Sunday 7 July 2024

General Election Results 2024 – Analysis


The data junkie in me has massaged the July 4th election results into the following tables:

General Election Results 2024

Turn-out %

59.9

Electorate

48068275

 

 

 

 

 

 

Party

Seats

Change

Votes (%)

Change (% pt)

Votes

Labour

412

214

33.8

1.7

9,731,363

Conservative

121

-252

23.7

-19.9

6,827,112

Liberal Democrat

72

64

12.2

0.7

3,519,163

Scottish National Party

9

-38

2.5

-1.4

724,758

Sinn Féin

7

0

0.7

0.2

210,891

Others

7

4

2.9

-

842,013

Reform UK

5

5

14.3

-

4,106,661

Democratic Unionist Party

5

-3

0.6

-0.2

172,058

Green

4

3

6.8

4

1,943,258

Plaid Cymru

4

2

0.7

0.2

194,811

Social Democratic and Labour Party

2

0

0.3

-0.1

86,861

Alliance

1

0

0.4

0

117,191

Ulster Unionist Party

1

1

0.3

0

94,779

Workers Party of Britain

0

0

0.7

-

210,194

Alba

0

0

0

-

11,784

TOTALS

650

0

99.9

-14.8

28792897

None Of The Above

19275378

 

 

 

 

Party

Votes

% of Electorate

Seats per million voters

Labour

9,731,363

20.2

42.3

Conservative

6,827,112

14.2

17.7

Liberal Democrat

3,519,163

7.3

20.5

Scottish National Party

724,758

1.5

12.4

Sinn Féin

210,891

0.4

33.2

Others

842,013

1.8

8.3

Reform UK

4,106,661

8.5

1.2

Democratic Unionist Party

172,058

0.4

29.1

Green

1,943,258

4

2.1

Plaid Cymru

194,811

0.4

20.5

Social Democratic and Labour Party

86,861

0.2

23

Alliance

117,191

0.2

8.5

Ulster Unionist Party

94,779

0.2

10.6

Workers Party of Britain

210,194

0.4

0

Alba

11,784

0

0

TOTALS

28792897

59.7

None Of The Above

19275378

40.1

 A few observations:

1.     Sinn Fein got almost exactly the same number of votes as the Workers Party, yet got 7 seats against none at all.

2.     The Workers Party got more votes than any of the DUP, Plaid Cymru, the SDLP, Alliance or the Ulster Unionists, yet got no seats at all, while the five parties below them totalled 13 seats.

3.     Reform got one-sixth more votes than the Liberal Democrats, yet got only 5 seats against 72.

4.     Reform got more than 5.6 times as many votes as the SNP, but only just over half the number of seats.

5.     The 8.5% of the electorate who voted Reform received only 0.8% of the representation.

6.     Only 34.4% of the electorate voted Labour or Tory, but they received 82% of the representation.

7.     65.6% of the electorate – very nearly two-thirds – are not represented in either the government or the official opposition.

8.     69.7% of the voters voted Labour, Tory or Lib Dem, but they received 93.1% of the representation.

9.     The remaining 30.3% received only 6.9% of the representation.

If this is “representative democracy,” the system is clearly broken. But proportional representation has its own problems, too.

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