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2015 general election: Difference between revisions

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==LGBT history==
==LGBT history==
Following the election, there are 27 LGBT MPs, making it "the most ever reorded in the world", according to Professor Andrew Reynolds of the University of North Carolina.
Following the election, there are 27 LGBT MPs, making it "the most ever reorded in the world", according to Professor Andrew Reynolds of the University of North Carolina.<ref>http://www.pinknews.co.uk/2015/05/08/does-the-uk-now-have-the-most-lgbt-elected-mps-in-the-world/. ''[[Pink News]]'' 8 May 2015. Accessed: 2015-05-14. (Archived by WebCite® at http://www.webcitation.org/6YW8a1nuB)</ref>


The new LGBT MPs are:
The new LGBT MPs are:
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*[[Lynne Featherstone]] (Hornsey and Wood Green; Liberal Democrat)
*[[Lynne Featherstone]] (Hornsey and Wood Green; Liberal Democrat)
*[[Eric Ollerenshaw]] (Lancaster and Fleetwood; Conservative)
*[[Eric Ollerenshaw]] (Lancaster and Fleetwood; Conservative)
==References==
<references>


[[Category:Politics]]
[[Category:Politics]]

Revision as of 18:28, 14 May 2015

Distribution of seats after the election

The 2015 General Election was held on 7 May 2015, in accordance with the

Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011. The result was a narrow Conservative majority over all other parties combined. In Scotland, the SNP (Scottish National Party) won all but three seats. The Labour and Liberal Democrat parties lost significant numbers of seats, and [[UKIP} won only one seat despite having a large share of the national vote.

LGBT history

Following the election, there are 27 LGBT MPs, making it "the most ever reorded in the world", according to Professor Andrew Reynolds of the University of North Carolina.[1]

The new LGBT MPs are:

Existing LGBT MPs re-elected were:

The following lost their seat:

References

<references>