Jamaica Gleaner

650 seats, 46 million voters: the UK election in numbers

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LONDON (AP): THERE’S JUST over a month to go until Britain’s December 12 election, and the country’s political parties are battling over funding promises, policy priorities, and Brexit plans. Here is a look at some key numbers in an election that could determine not only who governs Britain, but when, how — or even whether — the country leaves the European Union (EU):

E46,000,000: The number of eligible voters in the UK.

650:grabs The number of seats in the House of Commons, all up for in the election. Any party that wins a majority — or becomes the largest party, even without a majority — can form a government, with its leader as prime minister.

298:Minister

The number of seats held before the election by Prime Boris Johnson’s ruling Conservati­ves — more than 20 short of a majority. The government’s lack of a majority meant it struggled to pass key measures needed for Britain to leave the EU.

243:Labour

The number of seats held by the left-of-centre opposition Party, which is battling to return to office for the first time since 2010. Labour plans to downplay Brexit and focus on healthcare, education, and social welfare, which all saw funding cuts under Conservati­ve government­s.

96: The number of years since Britain last had a December election. British elections are usually held in the late spring, when the weather is better and the days are longer.

82: The number of days until Britain is due to leave the EU. Brexit day was supposed to be October 31, but with Britain’s politician­s deadlocked, the EU granted a three-month delay until January 31.

72: The number of lawmakers not running for re-election amid Britain’s toxic political atmosphere. Politician­s on both sides of the Brexit argument have received abuse and threats. Those leaving include many moderate pro-EU Conservati­ves, Labour legislator­s who say their party has not stamped out anti-Semitism, and high-profile female legislator­s, who have received a disproport­ionate amount of abuse.

42.8%: The portion of political parties’ campaign spending that went to digital advertisin­g during the last election in 2017 — up from just 0.3 per cent in 2011. It’s expected to be even more this time.

35: The number of seats in Parliament held by the Scottish National Party, which opposes Brexit and wants Scotland to leave the UK and become an independen­t country.

20: The number of seats held in Parliament by the pro-EU Liberal Democrats, who want to cancel Brexit altogether.

£19.5m (US$25 million): The maximum a party can spend on advertisin­g, campaignin­g costs, and other expenses if it contests all 650 constituen­cies across the UK. The spending limit is calculated at £30,000 (US$38,650) per seat.

9: The number of years the Conservati­ve Party has been in power.

3: The Number of televised debates that Johnson and Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn have agreed to take part in. The Liberal Democrats are angry that their leader, Jo Swinson, has only been invited to one of them.

0: The number of seats in Parliament now held by the recently formed Brexit Party, which wants to leave the EU without a divorce deal. The party, led by Nigel Farage, plans to run hundreds of candidates in the election.

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