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词条 2010 United Kingdom general election in Scotland
释义

  1. Contesting parties

  2. Campaign events

  3. Scottish Leader's debates

  4. Target seats

     Labour Party  Scottish National Party  Liberal Democrats  Conservative Party 

  5. Overall results

     Votes summary 

  6. Results by constituency

  7. Superlatives

     Labour Party  Scottish National Party  Liberal Democrats  Conservative Party  Minor parties' highest shares 

  8. References

{{Main|United Kingdom general election, 2010}}{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2012}}{{Use British English|date=August 2012}}{{Infobox election
| election_name = United Kingdom general election, 2010[1]
| country = Scotland
| type = parliamentary
| ongoing = no
| previous_election = United Kingdom general election, 2005 (Scotland)
| previous_year = 2005
| previous_mps = List of MPs for constituencies in Scotland 2005–10
| next_election = United Kingdom general election, 2015 (Scotland)
| next_year = 2015
| seats_for_election = All 59 Scottish seats to the House of Commons
| elected_mps = List of MPs for constituencies in Scotland 2010–15
| election_date = {{Start date|2010|5|6|df=yes}}
| turnout = 63.8%, {{increase}}3.2%
| image1 =
| leader1 = Gordon Brown
| leader_since1 = 24 June 2007
| party1 = Labour Party (UK)
| last_election1 =
| seats_before1 = 41
| seats1 = 41
| seat_change1 = {{steady}}
| UK seats1 = 258
| popular_vote1 = 1,035,528
| percentage1 = 42.0%
| swing1 = {{increase}}2.5%
| image2 =
| leader2 = Nick Clegg
| leader_since2 = 18 December 2007
| party2 = Liberal Democrats (UK)
| last_election2 =
| seats_before2 = 11
| seats2 = 11
| seat_change2 = {{steady}}
| UK seats2 = 57
| popular_vote2 = 465,471
| percentage2 = 18.9%
| swing2 = {{decrease}}3.7%
| image4 =
| leader4 = Alex Salmond
| leader_since4 = 3 September 2004
| party4 = Scottish National Party
| popular_vote4 = 491,386
| percentage4 = 19.9%
| swing4 = {{increase}}2.3%
| last_election4 =
| seats_before4 = 6
| seats4 = 6
| seat_change4 = {{steady}}
| UK seats4 = 6
| image5 =
| leader5 = David Cameron
| leader_since5 = 6 December 2005
| party5 = Conservative Party (UK)
| popular_vote5 = 412,855
| percentage5 = 16.7%
| swing5 = {{increase}}0.9%
| last_election5 =
| seats_before5 = 1
| seats5 = 1
| seat_change5 = {{steady}}
| UK seats5 = 306
| map_image = 2010UKelectionMapScotland.svg
| map_size = 350px
| map_caption = Colours on map indicate winning party for each constituency
}}

These are the results of the 2010 United Kingdom general election in Scotland. The election was held on 6 May 2010 and all 59 seats in Scotland were contested. There were no seat changes from the 2005 general election, although Labour took back 2 seats that it had lost in by-elections.

Contesting parties

Since 2005, the Scottish National Party had come first in the 2007 Scottish Parliament election as well as the 2009 European election. They had also won the Glasgow East by-election in 2008, which was one of the safest Labour seats in the UK. This boosted the party's confidence and the party's leader Alex Salmond set the ambitious target of 20 seats in the general election. Salmond himself was standing down as an MP because he wanted to focus more on his job as First Minister of Scotland. In the election, the party only increased their share of the vote by 2.3% and had their number of seats reduced to six after being overwhelmingly defeated in the Glasgow East constituency.

The Scottish Labour Party had held the majority of seats in Scotland in every general election since the 1960s. This is usually attributed to the North-South divide in British politics, where Scotland and the North of England tend to return mostly Labour MP's whereas the South of England tends to vote mostly for the Conservatives. Many prominent government officials were representing Scottish constituencies, such as the Prime Minister Gordon Brown and the Chancellor Alistair Darling. In the election, the Labour Party in Scotland increased its share of the vote by 2.5% and re-gained the Glasgow East and Dunfermline and West Fife constituencies giving them 41 out of 59 seats in Scotland.

The Scottish Conservative Party had not held the majority of Scottish seats in a general election since 1955 and it lost all eleven of its seats in the election of 1997. Since 2001, the party had only held one Westminster seat in Scotland. In 2005, following the re-organisation of Scottish constituencies, that seat was Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale and Tweeddale, a mostly rural constituency near the Scottish borders. However, the party had 11 target seats within Scotland for the election and party officials such as William Hague had predicted a 'Tory breakthrough' for Scotland.[2] Following the election, the Conservative vote in Scotland increased by roughly 1% but with only the 1 seat being retained.

During the 2005 election, the Scottish Liberal Democrats achieved 11 Scottish seats in Westminster and saw this figure increased to 12 following the Dunfermline and West Fife by-election in 2006. Two former Liberal Democrat leaders, Charles Kennedy and Menzies Campbell represent Scottish constituencies. In the election, the Liberal Democrat vote fell in Scotland and the party was once again left with 11 seats.

Minor parties such as the UK Independence Party, the British National Party and the Scottish Green Party all contested more Scottish seats than they did in the 2005 election. The Socialist Workers Party and Solidarity (a splinter group of the Scottish Socialists) took part in the Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition for the election. The Scottish Socialist Party had contested all of the Scottish constituencies in 2005 but because of party splits, it fielded only 10 candidates for the 2010 election.

If proportional representation had been used, then the Labour Party would have had 25 seats, the SNP would have had 12, the Liberal Democrats would have had 11 and the Conservatives would have had 10.

Campaign events

  • 9 April – The Labour Party candidate for Moray, Stuart Maclennan, was sacked after making offensive comments on his Twitter page. These included insulting politicians such as David Cameron, Nick Clegg, John Bercow and Diane Abbott and also referring to the elderly as 'coffin dodgers' and voters in the North of Scotland as teuchters.[3]
  • 12 April – Prime Minister Gordon Brown asks the Queen to dissolve parliament, thus triggering the election.
  • 20 April – The first of three televised Scottish Leader's debates takes place.
  • 27 April – The Conservative candidate for North Ayrshire and Arran, Philip Lardner was expelled from his party and relieved from his job as a primary school teacher after making comments on his blog that homosexuality was 'not normal'. This occurred on 27 April 2010, which was too late to remove his name from the ballot paper and subsequently he still read as the Conservative & Unionist candidate.[4]
  • 28 April – The SNP failed to sue the BBC for excluding them from the televised leader's debates, claiming that the BBC had breached its rules on impartiality by excluding the SNP.
  • 6 May – Polling day across the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. The following day, a hung parliament is declared, where no party holds an overall majority in the House of Commons.

Scottish Leader's debates

In correspondence with the main Leader's debates, featuring David Cameron, Gordon Brown and Nick Clegg, three televised debates were broadcast with representatives from the four main parties in Scotland. The first debate was broadcast on STV on 20 April, the second on Sky News on 25 April and the third on BBC One Scotland on 2 May.

The representatives from each of the main parties were:

  • Scottish Labour Party – Jim Murphy, Secretary of State for Scotland, MP for East Renfrewshire
  • Scottish Conservative Party – David Mundell, Shadow Secretary of State for Scotland, MP for Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale and Tweeddale
  • Scottish Liberal Democrats – Alistair Carmichael, Liberal Democrat Spokesman on Northern Ireland and Scotland, MP for Orkney and Shetland
  • Scottish National Party – Angus Robertson, SNP leader at Westminster, MP for Moray

Target seats

Labour Party

RankConstituencyWinning party 2005Swing RequiredLabour's place 2005Result
1Dundee East{{party name with colour|Scottish National Party}}0.49%2ndSNP hold
2Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale and Tweeddale{{party name with colour|Scottish Conservative Party}}1.95%2ndCON hold
3East Dunbartonshire{{party name with colour|Scottish Liberal Democrats}}4.35%2ndLD hold
4Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey{{party name with colour|Scottish Liberal Democrats}}4.69%2ndLD hold

Scottish National Party

RankConstituencyWinning party 2005Swing RequiredSNP's place 2005Result
1Ochil and South Perthshire{{party name with colour|Scottish Labour Party}}0.74%2ndLAB hold
2Dundee West{{party name with colour|Scottish Labour Party}}7.28%2ndLAB hold
3Kilmarnock and Loudoun{{party name with colour|Scottish Labour Party}}9.81%2ndLAB hold
4Aberdeen North{{party name with colour|Scottish Labour Party}}9.28%3rdLAB hold

Liberal Democrats

RankConstituencyWinning party 2005Swing RequiredLiberal Democrat's place 2005Result
1Aberdeen South{{party name with colour|Scottish Labour Party}}1.62%2ndLAB hold
2Edinburgh North and Leith{{party name with colour|Scottish Labour Party}}2.53%2ndLAB hold

Conservative Party

RankConstituencyWinning party 2005Swing RequiredConservative's place 2005Result
1Perth and North Perthshire{{party name with colour|Scottish National Party}}1.66%2ndSNP hold
2Angus{{party name with colour|Scottish National Party}}2.1%2ndSNP hold
3Dumfries and Galloway{{party name with colour|Scottish Labour Party}}2.87%2ndLAB hold
4Stirling{{party name with colour|Scottish Labour Party}}5.46%2ndLAB hold

Overall results

{{Party name with colour|Labour Party (UK)}}{{Party name with colour|Liberal Democrats (UK)}}{{Party name with colour|Scottish National Party}}{{Party name with colour|Conservative Party (UK)}}{{Party name with colour|UKIP}}{{Party name with colour|Scottish Green Party}}{{Party name with colour|British National Party}}{{Party name with colour|Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition}}{{Party name with colour|Scottish Socialist Party}}{{Party name with colour|Socialist Labour Party (UK)}}{{Party name with colour|Christian Party (UK)}}{{Party name with colour|Trust (British political party)}}{{Party name with colour|Liberal Party (UK, 1989)}}{{Party name with colour|Scottish Jacobite Party}}{{Party name with colour|Communist Party of Britain}}
PartySeatsSeats
change
Seats contestedLost depositsVotes%%
change
4105901,035,52842.0+2.5
110590465,47118.9-3.7
60590491,38619.9+2.3
105912412,85516.7+0.9
00343317,2230.7+0.3
00201916,8270.7-0.3
0013138,9100.4+0.3
0010103,5300.1N/A
0010103,1570.1-1.7
00551,6730.0-
00118350.0N/A
00115340.0N/A
00113890.0N/A
00222900.0N/A
00222370.0N/A
Turnout2,465,72263.8

1 Philip Lardner, the Conservative candidate for North Ayrshire and Arran was disowned by the Conservative Party for comments he posted on his website, calling homosexuality 'abnormal'. It was too late for him to be replaced and he still read as the Scottish Conservative & Unionist Party candidate on the ballot paper.

Votes summary

{{bar box
| title=Popular vote
| titlebar=#ddd
| width=600px
| barwidth=410px
| bars={{bar percent|Labour|{{Scottish Labour Party/meta/color}}|42.00}}{{bar percent border|SNP|{{Scottish National Party/meta/color}}|border=darkgray|19.93}}{{bar percent|Liberal Democrats|{{Scottish Liberal Democrats/meta/color}}|18.88}}{{bar percent|Conservative|{{Scottish Conservative Party/meta/color}}|16.74}}{{bar percent|UKIP|{{UK Independence Party/meta/color}}|0.70}}{{bar percent|Greens|{{Scottish Green Party/meta/color}}|0.68}}{{bar percent|Other|#777777|1.07}}
}}{{bar box
| title=Parliament seats
| titlebar=#ddd
| width=600px
| barwidth=410px
| bars={{bar percent|Labour|{{Scottish Labour Party/meta/color}}|69.49}}{{bar percent|Liberal Democrats|{{Scottish Liberal Democrats/meta/color}}|18.64}}{{bar percent border|SNP|{{Scottish National Party/meta/color}}|border=darkgray|10.17}}{{bar percent|Conservative|{{Scottish Conservative Party/meta/color}}|1.69}}
}}

Results by constituency

Winning party in each constituency is marked in bold.

ConstituencyLabour%Lib Dems%SNP%Conservative%Others%Notes
Aberdeen North16,74644.4%7,00118.6%8,38522.2%4,66612.4%9032.4%SNP target #4
Aberdeen South15,72236.5%12,21628.4%5,10211.9%8,91420.7%1,0802.5%Lib Dem target #1
Airdrie and Shotts20,84958.2%2,8988.1%8,44123.5%3,1338.7%5281.5%
Angus6,53517.2%4,09010.8%15,02039.6%11,73830.9%5771.5%Conservative target #2
Argyll and Bute10,27422.7%14,29231.6%8,56318.9%10,86124.0%9452.0%
Ayr, Carrick and Cumnock21,63247.1%4,2649.3%8,27618.0%11,72125.5%N/A
Banff and Buchan5,38214.0%4,36511.3%15,86843.3%11,84130.8%1,0102.6%Largest swing recorded in Scotland (10.6 SNP to CON)
Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk5,00310.2%22,23045.4%4,4979.2%16,55533.8%7291.5%Michael Moore's Seat
Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross7,08124.6%11,90741.4%5,51619.2%3,74413.0%5201.8%
Central Ayrshire20,95047.7%5,23611.9%8,36419.0%8,94320.4%4221.0%
Coatbridge, Chryston and Bellshill27,72866.6%3,5198.5%7,01416.9%3,3748.1%N/A
Cumbernauld, Kilsyth and Kirkintilloch East23,54957.2%3,9249.5%9,79423.8%3,4078.3%4761.2%
Dumfries and Galloway23,95045.9%4,6088.8%6,41912.3%16,50131.6%6951.3%Conservative target #3
Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale and Tweeddale13,26328.9%9,08019.8%4,94510.8%17,45738.0%1,1472.5%Conservative's only Scottish seat, Labour target #2
Dundee East13,52933.3%4,28510.6%15,35037.8%6,17715.2%7961.9%Labour target #1
Dundee West17,99448.5%4,23311.4%10,71628.9%3,4619.3%7222.0%SNP target #2
Dunfermline and West Fife22,63946.3%17,16935.1%5,20110.6%3,3056.8%6331.3%Regained by Labour after by-election loss to Lib Dems
East Dunbartonshire16,36734.1%18,55138.7%5,05410.5%7,43115.5%5451.1%Labour target #3
East Kilbride, Strathaven and Lesmahagow26,24151.1%5,0529.9%11,73823.0%6,61313.0%1,3022.6%
East Lothian21,91944.6%8,22816.9%7,88316.0%9,66119.7%1,4102.9%
East Renfrewshire25,98750.8%4,7209.2%4,5358.9%15,56730.4%3720.7%Jim Murphy's seat
Edinburgh East17,31443.4%7,75119.4%8,13320.4%4,35810.9%2,3095.8%
Edinburgh North and Leith17,74037.5%16,01633.8%4,5689.6%7,07914.9%1,8253.8%Lib Dem target #2
Edinburgh South15,21534.7%14,89934.0%3,3547.7%9,45221.6%8802.0%
Edinburgh South West19,47342.8%8,19418.0%5,53012.2%11,02624.3%1,2392.7%Alistair Darling's seat
Edinburgh West12,88127.7%16,68435.9%6,11513.2%10,76723.2%N/A
Falkirk23,20745.7%5,22510.3%15,36430.3%5,69811.2%1,2832.5%
Glasgow Central15,90852.0%5,01016.4%5,35717.5%2,1587.1%2,1397.0%
Glasgow East19,79761.6%1,6175.0%7,95724.7%1,4534.5%1,3404.1%Regained by Labour after by-election loss to SNP
Glasgow North13,18144.5%9,28331.3%3,53011.9%2,0397.1%1,5305.2%
Glasgow North East20,10068.3%2,2627.7%4,15814.1%1,5695.3%1,3204.4%
Glasgow North West19,23354.1%5,62215.8%5,43015.3%3,5379.9%1,7605.0%
Glasgow South20,73651.7%4,73911.8%8,07820.1%4,59211.5%1,9494.9%
Glasgow South West19,86362.5%2,8709.0%5,19216.3%2,0846.6%1,7724.9%
Glenrothes25,24762.3%3,1087.7%8,79921.7%2,9227.2%4251.0%
Gordon9,81120.1%17,57536.0%10,82722.2%9,11118.7%1,4512.9%
Inverclyde20,93356.0%5,00736.0%6,57717.5%4,50212.0%4331.2%
Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey10,40722.1%19,17240.7%8,80318.7%6,27813.3%2,4265.2%Danny Alexander's seat, Labour target #4
Kilmarnock and Loudoun24,46052.5%3,4197.3%12,08226.0%6,59214.2%N/ASNP target #3
Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath29,55964.5%4,2699.3%6,55014.3%4,2589.3%1,1662.6%Gordon Brown's seat, largest majority of any Scottish seat
Lanark and Hamilton East23,25850.0%5,24911.3%9,78021.0%6,98115.0%1,2862.7%
Linlithgow and East Falkirk25,63449.8%6,58912.8%13,08125.4%6,14611.9%N/A
Livingston23,21548.5%5,31611.1%12,42425.9%5,15810.8%1,7943.7%
Midlothian18,44947.0%6,71117.1%8,10020.6%4,66111.9%1,3213.3%
Moray7,00717.1%5,96514.5%16,27339.7%10,68326.1%1,0852.6%
Motherwell23,91061.1%3,8409.8%7,10418.2%3,6609.4%6091.6%
Na h-Eileanan an Iar4,83832.9%1,0977.5%6,72345.7%6474.4%1,4129.6%
North Ayrshire and Arran21,86047.4%4,63010.0%11,96525.9%7,21215.6%4491.0%
North East Fife6,86917.1%17,76344.3%5,68514.2%8,71521.8%1,0322.6%Menzies Campbell's seat
Ochil and South Perthshire19,13137.9%5,75411.4%13,94427.6%10,34220.5%1,2982.6%SNP target #1
Orkney and Shetland2,06110.7%11,98962.0%2,04210.6%2,03210.5%1,2226.3%Safest Lib Dem seat in the UK
Paisley and Renfrewshire North23,61354.0%4,59710.5%8,33319.1%6,38114.6%7831.8%
Paisley and Renfrewshire South23,84259.6%3,8129.5%7,22818.1%3,9799.9%1,1372.8%Douglas Alexander's seat
Perth and North Perthshire7,92316.4%5,95412.3%19,11839.6%14,73930.5%5341.1%Conservative target #1
Ross, Skye and Lochaber5,26515.1%18,33552.6%5,26315.1%4,26012.2%1,7154.9%Charles Kennedy's seat
Rutherglen and Hamilton West28,56660.8%5,63612.0%7,56416.1%4,5409.7%6751.4%
Stirling19,55841.8%6,79714.5%8,09117.3%11,20423.9%1,1412.4%Conservative target #4
West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine6,15913.6%17,36238.4%7,08615.7%13,67830.3%9102.0%
West Dunbartonshire25,90561.3%3,4348.1%8,49720.1%3,2427.7%1,1882.8%

Superlatives

Labour Party

  • Highest share of vote – Glasgow North East, 68.3% of vote
  • Lowest share of vote – Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk, 10.2% of vote

Scottish National Party

  • Highest share of vote – Na h-Eileanan an Iar, 45.7% of vote
  • Lowest share of vote – Edinburgh South, 7.7% of vote

Liberal Democrats

  • Highest share of vote – Orkney and Shetland, 62.0% of vote
  • Lowest share of vote – Glasgow East, 5.0% of vote

Conservative Party

  • Highest share of vote – Dumfriesshire, Clydesdale and Tweeddale, 38.0% of vote
  • Lowest share of vote – Na h-Eileanan an Iar, 4.4% of vote

Minor parties' highest shares

  • UK Independence Party – Orkney and Shetland, 6.3% of vote
  • Scottish Green Party – Edinburgh East, 5.1% of vote
  • British National Party – Banff and Buchan, 2.6% of vote

References

1. ^Election 2010 United Kingdom - National Results BBC News
2. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.newstatesman.com/blogs/public-accounts/2010/04/160-election-scottish-scotland|title=William Hague predicts Tory election "breakthrough" in Scotland|website=www.newstatesman.com}}
3. ^{{cite web|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/election_2010/scotland/8610934.stm|title=Twitter abuse candidate removed|date=9 April 2010|publisher=|via=news.bbc.co.uk}}
4. ^{{cite web|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/election_2010/scotland/8647206.stm|title=Tory suspended over gay comments|date=27 April 2010|publisher=|via=news.bbc.co.uk}}
{{United Kingdom general election, 2010}}{{Scottish elections}}

3 : 2010 United Kingdom general election|2010 in Scotland|General elections in Scotland to the Parliament of the United Kingdom

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