Cameron was due to meet Queen Elizabeth to accept mandate to form a government (Image & graphics source: Daily Mail) |
Prime Minister David Cameron won a stunning election victory
in Britain, overturning poll predictions that the vote would be the closest in
decades to sweep easily into office for another five years, with his Labour
opponents in tatters.
The sterling currency,
bonds and shares surged on a result that reversed expectations of an
inconclusive "hung parliament" in which Cameron would have had to
jockey for power with Labour rival Ed Miliband.
Instead, Cameron was due
to meet Queen Elizabeth before noon to accept a swift mandate to form a
government. The royal standard was raised at Buckingham Palace to signal the
queen was there awaiting him.
Reuters reports:
"This is the
sweetest victory of all," he told enthusiastic supporters at party
headquarters. "The real reason to celebrate tonight, the real reason to be
proud, the real reason to be excited is we are going to get the opportunity to
serve our country again."
Miliband has just
announced his resignation as Labour leader. He had earlier said on Twitter:
"The responsibility for the result is mine alone."
Despite the unexpectedly
decisive outcome, more uncertainty looms over whether Britain will stay in the
European Union - and even hold together as a country.
Scottish nationalists
swept aside Labour, meaning that Scotland, which voted just last year to stay
in the United Kingdom, will send just three representatives of major British
parties to parliament and be all but shut out of the cabinet. That could revive
calls for it to leave the United Kingdom.
Cameron sounded a
conciliatory note towards Scotland, likely to be his first immediate headache.
"I want my party -
and, I hope, a government I would like to lead - to reclaim a mantle we should
never have lost, the mantle of one nation, one United Kingdom," Cameron,
48, said after winning his own seat in Witney, Oxfordshire.
Cameron's victory also
means Britain will face a vote which he has promised on continued membership in
the EU. He says he wants to stay in the bloc, but only if he can renegotiate
Britain's relationship with Brussels.
Jean-Claude Juncker,
president of the EU's executive European Commission, congratulated Cameron on
his victory. The Commission would examine any British proposal "in a
polite, friendly and objective way," a Commission spokesman said.
Smiling beside his wife
Samantha, Cameron returned to the prime minister's office in Downing Street
early on Friday. He was expected to declare victory outside the black door of
Number 10 Downing Street after his meeting with the queen.
With a handful of seats
still to be declared in the 650-seat house, the Conservatives surpassed the 325
seat threshold of an effective majority that allows them to govern alone for
the first time since 1992.
The margin of victory was
a surprise even to Cameron, who said he "never quite believed we'd get to
the end of this campaign in the place we are now."
That means Cameron no
longer needs the Liberal Democrats, with which he has governed since 2010.
The centre-left party,
heir to one of the most storied liberal parties in Europe, was crushed, reduced
to single digits after winning 57 seats five years ago. It's leader, Nick
Clegg, held his own seat but resigned as party chief.
"It is simply
heartbreaking," he said of the losses. "Clearly the results have been
immeasurably more crushing and unkind than I could ever have feared."
Among the other stunning
results, Ed Balls, in line to be finance minister if Labour had won, lost his
seat. He fought back tears as he expressed sorrow at Labour's defeat.
"Any personal
disappointment I have at this result is as nothing compared to the sense of
sorrow I have at the result that Labour have achieved across the UK tonight ...
and the sense of concern I have about the future," he said.
The UK Independence
Party, a populist group that demands withdrawal from the EU, surged into third
place in the countrywide vote tally, but that translated into a win of only a
single seat. Its charismatic leader Nigel Farage lost his own bid for a seat.
He stood down as party leader but said he might seek the leadership again later
this year.
Sterling gained more than
2 cents against the dollar to rise above $1.55 for the first time since late
February, and looked on track to enjoy its biggest one-day gain against the
euro since January 2009.
The FTSE 100 stock index
was up 1.45 percent at 6985, approaching a record high set last month. The
price of British government bonds also rose.
SCOTTISH "TSUNAMI"
With almost all of
Scotland's 59 parliamentary seats counted, the Scottish National Party (SNP)
had won 56 of them, up from just six five years ago, all but obliterating
Labour in one of its historic strongholds.
"We're seeing an
electoral tsunami on a gigantic scale," said Alex Salmond, the party's
former leader, now elected to represent it in parliament in London. "The
SNP are going to be impossible to ignore and very difficult to stop."
The United Kingdom
includes England, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales. England accounts for 85
percent of the UK population but Scottish politicians elected to parliament in
London have historically held important government posts. That will now be
impossible with the SNP holding nearly all Scottish seats.
In a body blow to Labour
that set the patter for the night, Douglas Alexander, the party's campaign
chief and foreign policy spokesman, lost his seat to a 20-year-old Scottish
nationalist student, the youngest member of the House of Commons since 1667.
Miliband, a
self-described "geek", never quite connected with working-class
voters. He ran a campaign widely seen as better than expected, but was always
far behind Cameron in polls that asked voters who they saw as a more credible
leader.
"This has clearly been
a very disappointing and difficult night for the Labour Party," he told
supporters after retaining his own parliamentary seat in Doncaster, northern
England.
UKIP's surge into third
place in the overall vote tally, mirroring the rise of similar populist groups
elsewhere in Europe, failed to yield it a strong presence in parliament under
Britain's system in which candidates must place first in districts to win
seats. It racked up scores of second place finishes across the country.
One other loser is the opinion
polling industry which is likely to face an inquest over its failure to predict
the outcome. Before the election, virtually all opinion polls had shown the
Conservatives and Labour neck-and-neck.
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