The British Labour Party has won its largest majority since the founding of the party over a century ago, securing at least 412 of the House of Commons’s 650 seats.
And in an age of populism and polarization, it has done so on a moderate, centrist platform.
There is no clear sign that British voters are any more enthusiastic than voters anywhere else for the socially liberal, fiscally conservative politics that this incarnation of the Labour Party represents.
The Conservative Party has been reduced to 121 seats, with two seats left to declare, the worst defeat in its 190-year history.
It lost vote share not only to Labour and the centrist, pro-European Liberal Democrats, but also to the hard-right, anti-immigrant Reform U.K., led by Nigel Farage, an ally of Donald Trump.
Persons:
Labour —, Keir Starmer, Bill Clinton, Tony Blair, Nigel Farage, Donald Trump
Organizations:
British Labour Party, Labour, Crown, Labour Party, Conservative Party, European Liberal Democrats, U.K