1983 United Kingdom general election in England

1983 United Kingdom general election in England

← 1979 9 June 1983 1987 →

All 523 English seats in the House of Commons
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader Margaret Thatcher Michael Foot
Party Conservative Labour Alliance
Leader since 11 February 1975 10 November 1980
Leader's seat Finchley Blaenau Gwent
Last election 306 seats, 47.2% 203 seats, 36.7% 7 seats, 14.9%
Seats before 325[a] 193[a] 5[a]
Seats won 362 148 13
Seat change Increase37[b] Decrease45[b] Increase8[b]
Popular vote 11,711,519 6,862,422 6,714,957
Percentage 46.0% 26.8% 26.4%
Swing Decrease1.2% Decrease9.8% Increase11.5%

The 1983 United Kingdom general election in England was held on 9 June 1983 for 523 English seats to the House of Commons. The Conservative Party won a landslide majority of English seats, gaining 37 seats for a total of 362. The Labour Party came second, winning 148 MPs, a decline of 45. Labour's share of the vote in England was its lowest since 1918, and its number of English MPs was its smallest since 1931.[1] The SDP–Liberal Alliance won 26.4% of the popular vote, just 0.4% behind Labour, but won only 13 seats compared to 148 for Labour, due to the first-past-the-post electoral system.[2]

Results table

Party[1] Seats Votes
Total Gains Losses Net +/- % seats Total votes % votes Change
Conservative 362 N/A N/A Increase37 69.2 11,711,519 46.0 Decrease1.2
Labour 148 N/A N/A Decrease45 28.3 6,862,422 26.8 Decrease9.8
Alliance 13 N/A N/A Increase8 2.5 6,714,957 26.4 Increase11.5
Other parties 0 N/A N/A Steady 183,748 0.7 Decrease0.5
25,472,646 72.5
Popular vote
Conservative
46.0%
Labour
26.8%
SDP–Liberal Alliance
26.4%
Other
0.7%
Parliament seats
Conservative
69.2%
Labour
28.3%
SDP–Liberal Alliance
2.5%

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Notional 1979 results.
  2. ^ a b c Indicates boundary change—so this is a nominal figure.

References

  1. ^ a b "GENERAL ELECTION RESULTS, 9 JUNE 1983" (PDF). 1984. Retrieved 31 July 2018.
  2. ^ Lindsay, Caron (2 April 2013). "The 1983 election: highlights and hindsight". Lib Dem Voice. Archived from the original on 14 August 2020. Retrieved 31 May 2020.