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UK Election 2010 Result

| 10/05/2010

UK election will end soon because BBC Online stated that 649 seats already selected and last one to be finalised soon out of 650 all together. A hung Parliament is created if no party wins an outright majority. In this election that would require one party to win 326 seats out of 650 with the Conservative predicted to win only 309 at the current count. If the Conservative do not form a minority government, two parties must form a coalition to govern in order to create an overall majority of MPs.

A hung Parliament is one in which no party has an overall majority, which means no party has more than half of MPs in the House of Commons. The government will not be able to win votes to pass laws without the support of members of other parties. Smaller parties could join forces to outvote the government which would make it difficult to pass laws.

The bigger parties can try to persuade smaller parties to support them, either each time there is a vote, or by creating a coalition government with an absolute majority. The largest party – in this case the Conservatives – does not automatically have the right to try and form an administration. That right falls to Gordon Brown as the incumbent Prime Minister.

What does it mean? There is no formal deadline for when an administration must be formed but a key date is 25 May, when the Queen’s Speech is due to set out the government’s priorities during the Parliament. Negotiations to form a government in a hung Parliament could take between a week and 10 days. If no agreement can be reached between parties and no government was unable to command enough support to get the Queen’s Speech through Parliament there would be a need for a second election.

Some economists fear that a hung Parliament could affect Britain’s economic recovery if the financial markets lose faith in a British government’s ability to be decisive. This could impact upon the country’s credit rating. David Cameron has previously warned that a hung Parliament can lead to politicians being able to endlessly “haggle and bicker and scheme” delaying decision-making and leading to paralysis.

What happens next? If Gordon Brown remains prime minister he could try and form a coalition with the Liberal Democrats in order to amass a greater number of seats than the Tory party. If Gordon Brown resigns then the Queen may invite David Cameron to form a government. He could seek to form a minority government and make arrangements with individual parties to pass individual bills through the Commons. However, if he decides to form a coalition he could also try and form an alliance with the Liberal Democrats to create a majority. He may have hoped to have enough seats through his electoral alliance with the Ulster Unionist Party but current electoral arithmatic indicates that they have not got enough seats to create a majority. Nick Clegg could be in a position to decide which of the main parties he is willing to work with.

Latest UK Election 2010 result is according to BBC;
Conservative 306 Labour 258 Liberal Democrat 57
Democratic Unionist Party 8
Scottish National Party 6
Sinn Fein 5
Plaid Cymru 3
Social Democratic & Labour Party 3
Green 1
Alliance Party 1 and Others 1
Turnout 29,653,638 65.1 4.0

Last night’s talks in the Commons followed earlier discussions between the Liberal Democrat leader and Gordon Brown in what was described by critics as a “last-ditch” bid by the Prime Minister to convince Mr Clegg a progressive alliance with Labour would benefit the country more than a Lib-Con coalition.  Reports even suggested some Cabinet ministers wanted Mr Brown to sacrifice himself as a means of luring Mr Clegg away from the Tories towards a deal with Labour. However, a No 10 source told The Herald he did not recognise such a suggestion. Certainly, a number of Labour figures believe the time has come for their leader to step aside.

Graham Stringer, the Manchester MP, claimed he had spoken to several Labour colleagues since the election result and “not one of them thinks he should stay on”. Alex Salmond, the SNP leader, insisted the Lib-Con talks should “not be seen as the only game in town”

and suggested a “rainbow alliance” involving the Nationalists, Labour and the LibDems could benefit Scotland the most. Yet such a suggestion was dismissed as “ridiculous” by Malcolm Wicks, the former Labour minister, who admitted: “We have lost. It would look very, very shabby for us to be seen hanging on to the doorknob of No 10.”

While the Lib-Con talks continued at the Cabinet Office, just yards away Mr Brown emerged from the back door of No 10 to make the short walk to the Foreign Office, where he had private talks with his Liberal Democrat counterpart.

A Downing Street spokesman described the 70-minute meeting as amicable. After more than six hours of Lib-Con talks, William Hague emerged on to the Whitehall pavement surrounded by a throng of onlookers to announce that the latest round of negotiations had been “very positive and productive”. The Conservative deputy leader said issues from political reform and the economy to civil liberties and the environment had been discussed. He stressed: “We are agreed that a central part of any agreement that we make will be economic stability and a reduction of the budget deficit.”

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