In less than two hours, polls will open across Great Britain and Northern Ireland. It is the closest election since 1992.
That year (1992). I was the only person (I think) who predicted a Conservative majority, and in fact, the Tories’ MP number was one seat outside my range (I predicted between 331 and 335; they won 336).
I’ve been a little sketchy on UK elections since then (and here in the US, I’ve been absolutely awful), but that’s never stopped me before, so here goes.
From what I can see, the Conservatives once again have the momentum – and since UK polls (much like Canada’s) don’t include undecided voters, that can lead to wild swings, especially in an election like this.
Therefore, I suspect the Tories will do better than where the pollsters have them (which in itself is not bad and getting better).
Well, onto the numbers:
- Conservative: 331-335 (majority of 12 to 20), with one Independent Unionist in Ulster supporting them
- Labor: 185-190
- Liberal Democrats: 95-100
- Democratic Unionist Party (Ulster/Northern Ireland): 9-10
- Scottish National Party: 6-7
- Sinn Fein (NI – nationalist): 5-6
- Plaid Cymru (Welsh nationalists): 3-4
- Social Democratic Labor Party (NI – nationalist): 2-3
- United Kingdom Independence Party: 1 (Nigel Farage defeats the Speaker)
We’ll see how far off I am . . .



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If your prediction is correct, how effectively can David Cameron govern. And who would replace Gordon Brown as Labour leader in that scenario?