Boris Johnson's Conservatives win decisive victory in crucial election

Image: BRITAIN-VOTE-BREXIT
Britain's Prime Minister and Conservative leader Boris Johnson leaves after retaining his seat in west London. Copyright OLI SCARFF
Copyright OLI SCARFF
By Patrick Smith with NBC News World News
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The results bring the biggest Parliamentary majority since Margaret Thatcher won convincingly for the party in 1987.

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LONDON — British Prime Minister Boris Johnson won a convincing election victory Friday, easily passing the threshold to form a stable government and set the course for the country's exit from the European Union.

An exit poll had predicted a clear majorityfor Johnson's Conservative Party and just after 5 a.m. it secured the necessary 326 seats to win a majority in the House of Commons, with the BBC predicting an overall majority of 78 when all the results are confirmed.

The win means the United Kingdom is all but certain to leave the European Union on Jan. 31. A divided Parliament has refused to back Johnson's withdrawal bill several times — but he now has enough lawmakers to push it through the House three-and-a-half years after the Brexit referendum.

"It does look as though this One Nation Conservative government has been given a powerful new mandate to get Brexit done," Johnson said at the election count in his constituency of Uxbridge in west London.

The election, the third in four years, had been described as the most important in a generation as it represented the last realistic opportunity to block Brexit.

It's an historic win for Johnson, the biggest Parliamentary majority since Margaret Thatcher won a decisive victory for the Conservatives in 1987.

But it's been a disastrous election for the socialist Labour Party, which saw its vote share drop eight percent overall and the loss of key seats across the country in its worst general election performance in three decades. Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn announced he would stand down before the next election, without setting a date, after a period of "reflection."

Former industrial heartlands which have been staunchly Labour for decades swung to the Conservatives. Denis Skinner, the 87-year-old veteran socialist who has held the seat of Bolsover in Derbyshire since 1970, lost by 5,000 votes. Sedgefield in the north-east of England, the former seat for three-time election winner Prime Minister Tony Blair, also voted Conservative.

It wasn't much better for the centrist Liberal Democrat Party — who promised to cancel Brexit if elected — which saw its leader Jo Swinson lose her seat in East Dunbartonshire in Scotland and the party fail to make many gains elsewhere.

The election raises questions, however, about the future of the United Kingdom. The Scottish National Party, which campaigns for Scotland to be an independent nation, won 48 seats, an increase of 13.

Scotland narrowly voted to remain part of the United Kingdom in a 2014 referendum but the SNP's success makes a second referendum more likely, although it is up to the prime minister to decide whether to hold one.

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