The data confirm the almost definitive exit polls who last night wowed the UK. The Conservative Party David Cameron, according to the BBC, has already obtained 326 seats in the House of Commons, that the absolute majority of the assembly. The poll is still ongoing and Cameron can further increase the spoils but already it has the numbers to form the government alone. The last projection gives him 331 seats . A victory without question that brings to mind the repeated and indisputable triumphs of Margaret Thatcher. The collapse in share 239 Labour leader Ed Miliband and, after a very bad awakening, chose the step back. The party in Scotland has been gnawed by nationalists and in the rest of the country has not gained as hoped and as all the polls indicated.
Miliband announced his resignation as leader of Labour in the press conference: “Britain needs a strong Labour Party and it’s time for someone else to assume its leadership,” he said, adding that temporarily take the reins of his party deputy, Harriet Harman, until there will be a new challenge for leadership. He said he was very sorry for the defeat and said he had done everything possible. “The Labour Party has been a great force for progress to which I joined at the age of 15 years. The party will recover after this defeat “.
The debacle had prompted the resignation of leader Nick Clegg by libdem. For Clegg was “simply heartbreaking” to see many colleagues and friends lose their seats in the House of Commons. He stated that the responsibility for the defeat lies about him and that libdem pay the price of being in government. “The fear and injustice have won. Liberalism has lost. But now more than ever we must continue to fight, “he said, noting that it is” dark hour “for the party but that liberal values must be defended.
The Scottish National Party will have 58 seats – the success is huge but will do little – the Ukip a couple (the leader Farage but was beaten by a conservative in his constituency), the Liberal Democrats find themselves anniciliti: lose at least forty-five MPs in Westminster will ensure and not ten. The current coalition government, despite the humiliation they endure from Lib Dem (former party leader Paddy Ashdon said last night on TV that “will eat his hat in public ‘), conceivably could even compose himself. But the magnitude of the success will push the Conservative Party to go it alone: it takes between 323 and 326 seats to take control of the House of Commons and to take the helm of England from Downing Street. Divide the chair with the other, at this point, would not make sense.
The Labour Party of Ed Miliband are the big losers of the vote. After years of opposition, they do not go beyond 30% and lose twenty-six parliamentarians from five years ago: the dream of returning to the government has finally vanished at dawn. To achieve n be enough even on a reckless alliance with the Scottish National Party. It was discussed at length during the election campaign. It does not. However the Scottish independence, after the referendum lost last September, they get a historical revenge: conquer virtually all colleges for grabs between Glasgow and Orkney Islands in the far north – 55 or 56 members – and anyone will be driving in the UK can not ignore a party, locally strong, that the United Kingdom wants to do it openly apart. But the SNP soride not what he wanted: the Sturgeon hoped the success of Labour to condition the new government. The game, it seems, went differently: the drubbing Labour was due to the fact that it was cannibalized across Scotland by nationalists.
Prime Minister David Cameron has not yet been proclaimed openly winner. It will do so only when there will be the final results. “My goal – said cautiously – it remains simple: to govern for all and for our United Kingdom.” Instead, the leader of Labor, the young Ed Miliband, many accused of inadequacy, has effectively admitted defeat in the night talking to Doncaster: “We are deeply sorry,” he said. The percentage of votes nationwide, which in the majority system counts relatively – you win and lose in the individual colleges – are now outlined: Conservative 36.8%, Labour 30.5%, UKIP 12.6%, Liberal 7.7 %, Scottish National Party 4.8%, followed by all the others.
The results decreed another humiliation, perhaps the greatest: the survey. Virtually all institutions were predicting a tie, parliamentary paralysis, a vote antechamber of the abyss, the so-called “greek scenery”. The same betting shops, which gave (and paid) as the most likely hypothesis a hung parliament, seem to have suffered a debacle. But to understand how things should know the extent of the stakes. It remains a fact: while t ll preparing for the funeral of the Anglo-Saxon system, the British seem to have found in the fog the road to stability: there will be a majority and Prime Minister David Cameron, without having to make deals with anyone, will remain firmly Downing Street cashing the dividend policy of five years in which the country’s economy is still grew at a pace unknown in the rest of Europe.
Unfortunately for Nigel Farage: the leading anti-EU and anti-immigration UKIP remains outside the House of Commons. In his college he was hammered about 2,000 votes from conservative Craig MacKinlay. The Ukip – while getting 12.6% and growing since the last British elections – will have a few seats . Who knows, however, that the two neo-independence deputies do not end up in some way to have a role to satellites in the new government. Cameron has promised England a referendum in 2017 to decide on the output of the United Kingdom by the European Union. The Ukip’s referendum is the cornerstone. There is a clear convergence of interests and convergence can produce everything.
England, whatever happens, will long remember the evening of May 7, 2015. In the new Parliament, never so divided and fragmented, will at least eight parties: in addition to the Conservatives, Labour, Liberal Democrats and Ukip, there will be Welsh, Northern Irish Unionists and Verdi. Who comes out winner is Prime Minister Cameron. In recent days he had appealed to the people: do not throw the cards, vote Conservative, because an alliance between the Labour Party and the Scottish National Party – the danger was real – would be devastating for Britain. It ‘was obviously heard, because the British, when they sense danger, they think only to England.
Friday, May 8, 2015, 00:38 – Last Updated: 13:50
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