2019 before the European Parliament elections took place Nonetheless on 27 May 2018 it was reported that the UK s Electoral Commission had set aside 829 000 for its activities relating to a European Parliamentary election in 2019 The Commission described the money as a precautionary measure so that we have the necessary funds to deliver our functions at a European Parliamentary election in the unlikely event that they do go ahead The European Parliament resolution of 7 February 2018 on the composition of the European Parliament 2017 2054 INL 2017 0900 NLE included these clauses H7 refers to the re allocation of some UK seats following the UK withdrawal from the EU stating Underlines that the seats to be vacated by the United Kingdom upon its withdrawal from the European Union will facilitate the adoption of a new allocation of seats in Parliament which will implement the principle of degressive proportionality further underlines that the new allocation proposed would allow for a reduction in the size of Parliament notes that the use of only a fraction of the seats vacated by the United Kingdom is sufficient to ensure no loss of seats for any Member State H6 has a contingency for the situation that the UK does not leave the EU before the 2019 election stating that in case the above mentioned legal situation concerning the United Kingdom s withdrawal from the European Union changes the allocation of seats applied during the 2014 2019 parliamentary term should apply until the withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the European Union becomes legally effective The European Council also drew up contingency plans allowing the UK to retain its MEPs were Brexit to be postponed However in the event that the United Kingdom is still a Member State of the Union at the beginning of the 2019 2024 parliamentary term the number of representatives in the European Parliament per Member State taking up office shall be the one provided for in Article 3 of the European Council Decision 2013 312 EU until the withdrawal of the United Kingdom from the Union becomes legally effective Official preparations After Brexit was delayed beyond its initial planned date of 29 March 2019 the possibility of a sufficiently long delay so as to require the election to take place became more apparent The period for withdrawal under Article 50 was first extended with the unanimous approval of the European Council until 12 April 2019 the deadline for informing the EU of the intention to hold an election By early April the House of Commons had voted again to extend the withdrawal period and a deadline of 31 October 2019 was agreed between the UK and the Council The UK Government therefore ordered preparations for the election with the deadline for candidate nominations on 24 April for the South West England region and 25 April for all other regions Nevertheless ratification of a withdrawal agreement by the UK and European parliaments would still have permitted the UK to leave before October Had this occurred before 23 May the United Kingdom and Gibraltar would not have taken part in the 2019 European Parliament elections scheduled for that day On 7 May the UK Government announced that it would not be able to obtain ratification in time to prevent the elections although it still aimed to ratify the withdrawal agreement before October Later in May it also acknowledged that the MEPs elected would take up their seats with Brexit not due to happen until after 2 July Campaign background The two major UK political parties the Conservatives and Labour saw the prospect of elections for the European Parliament while the UK was due to leave the European Union as problematic with both having been keen to avoid this scenario The backdrop of ongoing debate around Brexit was expected to be a very significant factor in how people voted with the election seen by many as a proxy referendum on whether the country should leave the EU or not Commentators who suggested that the vote share for the Conservatives and Labour could fall with voters moving towards a number of pro Leave or pro Remain parties and this did indeed happen The Conservative government had made several attempts to get the Withdrawal Agreement that it had negotiated with the EU approved by the House of Commons which would have allowed for Brexit before the election All these having failed the Conservatives entered into cross party talks with the Labour Party to see whether they could agree a withdrawal plan These talks were still ongoing as of 10 May 2019 but eventually failed The election was seen as being significant for two new single issue parties the Brexit Party supporting Brexit and Change UK supporting the UK remaining in the EU Between the 2014 and 2019 elections there were many changes to the breakdown of UK members due to defections and changes in affiliation This table shows the number of MEPs in each party at both ends of the term Affiliation MembersAt 2014 election At dissolution ChangeConservative 19 18 1Labour 20 18 2Brexit Party 14 14 Independent 0 6 6Green 3 3UKIP 24 3 21SNP 2 2Liberal Democrats 1 1Sinn Fein 1 1DUP 1 1Plaid Cymru 1 1UUP 1 1SDP 0 1 1Change UK 1 1Vacant seats 0 2 2Total 73 73CandidatesNomination papers had to be submitted by 16 00 on the 19th working day before election day 25 April 2019 To stand as a candidate individuals had to be aged 18 or over on the date of nomination and a British or European Union citizen or a Commonwealth citizen possessing indefinite leave to remain or not requiring leave to enter or remain in the UK In April 2019 Labour said it had started its process for choosing candidates 16 out of the 20 MEPs elected last time applied to stand again The party s candidates were announced on 18 April and included former Cabinet minister Andrew Adonis former MP Katy Clark and the national co ordinator of campaigning group Momentum Laura Parker Following the prospect of a delay to Brexit Conservative Party MEPs were asked by their delegation leader if they would consider standing again if there were a delay that would mean the UK staying in the EU beyond the date of the next European Parliament election Fifteen of the party s 18 MEPs stood again as lead candidates for their respective regions The Brexit Party ran candidates for all 70 seats in Great Britain with leader Nigel Farage himself a former UKIP leader standing in the South East England region and former Conservative candidate Annunziata Rees Mogg standing in the East Midlands region Writer Claire Fox formerly of the Revolutionary Communist Party and former Conservative MP Ann Widdecombe both also stood The UK Independence Party selected its three remaining MEPs as candidates along with social media activist Carl Benjamin and YouTuber Mark Meechan The Green Party of England and Wales and the corresponding party in Scotland the Scottish Greens began their candidate selection processes in March The Green Party of England and Wales announced a full slate of candidates for England and Wales on 24 April 2019 including one of its three outgoing MEPs Molly Scott Cato Other candidates included Catherine Rowett Rupert Read and former Lord Mayor of Sheffield Magid Magid The Liberal Democrats announced their selected candidates for England and Wales on 17 April 2019 following a membership vote The party s sole incumbent MEP Catherine Bearder was re selected as its lead candidate for South East England while former MEPs Chris Davies Fiona Hall Bill Newton Dunn and Phil Bennion were selected as lead candidates for their respective regions Other candidates included in London the entrepreneur Dinesh Dhamija and the former leader of the People s Alliance of Tower Hamlets Rabina Khan and former MPs Martin Horwood and Stephen Williams in the South West The party also stood a full slate in Scotland Change UK said it had had 3 700 applicants to be candidates including former MPs from both the Labour Party and the Conservative Party Their candidates included writer Rachel Johnson sister of Conservative MP Boris Johnson and formerly of the Liberal Democrats former BBC journalist Gavin Esler former Conservative MPs Stephen Dorrell and Neil Carmichael former Labour MEP Carole Tongue former Labour MPs Roger Casale and Jon Owen Jones former Liberal Democrat MEP Diana Wallis and former deputy Prime Minister of Poland Jacek Rostowski It stood 70 candidates all of Great Britain but not Northern Ireland Two of its candidates subsequently withdrew from the ballot due to reports that they had made misogynistic and racist remarks Jill Evans Plaid Cymru s sole MEP stood as the party s lead candidate as part of a full slate for the Wales constituency The Women s Equality Party stood in the London constituency with the party s co founder Catherine Mayer as the lead candidate Far right activist Tommy Robinson stood as an independent for the North West England constituency Further parties and independent candidates also stood including the English Democrats and the Yorkshire Party Nine candidates seven in London and two in South West England were part of the new Climate Emergency Independents group They took part in and were inspired by the Extinction Rebellion protests However as they were not a registered political party they were all listed as separate independents on the ballot paper Patrick O Flynn the Social Democratic Party s sole MEP who defected to the SDP after originally being elected for UKIP stated in April 2019 that the party would not be standing candidates at the election Northern Ireland Parties with a sitting MEP European affiliationDemocratic Unionist Party NISinn Fein GUE NGLUlster Unionist Party ECR Northern Ireland has a different party system to Great Britain dominated by regional parties and using single transferable vote rather than the party list system Two of the three sitting MEPs contested the election Martina Anderson for Sinn Fein and Diane Dodds for the Democratic Unionist Party Jim Nicholson who had represented the Ulster Unionist Party since 1989 retired with Danny Kennedy instead running for the party Three parties selected their leaders as candidates Colum Eastwood for the SDLP Naomi Long for the Alliance Party and Clare Bailey for the Green Party UKIP nominated Robert Hill as their candidate The Conservative Party also nominated a candidate making the Conservatives and UKIP the only two parties to stand candidates in all regions across the UK In April 2019 Jane Morrice co founder of the Northern Ireland Women s Coalition and a former deputy speaker of the Northern Ireland Assembly announced she was standing as an independent on a pro Remain platform Parties in the election Political party Standing inAlliance Party Northern Ireland onlyAnimal Welfare Party London onlyBrexit Party All constituencies except Northern IrelandChange UK All constituencies except Northern IrelandConservative Party All constituenciesDemocratic Unionist Party Northern Ireland onlyEnglish Democrats East of England North West England South West England Yorkshire and the HumberGreen Party in Northern Ireland Northern Ireland onlyGreen Party of England and Wales England and Wales onlyLabour Party All constituencies except Northern IrelandLiberal Democrats All constituencies except Northern IrelandPlaid Cymru Wales onlyScottish Green Party Scotland onlyScottish National Party Scotland onlySinn Fein Northern Ireland onlySocial Democratic and Labour Party Northern Ireland onlySocialist Party of Great Britain South East England onlyTraditional Unionist Voice Northern Ireland onlyUK European Union Party London North West England South East EnglandUK Independence Party All constituenciesUlster Unionist Party Northern Ireland onlyWomen s Equality Party London onlyYorkshire Party Yorkshire and the Humber onlyCampaignLabour In early 2019 there was an ongoing debate within Labour as to what its policy should be with respect to Brexit On 20 April the party s deputy leader Tom Watson argued the party needed to back a second referendum on Brexit in order to present a clear alternative to and beat the Brexit Party but that was not Labour s preferred option A draft of a Labour leaflet that made no reference to a second referendum provoked a public row including more than 90 Labour MPs and MEPs writing to the party s National Executive Committee NEC in protest On 27 April Labour announced that the original leaflet draft was to be redrafted to include details of the party s preparations for a general election with a referendum if necessary to avoid what it called a bad Tory deal Labour s manifesto for the elections was agreed at an NEC meeting on 30 April re affirming its 2018 policy that it will first seek a Brexit deal on its terms including a Customs Union but if that is not possible it will seek a general election and if that is not possible a second referendum Only one vote was held at the meeting on an amendment from the TSSA union that sought to commit Labour to a referendum on any Brexit deal but this was rejected by a what NEC sources called a clear margin Retiring Labour MEP Mary Honeyball criticised this as Not good enough and some Labour Party members destroyed their membership cards in protest However some Remain supporting Labour MPs and Labour MPs sceptical of a second referendum welcomed the decision Watson had walked out of the Shadow Cabinet meeting earlier on 30 April in protest at Shadow Cabinet members not being shown the draft manifesto Labour s 9 May campaign launch stressed bringing the country together Jeremy Corbyn talked of a healing process between those who supported Leave and Remain By mid May Watson and Labour s Shadow Brexit Secretary Keir Starmer were arguing for a second referendum yet their shadow international trade secretary Barry Gardiner stated Labour is not a Remain party now In most voting areas e g Scotland and South West England all Labour candidates stated their support for a second referendum with the UK s longest serving MEP David Martin Labour and the Labour Leader in the European Parliament Richard Corbett MEP among those calling for the country to stay in the EU Polling in mid May suggested both Labour supporters and the electorate in general were split as to whether Labour supported remaining or leaving the EU Conservative The Conservative government was hopeful of agreeing a withdrawal deal with the EU soon enough that UK MEPs would not take up their seats The party did not spend any central money on candidate campaigning did not publish a manifesto and did not hold a campaign launch One Conservative MEP said that the deficit of campaigning would be used as an excuse if the party does poorly in the elections Many party activists were demotivated given the failure of the government to deliver Brexit Conservative councillors in Derbyshire boycotted the European elections and refused to campaign in protest A survey of 781 Conservative councillors found that 40 plan to vote for the Brexit Party Conservative MPs including Lucy Allan tweeted positive comments about the Brexit Party In response the Conservative Party issued a warning that individuals campaigning for or endorsing other parties will be expelled from the party The Prime Minister and leader of the Conservative Party Theresa May had announced her intention to resign before the next general election but further pressure mounted on her to be clear about her timetable for departure with May meeting the party s 1922 Committee on the matter on 16 May 2019 This resulted in May agreeing to stand down by 30 June 2019 Campaigning by possible successors accelerated after the local elections citation needed UKIP UKIP argued it was the authentic party of Brexit the true party of Leave to quote party leader Gerard Batten Alongside the Conservatives UKIP was one of two Brexit supporting parties fielding a candidate in every region of the United Kingdom including Northern Ireland Batten criticised the rival Brexit Party as having no policies UKIP launched its campaign on 18 April There was renewed criticism surrounding its candidate Carl Benjamin for telling Labour MP Jess Phillips I wouldn t even rape you on Twitter in 2016 and producing a satirical video Further controversy came as one of UKIP s sitting MEPs Stuart Agnew addressed a pro apartheid club of expat South Africans in London that reportedly had links to the far right Brexit Party Nigel Farage the Brexit Party and former UKIP leader said that there was no difference between the Brexit party and UKIP in terms of policy but in terms of personnel there s a vast difference criticising UKIP s connections to the far right On 15 April 2019 three more sitting female UKIP MEPs defected to the Brexit Party criticising UKIP s nomination of Benjamin as a candidate In particular Collins noted UKIP leader Gerard Batten s defence of Benjamin s use of a non rape threat as satire to be an especially compelling factor Two further UKIP MEPs moved to the Brexit Party on 17 April On 23 April Farage said that the Brexit Party was not here just to get a protest vote on 23 May far from it 23 May for us is just the beginning He also argued that the better the performance of the Brexit Party the lower the chance of a second referendum on Brexit Farage argued that should the Brexit Party get most votes in the elections his party should get a seat at the UK EU negotiations Liberal Democrats Green Party and Change UK The three main nationwide pro European Union parties standing in the election Liberal Democrats Greens and Change UK wished to treat the election as a soft referendum on Europe Commentators such as Marina Hyde raised the concern of a split vote among pro Remain parties reducing the number of pro Remain MEPs being elected Vince Cable the leader of the Liberal Democrats proposed standing joint candidates with the Greens and Change UK on a common policy of seeking a second referendum on Brexit but the other parties rejected the idea Change UK s co founder Chuka Umunna confirmed the Lib Dem approach but he and Change UK interim leader Heidi Allen dismissed concerns of a split Remain vote Independent MEP Julie Girling then supporting Change UK said she had decided not to stand for re election as a Change UK candidate because of the concern about maximising the Remain vote On 10 May she endorsed the Liberal Democrats Change UK and Girling clarified that she had not been and was not a Change UK MEP with Girling saying she sat as an independent MEP On 15 May David Macdonald the lead candidate for Change UK in Scotland switched to endorsing the Liberal Democrats in order not to split the pro Remain vote On 22 May Allen said that she and another Change UK MP Sarah Wollaston wanted to advise Remain supporters to vote Liberal Democrat outside of London and South East England but they were overruled by other party members The Greens said that joint lists were not desirable and that there were fundamental ideological differences on other issues between the parties that wanted a second referendum The Green Party campaigned on a platform calling for action on climate change as well as an anti Brexit platform The Liberal Democrats ran on a stop Brexit message seeking the support of those who wanted the UK to remain in the EU At his party s campaign launch on 26 April Cable lamented that it was not standing on a common platform with other parties opposed to Brexit It launched its manifesto on 9 May unveiling its campaign slogan Bollocks to Brexit which attracted considerable media debate Polling in the final fortnight put the Liberal Democrats ahead of the other pro Remain parties and overtaking Labour in some polls Change UK which in early April was still known as the Independent Group saw the election as an important launchpad for its new party seeking to turn the ballot into a proxy referendum on Brexit On 16 April 2019 two former Conservative MEPs who had left the party to sit as independents within the European People s Party grouping announced their support for Change UK The Renew Party agreed to support Change UK at the elections and the latter included candidates from Renew s approved list Molly Scott Cato a sitting MEP for the Green Party of England and Wales criticised Change UK as a single issue party with no coherent policy platform beyond opposing Brexit Other parties The SNP campaign launch was marred by tens of thousands of personalised letters being sent to the wrong people The mistake was reported to be in the data supplied by SNP HQ run by Peter Murrell husband of SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon The party apologised for the error the party referred itself to the Information Commissioner s Office and may have been fined but was cleared of breaching data protection regulations The DUP campaigned on sending a message to get on with Brexit Later events Local elections were held in most of England and all of Northern Ireland on 2 May The results saw both Conservatives and Labour losing seats in what The Guardian called a Brexit backlash while the Liberal Democrats Greens and independents made gains The Liberal Democrats made the biggest gains which the Lib Dem leader Vince Cable put down to a rejection of the Conservatives and Labour over their Brexit approaches Stephen Bush writing in the New Statesman argued that the Lib Dem success in the local elections make it the most likely party for Remain voters to rally around at the European elections while James Moore in The Independent described them as having the momentum leading into the European elections Alliance the Lib Dems sister party in Northern Ireland other smaller parties and independents also made significant gains in the local elections in Northern Ireland On 18 May former Conservative Deputy Prime Minister and sitting Conservative peer Michael Heseltine said he would vote for the Liberal Democrats instead of the Conservatives because of his own party s support for Brexit Heseltine subsequently had the Conservative whip suspended owing to his comments Polling after the local elections saw the Brexit Party in front followed by Labour with the Liberal Democrats taking third from the Conservatives Conservative sources predicted the party could come even lower than fourth By the weekend before the vote the Labour Party was concerned at the increased polling for the Liberal Democrats which came above Labour in London and in some national polls On 17 May Labour left talks that had been held to find a Brexit deal with the Conservative government May then proposed to bring a new deal to the House of Commons for a vote in early June which she described as an improved package of measures after which she was expected to step down as Prime Minister and leader of the Conservative Party The campaign saw multiple cases of milkshakes being thrown at controversial MEP candidates on the right The protests began against Carl Benjamin the anti feminist social media activist who had attracted controversy for jokes about rape and activist Tommy Robinson They later extended to Nigel Farage leader of the Brexit Party Police asked a Scottish fast food outlet near where a Farage rally was taking place not to sell milkshakes on the night of the event On 21 May the Prime Minister and Leader of the Conservative Party Theresa May made a speech outlining her plan to introduce an EU withdrawal agreement bill in June that would allow the Commons to make amendments e g in favour of a Customs Union or a second referendum but this was received badly by much of her own party as well as by other parties There were growing calls for her to resign on 22 May the day before the election Andrea Leadsom the Leader of the House of Commons resigned on the evening of 22 May May had planned to publish the bill on Friday 24 May but on polling day she abandoned that plan with publication delayed until early June On the day after the vote May announced that she would resign as party leader on 7 June There were several reports on the day of problems encountered by non UK UK resident EU citizens not being able to vote because their paperwork had not been processed in time with opposition politicians raising concerns as to whether there had been systemic failures At least three councils admitted that the compressed timescale of the election meant that they had not been able to send postal ballots out in time for some voters overseas A report by The Guardian after the election found that there were low levels of completion of UC1 forms required by UK resident EU citizens in order for them to vote in the UK in many parts of the country After the election the European Commission complained to the UK government about the obstacles faced by EU citizens in voting A month later the Dutch Interior Ministry stated that almost half the local UK registration officials had failed to send the UC1 data to the Dutch authorities and that a portion of the data sent was unusable despite complaints by the Dutch government about similar issues in 2014 Between the vote and the count Because results could not be announced until the last European Union member country s polls had closed and most countries in the EU voted on Sunday the counting of UK ballots started on Sunday 26 May 2019 Within a day of the polls closing two party leaders and one deputy party leader announced their plans to resign On 24 May Theresa May announced her plan to resign as leader of the Conservative Party on 7 June which would trigger a leadership contest On the same day Mike Hookem resigned as deputy leader of UKIP in order to challenge for the leadership Vince Cable leader of the Liberal Democrats had previously stated his intention to stand down after the local elections and European Parliament elections The party s leadership contest officially started on 24 May Two Labour politicians announced their departures from the party after the vote departing MEP Mary Honeyball and former Welsh AM Leighton Andrews Andrews said he had voted Green Both criticised Labour over alleged antisemitism and their failure to oppose Brexit Alastair Campbell formerly Director of Communications for the Labour Party said he had voted for a pro Remain party the first time in his life he had not voted Labour He later revealed that he voted for the Liberal Democrats and was expelled from the Labour Party Party Brexit positions Party Brexit position Withdrawal agreement position Manifesto Position DetailsLabour Ambiguous Opposed Deal with EU In favour of a permanent customs union with the EU If it could not obtain agreement on its Brexit plan or an early general election the party supported the option of a public vote Conservative Leave Supported Deal with EU In favour of leaving the EU with the withdrawal agreement negotiated by the current Conservative government Brexit Party Leave Opposed No deal Brexit In favour of no deal Brexit opposed a customs union or membership of the single market UKIP Leave Opposed No deal Brexit In favour of no deal Brexit without a formal withdrawal agreement Green E amp W Remain Opposed Second referendum In favour of a second referendum SNP Remain Opposed Second referendum In favour of Scotland remaining in the single market and customs union Supported a second referendum and an independent Scotland within the EU Liberal Democrats Remain Opposed Revoke Article 50 to Stop Brexit Sought to stop Brexit In favour of a second referendum in which they would campaign for Remain Democratic Unionist Leave Opposed Deal with EU Concerns over a perceived risk to Northern Ireland s position in the United Kingdom due to the Irish border backstop issue Plaid Cymru Remain Opposed Second referendum In favour of a second referendum and potentially of an independence referendum for Wales if Brexit were to occur without continued membership of single market Sinn Fein Remain Supported In favour of designated special status for Northern Ireland remaining in the EU Supported a border poll on Northern Ireland uniting with Ireland in the event of no deal Brexit Ulster Unionist Party Ambiguous Opposed Deal with EU Concerns based over the Northern Irish backstop issue Change UK Remain Opposed Second referendum In favour of a second referendum in which it would campaign for Remain Among other parties the SDLP opposed Brexit and supported a second referendum but it supported the withdrawal agreement if Brexit is to take place The Alliance Party opposed Brexit while TUV supported it DebatesA livestreamed debate was held by The Daily Telegraph between Nigel Farage leader of the Brexit Party and Vince Cable leader of the Liberal Democrats A debate was held by the BBC in Northern Ireland with candidates of the main regional parties represented The BBC also held a debate between the lead candidates of all parties standing in Wales EndorsementsNewspapers Newspaper EndorsementDaily Mail Conservative Party Brexit Party in strategic electoratesEvening Standard Liberal DemocratsThe Guardian Pro EU candidatesThe News Letter Belfast Unionist candidatesThe New Worker No endorsement encouraged a boycottThe Observer Pro EU candidatesSocialist Worker Labour PartySunday Mail Scotland Scottish Green PartySunday Mirror Labour PartyOpinion pollsThe chart below depicts opinion polls conducted in Great Britain for the 2019 European Parliament elections in the UK trendlines are local regressions LOESS There was regular polling from mid March The share for the Brexit Party rose rapidly and it led the polls from late April The share for the Labour Party declined over the period but they came second in most polls Polling for the Liberal Democrats started rising towards the end of April with most polls predicting they would come third Polling for the Conservative Party fell over the period with most polls predicting it would come fourth ResultsResults were declared for Wales and most of England on Sunday evening with results for the rest of England and for Scotland coming on Monday Results for Northern Ireland were clear by the end of Monday United Kingdom results Party Alliance Votes SeatsNumber Seats Brexit Party NI 5 248 533 30 5 new party 29 new party 39 7Liberal Democrats ALDE 3 367 284 19 6 13 0 16 15 21 9Labour Party S amp D 2 347 255 13 7 10 8 10 10 13 7Green Party of England and Wales G EFA 1 881 306 11 8 4 0 7 4 9 6Conservative Party ECR 1 512 809 8 8 14 3 4 15 5 5Scottish National Party G EFA 594 553 3 5 1 1 3 1 4 1Plaid Cymru G EFA 163 928 1 0 0 3 1 1 4Sinn Fein GUE NGL 126 951 0 7 0 2 1 1 4Democratic Unionist Party NI 124 991 0 7 0 1 1 1 4Alliance Party of Northern Ireland ALDE 105 928 0 6 0 3 1 1 1 4Change UK EPP 571 846 3 3 new party 0 new party 0UK Independence Party 554 463 3 2 23 4 0 24 0Scottish Greens G EFA 129 603 0 8 0 1 0 0Social Democratic and Labour Party S amp D 78 589 0 5 0 0 0 0Traditional Unionist Voice NI 62 021 0 4 0 1 0 0Ulster Unionist Party ECR 53 052 0 3 0 2 0 1 0Yorkshire Party G EFA 50 842 0 3 0 2 0 0English Democrats 39 938 0 2 0 6 0 0UK European Union Party 33 576 0 2 new party 0 new party 0Animal Welfare Party APEU 25 232 0 2 0 0 0 0Women s Equality Party 23 766 0 1 new party 0 new party 0Green Party Northern Ireland G EFA 12 471 0 1 0 0 0 0Independent Network 7 641 lt 0 1 new party 0 0Socialist Party of Great Britain 3 505 lt 0 1 0 0 0 0Independent 80 280 0 5 0 5 0 0Valid Votes 17 199 701 99 92 73 0Rejected Votes 15 138 0 08Overall turnout 17 214 839 37 18 1 4Registered voters 46 550 683Change UK s sole MEP before the election Richard Ashworth was a member of the EPP group Results by constituency and local areas Constituency Elected MEPsEast Midlands Brx Brx Brx LD Lab East of England Brx Brx Brx LD LD Grn Con London LD LD LD Brx Brx Lab Lab Grn North East England Brx Brx Lab North West England Brx Brx Brx LD LD Lab Lab Grn South East England Brx Brx Brx Brx LD LD LD Lab Grn ConSouth West England Brx Brx Brx LD LD Grn West Midlands Brx Brx Brx LD Lab Grn Con Yorkshire and the Humber Brx Brx Brx LD Lab Grn Scotland SNP SNP SNP Brx LD Con Wales Brx Brx Lab PC Northern Ireland SF APNI DUP Vote share by constituency GB only Percentage shares of the votes cast Party East Midlands East of England London North East England North West England South East England South West England West Midlands Yorkshire and the Humber Scotland WalesBrexit 38 2 37 8 17 9 38 7 31 2 36 1 36 7 37 7 36 5 14 8 32 5Liberal Democrats 17 2 22 6 27 2 16 8 17 2 25 8 23 1 16 3 15 5 13 8 13 6Labour 13 9 8 7 23 9 19 4 21 9 7 3 6 5 17 0 16 3 9 3 15 3Green 10 5 12 7 12 5 8 1 12 5 13 5 18 1 10 7 13 0 8 2 6 3Conservative 10 7 10 3 7 8 6 8 7 6 10 3 8 7 10 0 7 2 11 6 6 5SNP 37 8Plaid Cymru 19 6Analysis Estimated results of the 2019 European Parliament election for House of Commons constituencies in Great Britain Dr Chris Hanretty a Reader in Politics at the University of East Anglia estimated through a demographic model the most likely result by parliamentary constituency should it be repeated at a general election concluding that the Brexit Party would have won a majority with 414 seats The Brexit Party was the largest party gaining five more seats than UKIP achieved in 2014 Nigel Farage as leader of UKIP in 2014 and the Brexit Party in 2019 became the first person to lead two different parties that topped a national election The Brexit party came first in Wales and in eight of the nine English constituencies It finished third in London The Brexit Party polled highest in regions that voted Leave in the Brexit referendum The Liberal Democrats came second This was its best performance in a national election since the 2010 general election and its best ever in a European Parliament election This was the first time it or its predecessor parties had come second in a national election since before the Second World War It was the largest party in the London constituency the largest party in the second highest number of English reporting areas and the only party other than the SNP to top any Scottish reporting area The Labour Party was third overall It did not come first in any constituency This was its worst result in Wales for nearly a century it did not come first in any reporting area in Wales or Scotland Labour s vote fell in both Remain and Leave areas The Greens came fourth with their best performance since the 1989 European elections The Green Party of England and Wales was the largest party in three reporting areas The Conservative Party came fifth and was not the largest party in any reporting area polling below 10 for the first time in the party s history It lost votes across the country but did worst in Remain areas The combined share for Labour and the Conservatives was 23 well below their previous post Second World War low of 43 5 in 2009 The SNP came sixth overall but first in the single Scottish constituency the only one in which it stood candidates It was the largest party in 30 of the 32 Scottish council areas Plaid Cymru came second in Wales behind the Brexit Party marking the first time it had beaten Labour in any Wales wide election The closest result across the UK was in Wales where the Liberal Democrats were 13 948 votes 1 7 behind Labour for the last MEP In Northern Ireland the three MEPs elected were from the Democratic Unionist Party which advocates the continuation of the union with Great Britain Sinn Fein which campaigns for a united Ireland and the cross community Alliance Party The latter two were opposed to Brexit It was the first time that unionists had won fewer than two of the three seats and the first time that all three MEPs were women The Alliance success was noted as an indicator for the rise of the Others who identify neither as Unionist nor Nationalist Various analyses sought to combine vote shares for different parties together to index a pro Remain or pro Leave vote A Press Association report aggregated support for explicitly anti Brexit parties defined as the LibDems Greens SNP Plaid Cymru and Change UK totalling 40 4 versus that for those supporting a no deal Brexit the Brexit Party and UKIP on 34 9 figures are for Great Britain only excluding Northern Ireland where there was a majority for anti Brexit parties That analysis excludes Labour on 14 and the Conservatives on 9 Guardian journalist Dan Sabbagh noted how there were several possible comparisons one could make e g the Brexit Party 5 2 million votes against the Liberal Democrats and Greens combined 5 4 million votes or the Brexit Party UKIP and the DUP 5 9 million votes against the Liberal Democrats Greens Change UK SNP Plaid Cymru Sinn Fein and Alliance 6 8 million votes In terms of seats 34 were won by Leave supporting parties and 39 by Remain supporting parties if Conservatives are counted for Leave Sabbagh later followed by fellow Guardian journalist Polly Toynbee tackled how to account for Labour and Conservative votes by adding them in based on polling as to how their supporters split assigning 80 of Conservative voters to Leave and 60 of Labour voters to remain in this way predicting a 50 Remain to 47 Leave split in a second referendum However BBC political journalist Laura Kuenssberg critiqued the whole endeavour of adding up different vote shares In terms of a comparison between Leave and Remain supporting parties psephologist John Curtice simply described the result as a draw A large post vote poll commissioned by Michael Ashcroft estimated that 53 of those who voted Conservative in the 2017 general election voted for the Brexit Party while 21 voted Conservative and 12 voted Liberal Democrat 38 of those who voted Labour in 2017 supported the party at this election while 22 voted Liberal Democrat 17 Green and 13 Brexit Party 69 of the LibDem voters of 2017 stayed with the party while 13 voted Green and 7 Brexit Party 24 of the UKIP voters of 2017 stayed with their party but 68 switched to the Brexit Party Among all voters 50 said they had voted to remain in the referendum and 45 to leave and 50 stated they now wanted to leave and 46 stated they now wanted to remain YouGov released polling suggesting 41 of Labour Party members voted for other parties at the European election including 19 Green and 15 Liberal Democrat Likewise 67 of Conservative Party members voted for other parties 59 Brexit Party Electoral Commission report The Electoral Commission released its report on the election on 8 October 2019 The report highlighted the difficulties for EU27 citizens and British citizens abroad to vote despite concerns raised after the 2014 European election Reaction to resultsThe results were expected to push the Conservative Party towards a more hardline position with respect to Brexit and to lean towards electing a Brexiter in its leadership contest shortly afterward Reacting to the results the Shadow Foreign Secretary Emily Thornberry and Deputy Leader Tom Watson called for the Labour Party to change its policy to supporting a second referendum and remaining in the EU There was renewed debate within the Labour Party over its policy with a shift towards clearer support for a second referendum including Jeremy Corbyn stating that although a general election would be Labour s preference any Brexit deal had to be put to a public vote but there was continuing criticism over the party s clarity on and Corbyn s commitment to another referendum A modified policy was announced in July Meanwhile Leave supporters in the party were critical of any support for a second referendum Alastair Campbell having revealed he voted for the Liberal Democrats was expelled from the Labour Party but this decision was criticised by some in the party In response former Labour Home Secretary Charles Clarke and former Labour MP until 2017 Fiona Mactaggart announced that they had also voted Liberal Democrat while former Labour Cabinet member Bob Ainsworth announced he had voted Green A hashtag on Twitter in support expelmetoo proved popular on social media Watson and Harriet Harman criticised the expulsion Labour MP Owen Smith among others noted the juxtaposition of Campbell s expulsion on the same day that the EHRC opened an enquiry into anti Semitism in Labour and the slow response to complaints of anti Semitism It then emerged that Cherie Blair wife of the former Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair had also voted Liberal Democrat YouGov polling suggested 41 of Labour Party members voted for other parties including 19 Green and 15 Liberal Democrat at the election General election polling shortly after the European elections showed continued support for the Brexit Party and the Liberal Democrats A YouGov poll conducted on 28 29 May put the Liberal Democrats first and the Brexit Party second with Labour and the Conservatives third This was the first time a national poll had found that neither of the most popular two parties were Labour or the Conservatives since 2010 On 4 June 2019 in response to their poor performance in the elections six of the eleven MPs in Change UK left the group to return to sitting as independents The party s former spokesperson Chuka Umunna announced on 13 June that he would be seeking to join the Liberal Democrats MEPs not returningMEPs not standing for re election Twenty eight MEPs sitting at the end of the European Parliament s term did not seek re election Brexit Party All originally elected as UKIP Tim Aker East of England Jonathan Arnott North East England David Coburn Scotland Jane Collins Yorkshire and the Humber Bill Etheridge West Midlands Ray Finch South East England Diane James South East England Paul Nuttall North West England Margot Parker East Midlands Julia Reid South West England Jill Seymour West MidlandsConservative David Campbell Bannerman East of England Jacqueline Foster North West England Kay Swinburne WalesGreens Jean Lambert London Keith Taylor South East EnglandLabour Lucy Anderson London Mary Honeyball London Derek Vaughan Wales Two additional Labour MEPs had already resigned ahead of the election with their seats remaining vacant for the rest of the Parliament Linda McAvan Yorkshire and the Humber resigned 18 April 2019 Catherine Stihler Scotland resigned 31 January 2019 Independents elected as UKIP Janice Atkinson South East England Louise Bours North West England James Carver West Midlands William Legge Earl of Dartmouth South West England Steven Woolfe North West EnglandOther Julie Girling independent MEP for South West England originally elected as Conservative Patrick O Flynn SDP MEP for East of England originally elected as UKIP Ian Hudghton SNP MEP for Scotland Jim Nicholson Ulster Unionist MEP for Northern IrelandIncumbent MEPs defeated 21 MEPs were unseated Change UK Richard Ashworth South East England originally elected as Conservative Conservative Amjad Bashir Yorkshire and the Humber originally elected as UK Independence Party Daniel Dalton West Midlands Nirj Deva South East England John Flack East of England Ashley Fox Conservative Group leader in the European Parliament South West England Syed Kamall co chair of the ECR group London Sajjad Karim North West England Rupert Matthews East Midlands Emma McClarkin East Midlands John Procter Yorkshire and the Humber Charles Tannock London Labour Paul Brannen North East England Wajid Khan North West England David Martin Scotland Alex Mayer East of England Clare Moody South West England Sion Simon West Midlands UK Independence Party Stuart Agnew East of England Gerard Batten UKIP leader London Mike Hookem Yorkshire and the HumberSee alsoOpinion polling on the United Kingdom s membership of the European Union 2016 2020 2019 European Parliament election in Gibraltar 2019 United Kingdom general electionFootnotesIn the case of a British citizen who moved abroad before the age of 18 if a parent or guardian had been on the on Electoral Register in the UK in the 15 years before the election The number of registered voters included EU nationals who were not eligible to vote in UK general electionsReferences European Parliament Elections 2019 results and analysis PDF https www parliament uk Retrieved 14 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an ugly era of chaos The Independent 6 May 2019 from the original on 9 May 2019 Evening Standard comment Our view on European poll your vote matters Evening Standard 22 May 2019 The Guardian view on the EU elections a chance to reshape our politics The Guardian 17 May 2019 Retrieved 19 May 2019 A large unionist vote tomorrow will send a signal on the backstop News Letter JPI Media Farage marches on The New Worker New Communist Party of Britain 17 May 2019 Retrieved 19 May 2019 The Observer view on the European elections The Observer 19 May 2019 Retrieved 19 May 2019 Vote Labour in the European elections and increase the Tories crisis Socialist Worker Britain Larkham Printers amp Publishers 14 May 2019 Retrieved 19 May 2019 Sunday Mail backs Scottish Green Party in European elections Daily Record 12 May 2019 Retrieved 12 May 2019 Voice of the Sunday Mirror We depend on Labour for a fit future Mirror Online 18 May 2019 Retrieved 19 May 2019 Mcilkenny Stephen 22 May 2019 European 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North Irish Echo Retrieved 2 June 2019 Duffy Ronan 27 May 2019 Nationalist unionist duopoly broken in Northern Ireland s MEP elections as three women take seats TheJournal ie European elections 2019 Brexit Party dominates as Tories and Labour suffer BBC News 27 May 2019 Retrieved 28 May 2019 Toynbee Polly 27 May 2019 Remainers won these elections and they d win a second Brexit referendum The Guardian Retrieved 28 May 2019 Dan Sabbagh Remain v hard Brexit what the UK s EU election results tell us The Guardian 27 May 2019 bbclaurak 27 May 2019 Before twitter whips itself into a frenzy before 9 30 on Bank Hol Mon Tweet Retrieved 28 May 2019 via Twitter Ashcroft Michael 27 May 2019 My Euro election post vote poll most Tory switchers say they will stay with their new party Lord Ashcroft Polls Chris Curtis 20 May 2019 If everyone revealed how they voted last week Labour would have to kick out four in ten members YouGov Retrieved 31 May 2019 Report May 2019 European Parliamentary elections and local elections Electoral Commission 8 October 2019 Retrieved 16 October 2019 Murray Warren 28 May 2019 Tuesday briefing Corbyn converted over second Brexit referendum The Guardian BBCPolitics 26 May 2019 Labour should have argued for a second referendum and then pledged to campaign to remain in Europe says Emily Thornberry on her party s EU election campaign Tweet Retrieved 27 May 2019 via Twitter tom watson Following the disastrous EU election results Labour urgently needs to re think its Brexit position Twitter accessed 27 May 2019 Mason Rowena Elgot Jessica 28 May 2019 Corbyn backs referendum on Brexit deal after EU election exodus The Guardian Harris Tom 27 May 2019 Jeremy Corbyn is being broken on the horns of Labour s second Brexit referendum dilemma The Telegraph Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Labour would back Remain in referendum on Tory Brexit BBC News 9 July 2019 Howell Steve 29 May 2019 In 2017 Labour promised to deliver a jobs first Brexit It must not go back on that now The Guardian The Guardian view on Alastair Campbell s expulsion petty foolish and counterproductive The Guardian 28 May 2019 Retrieved 28 July 2021 Downes Steven 28 May 2019 Eastern Daily Press Archived from the original on 9 August 2020 Retrieved 28 July 2021 Campbell hires lawyers over Labour expulsion BBC News 5 June 2019 Retrieved 6 June 2019 Corbyn and deputy at war over expulsion of Labour members on voting Evening Standard 29 May 2019 Newsnight BBC Two 28 May 2019 Revealed Cherie Blair voted Lib Dem in European elections Evening Standard 30 May 2019 Retrieved 31 May 2019 Curtis Chris 30 May 2019 Lib Dems lead the polls as they start to become the party of the 48 YouGov YouGov Retrieved 31 May 2019 Schofield Kevin 31 May 2019 Major shock as Lib Dems take the lead in new opinion poll PoliticsHome Retrieved 31 May 2019 Bush Stephen 30 May 2019 Are the Liberal Democrats really topping the polls New Statesman Retrieved 31 May 2019 Change UK splits as six of 11 MPs become independents BBC News 4 June 2019 Retrieved 4 June 2019 Chuka Umunna joins the Lib Dems after quitting Change UK BBC News 13 June 2019 Retrieved 13 June 2019 Pyne Holly 24 April 2019 Talk Radio Wireless Group Archived from the original on 27 April 2019 Retrieved 27 April 2019 External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to 2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom House of Commons Briefings 2019 UK European Parliament Election Results European Parliament Liaison Office in the United Kingdom The Electoral Commission European Parliamentary electionsManifestos Alliance DUP Green Party of England and Wales Labour Liberal Democrats Sinn Fein, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library, article, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games, mobile, phone, android, ios, apple, mobile phone, samsung, iphone, xiomi, xiaomi, redmi, honor, oppo, nokia, sonya, mi, pc, web, computer
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