Andrew_S
Top Poster
Posts: 28,229
Member is Online
|
Post by Andrew_S on Jan 31, 2018 16:30:49 GMT
|
|
|
Post by hullenedge on Jan 31, 2018 18:38:32 GMT
|
|
|
Post by mick745 on Feb 5, 2018 12:01:25 GMT
Does anyone have the declaration times and order of declaration from GE 2017 please?
|
|
|
Post by hullenedge on Feb 5, 2018 17:53:39 GMT
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Feb 6, 2018 11:11:21 GMT
Highest Conservative votes 2017:
South Holland & The Deepings 69.9% South Staffordshire 69.8% Christchurch 69.6%
|
|
|
Post by andrewteale on Feb 6, 2018 11:41:03 GMT
|
|
|
Post by LDCaerdydd on Feb 7, 2018 15:17:57 GMT
Does anyone know the seat that had the highest UKIP vote in 2015 where UKIP didn't stand in 2017?
|
|
|
Post by greatkingrat on Feb 7, 2018 15:34:54 GMT
There were 10 seats where UKIP got over 20% in 2015 and didn't stand in 2017.
1. Wentworth and Dearne (24.9%) 2. Sittingbourne and Sheppey (24.8%) 3. Stoke-on-Trent North (24.7%) 4. Doncaster Central (24.1%) 5. Don Valley (23.5%) 6. Makerfield (22.5%) 7. Blyth Valley (22.3%) 8. Christchurch (21.5%) 9. Stoke-on-Trent South (21.2%) 10. West Bromwich East (21.2%)
|
|
|
Post by hullenedge on Feb 12, 2018 19:45:19 GMT
|
|
Andrew_S
Top Poster
Posts: 28,229
Member is Online
|
Post by Andrew_S on Feb 13, 2018 1:51:18 GMT
AFAIK 2017 was the first general election where the count for every seat started at 10pm on election night. 643 out of 650 were declared by 6:30am. The other 7 were declared as follows: Richmond Park (7:07am) — maj 45 Dudley North (7:13am) — maj 22 St Ives (7:39am) — maj 312 St Austell & Newquay (9:05am) — maj 11,142 Cornwall SE (9:21am) — maj 17,443 Cornwall N (9:51am) — maj 7,200 Kensington (9:03pm) — maj 20 Four of those are explained by small majorities / recounts being needed. The three Cornish seats with larger majorites are apparently explained by this: "7:08am We've asked why it's taking so long to get results from the Polkyth count (which includes South East Cornwall and North Cornwall, as well as Newquay and St Austell). We're told it's because there are fewer staff - because the room is smaller than the normal one they use."www.piratefm.co.uk/news/latest-news/2305790/cornwall-and-the-general-election-results/
|
|
Andrew_S
Top Poster
Posts: 28,229
Member is Online
|
Post by Andrew_S on Feb 13, 2018 8:38:39 GMT
|
|
Andrew_S
Top Poster
Posts: 28,229
Member is Online
|
Post by Andrew_S on Feb 13, 2018 19:44:28 GMT
BBC's election night show in Scotland:
|
|
Andrew_S
Top Poster
Posts: 28,229
Member is Online
|
Post by Andrew_S on Feb 14, 2018 1:09:46 GMT
BBC's election night show in Scotland: In 2015 the Scottish programme was actually better in terms of showing the results of individual constituencies, even ones outside Scotland, than the UK show in London, and from watching the first hour or so of the 2017 programme it looks like that might be true again.
|
|
thetop
Labour
[k4r]
Posts: 945
|
Post by thetop on Feb 18, 2018 0:55:47 GMT
BBC's election night show in Scotland: In 2015 the Scottish programme was actually better in terms of showing the results of individual constituencies, even ones outside Scotland, than the UK show in London, and from watching the first hour or so of the 2017 programme it looks like that might be true again. Looks to be incomplete - can't find any other parts.
|
|
Andrew_S
Top Poster
Posts: 28,229
Member is Online
|
Post by Andrew_S on Feb 18, 2018 6:12:53 GMT
In 2015 the Scottish programme was actually better in terms of showing the results of individual constituencies, even ones outside Scotland, than the UK show in London, and from watching the first hour or so of the 2017 programme it looks like that might be true again. Looks to be incomplete - can't find any other parts. Yes I couldn't find them. It ought to be on BBC iPlayer for 12 months, and they have got some shows from the campaign, but not the election show itself. www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/group/p05210v2
|
|
|
Post by Davıd Boothroyd on Feb 18, 2018 9:59:39 GMT
I have three parts of the 2017 BBC Scotland programme - runs from 10 pm to 9 am.
|
|
|
Post by Davıd Boothroyd on Mar 19, 2018 11:08:44 GMT
|
|
|
Post by LDCaerdydd on Mar 19, 2018 11:31:47 GMT
Conservative and Unionist Party (GB) £18,565,102
Labour Party £11,003,980
Liberal Democrats £6,788,316
Scottish National Party (SNP) £1,623,127
Green Party £299,352
Women’s Equality Party £285,662
UK Independent Party (UKIP) £273,104
Others inc Plaid (but exc NI) all under £250k
Update - Plaid spent £105k, next largest was the Co-operative Party on £40k.
|
|
Chris from Brum
Lib Dem
What I need is a strong drink and a peer group.
Posts: 9,743
|
Post by Chris from Brum on Mar 19, 2018 12:02:38 GMT
Of course the SNP spend would be exclusively focussed on Scotland. If we pro-rata the amount up to a GB equivalence, what would it look like?
|
|
|
Post by Pete Whitehead on Mar 19, 2018 12:04:39 GMT
That WEP figure is insane. They only had 7 candidates all of whom won a derisory vote
|
|