UK GENERAL ELECTION 2024 LIVE: Rishi Sunak and Keir Starmer cast their votes as millions go to the polls after six-week campaign with Labour on course to return to power after 14 years
The leader of the Scottish Labour Party, Anas Sarwar, has arrived with his family to vote at a polling station at Pollokshields Burgh Hall in Glasgow this morning:
What will happen tomorrow after the election?
By the early hours of tomorrow, the vast majority of constituencies will have declared, and the country is likely to know which party has won the most seats.
What happens next depends on whether one party has earned a majority – 326 of the 650 seats. In reality, a working majority requires fewer seats because the Speaker and the three deputy speakers do not vote, and Sinn Fein MPs opt not to take their seats in Westminster.
If no party has a majority, then it becomes a hung parliament. In that case, the incumbent prime minister remains in power and is given the first chance to form a government – if they cannot form a government which commands the support of the majority of the House of Commons, they must resign to allow the King to invite someone else to try.
Governments without majorities can form coalitions with other parties, as was the case when the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats joined forces in 2010 (pictured below).
Or they could lead as a minority government, as happened to the Conservatives in 2017 when they governed with the support of Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party, an arrangement known as confidence and supply.
If one party wins a majority of seats, they will form the new government, and its leader will become the next prime minister.
If a new prime minister is to be appointed, the incumbent will visit the King and tender their resignation. The incoming prime minister arrives next and is formally asked by Charles to form a government.
Ulster Unionist Party leader Doug Beattie votes
Ulster Unionist Party leader Doug Beattie voted at Seagoe Primary School in Portadown this morning.
Mr Beattie greeted waiting media and posed for photographs as he arrived at the polling station.
He said: ‘It is an important day, it is a day for the people to cast their votes. We have run a good campaign.’
Keir Starmer arrives on foot to vote in London
Sir Keir Starmer made the short journey from his Kentish Town home to the polling station in Willingham Close TRA Hall to vote in the Holborn and St Pancras constituency.
Sir Keir and his wife, Victoria, arrived on foot and walked hand-in-hand into the hall tucked inside the housing estate while being flanked by police protection officers.
A crowd of local residents gathered to watch the Labour leader enter the polling station alongside dozens of national and international media.
Sir Keir wore a white shirt under a dark suit with a red tie as he greeted supporters lining the approach into the polling station.
A woman could be heard shouting ‘free Palestine’ as he entered the hall. He left through a back door out of sight of reporters.
What happens once voting has closed?
Once every person still in the polling station queue at 10pm tonight has voted, the presiding officer seals the ballot box and delivers it to the local count centre.
Votes are first verified, with the number of votes in the ballot box checked against the paperwork from polling stations. Blank and spoiled papers, and those on which the voter’s intention is unclear, are removed. Votes from the ballot box are mixed with postal votes before they are counted.
The first constituency results are expected to be announced within a couple of hours. In recent years, a Tyne-Wear derby has developed in the north-east of England, with constituencies racing to be the first to declare.
Newcastle upon Tyne Central (now replaced by Newcastle upon Tyne Central and West under new boundaries), declared at 11.27pm in 2019, ahead of Houghton and Sunderland South.
Meanwhile, politicians will be digesting the predictions of the exit poll. The results, broadcast at 10pm as the polling booths close, give the country the first idea of what to expect as the night progresses.
Exit polls are conducted throughout election day by asking thousands of people who they voted for at strategically chosen polling stations. In recent years, exit polls have given a reasonably accurate view of the choices the electorate has made.
Police escort activist away from polling station
Police officers have now escorted an activist away from a polling station in London after they stood there before Sir Keir Starmer arrived to vote.
The protester from animal rights group Peta was dressed as a bear and held a placard addressed to the Labour leader, saying: ‘Sir Keir: Save My Skin! Vote for Faux-Fur Caps’.
Click on the link below for This is Money’s analysis of the political parties’ manifestos and give our manifesto special podcast a listen back:
Breaking: Keir Starmer votes with his wife
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer and his wife Victoria have arrived to cast their votes in the 2024 General Election at Willingham Close TRA Hall in London this morning:
Sir Keir Starmer needs a bigger swing than Sir Tony Blair’s 1997 landslide to win a majority at the General Election, with his task made more difficult by changes to constituency boundaries.
The Labour leader must achieve a swing of 12.7 points from the Conservatives to become prime minister – larger than the 10.2 point swing that brought New Labour to power in 1997 and more than double the swing at any other election since 1945.
His task is made harder by the impact of the boundary changes, the first since 2010, which are intended to ensure that constituencies have similar numbers of voters.
This left Rishi Sunak defending a notional majority of 94, compared with the 80-seat margin actually secured by Boris Johnson’s Conservatives in 2019 – although that was later diminished by by-election defeats, and MPs being suspended from the whip or defecting.
The new parliamentary constituencies were drawn up by the permanent and independent Boundary Commissions for England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, and just 77 of the 650 Commons seats were left untouched.
Corbyn: Independent candidate is ‘alright’
Jeremy Corbyn has posted a photo of himself outside a polling station in his North London constituency.
The former Labour leader is running as an Independent in Islington North.
Mr Corbyn has won the seat for Labour at every general election since 1983, but is no longer a member of the party. The picture of him with thumbs up is captioned: ‘Just voted for the independent candidate in Islington North. I heard he’s alright.’
Earlier, he made an appeal for voters to help his campaign, saying: ‘We have built this campaign from nothing. We don’t have party machinery. We don’t have big donors. We have something more powerful: people.’
Tea for voters and journalists at polling station
A local resident offers tea to voters and members of the media outside a polling station in London this morning as ballots are cast:
Breaking:DUP leader Gavin Robinson votes
DUP leader Gavin Robinson and his wife Lindsay have cast their ballots at Elim church in Dundonald in his east Belfast constituency.
Mr Robinson greeted waiting media as he arrived. ‘Fresh and well you’re looking,’ he said. Leaving the polling station, he said he was glad to have voted before giving a thumbs up to photographers.
What to expect on polling day today
Ballots are now being cast in the General Election today as voters choose a new government, with opinion polls predicting a Labour landslide and a Tory washout.
Parties will be rallying to their respective causes as they attempt to get people out to the polls.
Millions of people across the UK will cast their vote between 7am and 10pm, with opinion polls suggesting Labour is on course to secure a large majority in the House of Commons and form a new government with Sir Keir Starmer as prime minister.
An exit poll, published shortly after 10pm tonight, will provide the first indication of how the election has gone on a national level.
The first of the 650 seats are likely to declare their results from 11.30pm, and counting will continue into the early hours of the morning. Thousands of electoral staff, candidates, party staff and journalists will be up all night as the results roll in.
While Labour are tipped to win the keys to 10 Downing Street, the outlook is much less clear in Scotland – with Labour looking to end more than a decade of SNP domination at Westminster.
John Swinney’s party won 48 seats in 2019, while the Tories took six and the Liberal Democrats four. Labour was reduced to a single MP.
Sir Keir Starmer’s party – led in Scotland by Anas Sarwar – has enjoyed a resurgence in recent years against a backdrop of turmoil for the Conservatives, putting Labour in pole position this time around.
But Scotland also boasts a number of the more intriguing local battles in this election. Read the full report from Michael Blackley in the Scottish Daily Mail:
General Election battle in Northern Ireland
Over in Northern Ireland, voting is under way in the General Election which involves several constituency battles that remain too close to call.
A total of 136 candidates are standing in the region’s 18 constituencies.
All eyes will be on the race for the greatest number of seats, with the potential of Sinn Fein cementing its position as the largest party in Northern Ireland, having come out on top in the last Assembly and local council polls.
Sinn Fein, which ran a relatively low-key campaign, could secure first place by retaining the seven seats it already holds, if the DUP drops down from the eight seats it won in 2019.
Pictured: Early voters arrive at the Agape Centre in south Belfast.
Peta activist waits for Sir Keir Starmer to vote
An activist from animal rights group Peta dressed as a bear is holding a placard addressed to Sir Keir Starmer this morning outside a polling station in North London where the Labour leader is expected to vote later:
From a caravan in Cambridgeshire, to a shipping container in Battersea and even a Hindu temple in Wimbledon, there are a number of surprising places that have been made into makeshift polling stations this week.
Here, MailOnline shows you a glimpse of some of the most unusual:
Breaking:First Minister casts vote in Scotland
SNP leader John Swinney has cast his vote at Burrelton Village Hall, Perthshire.
Accompanied by his 13-year-old son Matthew, the First Minister walked from his home to the polling station, greeting members of the media on the way in.
He also met his candidate Dave Doogan who is running in the Angus and Perthshire Glens constituency.
Rishi Sunak has appealed today to disaffected Tory voters to return to the fold to prevent a ‘socialist supermajority’ wrecking Britain.
Writing in the Daily Mail, the Prime Minister urged former Tory supporters considering staying at home today or voting Reform to lend their votes to the Conservatives again to stop Sir Keir Starmer winning unchecked power.
Read his full column on MailOnline here:
Now it’s time for #horsesatpollingstations!
It’s not just dogs at polling stations today – Heatherbelle Bates took her horse with her as she cast her vote in the Devon village of Holne this morning:
Kate Garraway has revealed that the only polling card posted through her door was for her late husband Derek Draper.
The Good Morning Britain host, 57, shared the heartbreaking news while speaking about how people can vote as the nation heads to the polls today.
Mr Draper, a former Labour party advisor, died aged 56 on January 3, following a long battle with Covid-19. Read the full story on MailOnline:
Monks cast their vote in General Election
Among those voting this morning were monks from Sancta Maria Abbey in East Lothian, who were pictured visiting a polling station at Garvald Village Hall:
Polling stations opened for voters to have their say at the General Election today, which also means the return of the trend #dogsatpollingstations.
One pup named Mavis was pictured high-fiving the camera, with her owner writing on X: ‘Paws up for change! Mavis feels getting in early is impawtent in Bury North on a day like this.’
Read the full story and see the best pictures on MailOnline today:
Pictured: Actor Charles Dance casts his vote
Game of Thrones actor Charles Dance has been spotted waiting in line to cast his vote in the 2024 General Election at Willingham Close TRA Hall in North London:
Does the weather affect election turnout?
Voter turnout is not generally affected by weather conditions, records suggest.
According to the Parliament website, despite the last general election in 2019 being the wettest since records began in 1931, turnout was actually higher (67.3 per cent) than in 2001 (59.4 per cent) and 2005 (61.4 per cent) when polling day fell in June and May respectively.
The UK will see a national weather divide on General Election day, with 22C (72F) sunshine in southern England but 50mph winds and rain in the North and Scotland.
South-eastern parts of the country especially areas around London will experience the brightest and warmest weather today as voters head to polling stations.
But strong winds and chillier temperatures will hit further north as well as showers in West and North West Scotland, North West England and Northern Ireland.
Read the full story on MailOnline:
As millions of voters descend on polling stations today, Britons have answered the all-important question: Which election candidates would you Snog, Marry or Avoid?
MailOnline took to the streets and put Brits on the spot as they reluctantly picked between Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer and Reform UK’s Nigel Farage. Read the story and watch the videos here:
Rishi Sunak makes early visit to vote at hall
Rishi Sunak made the short journey from his grade II-listed manor house to vote at Kirby Sigston Village Hall in his Richmond constituency.
Mr Sunak and his wife Akshata Murty arrived in a Range Rover and walked hand-in-hand into the village hall, which is surrounded by rolling fields.
Swallows nesting in the eaves of the hall dipped over the heads of the waiting media while a dairy farmer next door turned out his cattle.
Mr Sunak, wearing a white shirt underneath a blue jumper, greeted the photographers outside the polling station.
He left without commenting and was driven away, followed by police protection officers.
Breaking: Rishi Sunak casts his vote
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and his wife Akshata Murty have arrived to cast their vote in the 2024 General Election at Kirby Sigston Village Hall in North Yorkshire:
Rishi Sunak said yesterday that 132,000 voters in the most tightly fought seats could decide whether the UK has a hung Parliament or Labour majority.
And DANIEL HANNAN argues today that this is why anyone who does not want to hand Sir Keir Starmer untrammelled power should carefully read this guide:
Polling stations open after final preparations
Photographs show the polling station team at the Agape Centre in south Belfast preparing the room ahead of voting opening in the 2024 General Election:
Polls have opened across the UK in today’s general election after Rishi Sunak made an 11th-hour plea for voters to prevent a ‘socialist supermajority’ wrecking Britain.
From 7am until 10pm, millions of Britons will head to polling stations to cast their vote in the first Westminster contest since 2019. A series of opinion polls in the run-up to today have shown Labour on course for a huge landslide win.
Here is the full story from MailOnline’s political correspondent Greg Heffer:
What are the parties saying on social media?
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer, writing on social media site X as polls opened, said: ‘Change. Today, you can vote for it.’
Ahead of 7am, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak posted a series of messages on the same site, which urged voters to ‘stop the Labour supermajority’.
Green Party co-leader Adrian Ramsay, also writing on X, said: ‘Today’s the opportunity to vote for real hope and real change, in Waveney Valley, and across the country.’
Reform UK, led by Nigel Farage, posted an image asking people to ‘vote with your heart’, adding: ‘Vote for real change today. Vote Reform UK.’
The SNP tweeted: ‘Vote SNP to deliver independence, rejoin the EU, scrap the two-child benefit cap, invest in the just transition, protect free tuition.’
First Minister urges all SNP voters to turn out
North of the border, Scotland’s First Minister has urged ‘every single SNP voter’ to turn out today in what he said will be an ‘incredibly close’ contest throughout the country.
Addressing supporters at a pre-election rally in Leith yesterday evening, John Swinney said the Conservatives were going to be ‘heavily defeated’ by the Labour Party in England.
But he added that there were ‘narrow margins’ between Labour and the SNP north of the border.
Crunch time results on election night in full
After polling stations close at 10pm tonight, the counting process begins in 650 constituencies across the UK.
The crunch time will be between 3am and 4am when the bulk of the results will flood in. Read the full guide from MailOnline’s deputy political editor David Wilcock:
Lib Dems conclude campaign full of stunts
Ending a campaign that was dominated by headline-catching stunts, Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey drove off in a pink Cadillac convertible with his deputy Daisy Cooper after his last election campaign stop.
The Lib Dem leader gave a stump speech at Hammond’s End Farm in Harpenden to the tune of ABBA’s Take A Chance On Me.
Sir Ed said he had enjoyed the campaign, which saw him travel the entire length of the UK, cover 6,000 miles on the Lib Dem’s Yellow Hammer One bus and bungee 160 feet.
He added: ‘Communities are angry. The water companies have been allowed to pour their filthy sewage into our rivers, lakes and onto our beaches. This has to change. The Conservatives have got to go.’
Sir Keir: Labour is ‘ready for what comes next’
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said the UK ‘cannot afford’ five more years under the Conservatives, adding Britain can ‘begin a new chapter’ under his party.
He said yesterday: ‘Britain’s future is on the ballot.’
Sir Keir was also cheered by activists as he spoke at a community centre in Redditch, Worcestershire, as his campaigning came to a close.
He said: ‘That’s what we are fighting for, let’s continue that fight. If you want change, you have to vote for it.’
As the bookies’ favourite to be the next prime minister, Sir Keir said he was pleased with Labour’s campaign and his party was ‘ready for what comes next’.
Britons should ensure they have the correct photo identification to vote before heading to the polling station today, the Electoral Commission has warned.
This year is the first time in the UK that everybody wanting to vote in person at a general election will have to show ID before receiving a ballot paper.
Not all types of photo ID will be accepted at polling stations, but a passport, driving licence or blue badge are valid. Read the full guide on MailOnline:
What was Rishi Sunak’s final plea to voters?
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said today represents a ‘pivotal moment’ for the country’s future as he claimed Labour would ‘wield their unchecked power’ to increase taxes should they secure a ‘supermajority’.
Mr Sunak was joined by his parents Usha and Yashvir Sunak and his wife, Akshata Murty, for the final stump speech of the election campaign yesterday evening.
He stood for a photo with his family after giving a speech at Romsey Rugby Club, north of Southampton where he grew up.
‘This underdog will fight to the final whistle,’ Mr Sunak said.
The Prime Minister called on Tory activists to continue campaigning, claiming they had ‘urgent work to do’ to ‘save the UK’ from a Labour government.
When will we know the election results?
An exit poll, published shortly after 10pm tonight, will provide the first indication of how the election has gone on a national level.
These take place at polling stations across the UK, with tens of thousands of people asked to privately fill in a replica ballot as they leave, to get an indication of how they voted.
The first of the 650 seats are likely to declare their results from 11.30pm.
Polling stations opened at 7am
Polling stations all opened at 7am today – among them this one at Kirby Sigston in North Yorkshire, where Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is expected to vote later.
Welcome to MailOnline’s election liveblog
Good morning and welcome to MailOnline’s live coverage as polling stations open for UK voters to have their say at the General Election after weeks of campaigning.
Millions of people will cast their vote between 7am and 10pm, with opinion polls suggesting Labour is on course to secure a big majority in the House of Commons.
Follow MailOnline’s live coverage for updates throughout today.
Key Updates
Keir Starmer votes with his wife
What to expect on polling day today
First Minister casts vote in Scotland
Rishi Sunak arrives at polling station
When will we know the election results?
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UK GENERAL ELECTION 2024 LIVE: Rishi Sunak and Keir Starmer cast their votes as millions go to the polls after six-week campaign with Labour on course to return to power after 14 years
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