Britain likely to enter coalition era
LONDON, KAZINFORM Britain's opposition Conservatives came top in knife-edge elections Thursday but fell short of a clear-cut majority to return to power after 13 years in opposition, exit polls suggested, Kazinform refers to Arab News.
The UK could be on course for a hung Parliament as millions of people in 649 constituencies across the country cast their votes in the general election in one of the most keenly contested polls in a generation.
The big difference for the 44 million or so registered voters this time was that the election for the first time was a three-horse race between the two traditional mainstream parties Labour and the Conservatives and third party the Liberal Democrats.
Labour Prime Minister Gordon Brown was trailing in the polls against Tory leader David Cameron, while Nick Clegg of the Liberal Democrats is confident of a strong showing following his commanding performance in the historic televised Prime Ministerial Debates over the last month.
Opinion polls have indicated that the likeliest outcome of voting is a "hung Parliament", in which no party wins an outright majority in the house.
Britain has not had an inconclusive election since 1974 and unlike other European countries does not have a tradition of coalition rule.
That scenario could leave the Lib Dems holding the balance of power and certain to press their case for electoral reform to a more proportional system.
Voting in several constituencies, including those in which the three leaders voted was brisk. The weather was as eccentric as it could be, ranging from light rain to largely overcast. And mini exit polls conducted by party apparatchiks in a few constituencies allegedly reflected the national poll trends of a close call with the Conservatives having the slight edge.
Boundary changes in several constituencies may also take its toll. The newly created Hampstead and Kilburn constituency is a cross-borough seat taking most of the wards from Hampstead and Highgate as well as some from Brent East and Brent South. It is made up of Brondesbury Park, Kilburn, Queens Park, Belsize Park, Fortune Green, Frognal and Fitzjohns, Hampstead Town, Kilburn, Swiss Cottage and West Hampstead.
This affluent constituency was traditionally associated with the famous, the rich, those with huge mansions and new money. These can be found around Hampstead, but more socially mixed and deprived areas around Kilburn have come into the equation.
In the past this seat was a straight fight between the Conservatives and Labour, with actress Glenda Jackson winning the seat from the Conservatives in the 1992 election. But with the boundary changes, the seat is now a dogfight between Labour and the Liberal Democrats, Kazinform cites Arab News. See www.arabnews.com for full version.