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2017 United Kingdom general election in Northern Ireland

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2017 United Kingdom general election (Northern Ireland)
← 2015 8 June 2017 2019 →

All 18 seats in Northern Ireland to the House of Commons
Turnout65.6% (Increase)
  First party Second party Third party
  Arlene Foster
Leader Arlene Foster Gerry Adams Colum Eastwood
Party DUP Sinn Féin SDLP
Leader since 17 December 2015 13 November 1983 14 November 2015
Leader's seat Did not stand Did not stand Did not stand
Last election 8 seats, 25.7% 4 seats, 24.5% 3 seats, 13.9%
Seats won 10 7 0
Seat change Increase2 Increase3 Decrease3
Popular vote 292,316 238,915 95,419
Percentage 36.0% 29.4% 11.7%
Swing Increase10.3% Increase4.9% Decrease2.2%

  Fourth party Fifth party
 
Robin Swann in Stormont (cropped).jpg
Naomi_Long_MLA.jpg
Leader Robin Swann Naomi Long
Party UUP Alliance
Leader since 8 April 2017 26 October 2016
Leader's seat Did not stand Ran in Belfast East (lost)
Last election 2 seats, 16.0% 0 seats, 8.6%
Seats won 0 0
Seat change Decrease2 N/C
Popular vote 83,280 64,553
Percentage 10.3% 7.9%
Swing Decrease5.8% Decrease0.6%

Colours on map indicate winning party for each constituency

The 2017 United Kingdom general election in Northern Ireland was held on 8 June 2017. All 18 seats in Northern Ireland were contested. 1,242,698 people were eligible to vote, up 5,933 from the 2015 general election. 65.6% of eligible voters turned out, an increase of 7.2 percentage points from the last general election.[1]

The DUP gained 2 seats for a total of 10, and Sinn Féin won 7, an improvement of 3. Independent unionist Sylvia Hermon was also re-elected in her constituency of North Down. Meanwhile, the SDLP lost 3 seats and the UUP lost 2 seats, meaning they both lost all their representation in the House of Commons.

As Sinn Féin maintains a policy of abstentionism in regards to the British Parliament, the 2017 election marked the first parliament since 1964 without any Irish nationalist MPs who take their seats in the House of Commons in Westminster.

Nationally, the governing Conservative Party fell 8 seats short of a parliamentary majority after the election, reduced to 4 if the absence of Sinn Féin is taken into account. The DUP thus held the balance of power, and announced on 10 June that it would support the Conservative government on a "confidence and supply" basis.[2] (See also Conservative–DUP agreement.)

Results

[edit]

Five seats changed hands in Northern Ireland. The SDLP lost its seats in Foyle and South Down to Sinn Féin and the constituency of Belfast South to the DUP. Meanwhile, the UUP lost South Antrim to the DUP and Fermanagh and South Tyrone to Sinn Féin. The number of unionist and nationalist representatives (11 and 7, respectively) remained unchanged from the 2015 general election, although none of the nationalist members participated in the Parliament.

Party Votes % +/- MPs % +/-
DUP 292,316 36.0 +10.3 10 55.6 +2
Sinn Féin 238,915 29.4 +4.9 7 38.9 +3
SDLP 95,419 11.7 -2.2 0 -3
UUP 83,280 10.3 -5.8 0 -2
Alliance 64,553 7.9 -0.6 0 0
Independent 16,148 2.0 -0.7 1 5.6 0
Green (NI) 7,452 0.9 -0.1 0 0
People Before Profit 5,509 0.7 -0.2 0 0
NI Conservatives 3,895 0.5 -0.8 0 0
TUV 3,282 0.4 -1.9 0 0

Vote summary

[edit]
Popular vote
DUP
36.0%
Sinn Féin
29.4%
SDLP
11.7%
UUP
10.3%
Alliance
7.9%
Greens
0.9%
PBP
0.7%
NI Cons
0.5%
TUV
0.4%
Other
2.1%
Parliamentary seats
DUP
55.6%
Sinn Féin
38.9%
Independent
5.6%

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "UK Parliamentary Election 2017 - Turnout". EONI. 8 June 2017. Archived from the original on 6 August 2019. Retrieved 15 December 2019.
  2. ^ "Who are the DUP and will they demand a soft Brexit to prop up the Tories?". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 9 June 2017. Retrieved 9 June 2017.