December 12th, 2019, UK general election

Overview
The 2019 General Election will take place on 12th December 2019. It was approved by the House of Commons on the 29th October 2019, after many weeks of Boris Johnson attempting to get one. As of 4th November 2019, Boris Johnson seemed set to get a majority in Parliament, however similar things were said near the start of the General Election 2017 campaign, and it has been noted that the Labour Party have been making gains in opinion polls.

The House of Commons has voted by a margin of 438 votes to 20, for the first December election since 1923 and it was later approved by the House of Lords.

The Conservatives heavily win the UK's general election.

The PM, Boris Johnson, bragged his victory at first, but his victory speech promised reconciliation and several new spending plans.

Eventually the Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn, prepares to stand down and said he will not contest the next election.

Background


With no government majority and a good English and Welsh opinion poll rating, the government derived from supporting Brexit called an election and the SNP thought it was worth backing due to thire good poll rating based on stopping Brexit ''in Scotland. ''

The leading issues were Grenfell Tower, domestic wast incineration in western Dorset, fuel poverty in the Western Isles, the PM's attitude towards  ITV’s political correspondent, Joe Pike; promoting tourism on the island of Barra, better remote rural internet speeds, Brexit, urban knifings in England, e.on buying out and closing down most of npower, Scottish fisheries, the crappy service pattern run by Northern Rail, the Shrewsbury and Telford NHS Hospital Trust's 1979-2017 murder spree at Ludlow Community Hospital (3 mothers died, 50+ babies were left disabled, 40+ babies died, 600+ lesser victims, 320+ possible other victims), the early release of the murderer and rapist Joseph Mccann, staff shortages and underfunding of the NHS, the collapse of Thomas Cook, the collapse of British Steel, The precise fate of the now bankrupt Northampton County Council, air pollution in Bristol and Inner London, the national government's and Doncaster Borough Council's poor handling of the UK's early November floods, theft in Bristol shops, The Cube student diggs burning down, knifings in London, climate change, peoples' erroneous belief that the Credit Crunch was a EU plot, not the result of greedy and incompetent bankers across the Western World (especially in the USA, UK, Switzerland, Hong Kong and Iceland); Glaswegian bus services, growing foodbank use in Great Grimsbury. the collapse of the Mothercare high street retail chain (it was still just holding on to it's online outlets), American exports of chlorinated chicken, the fate of individual hospitals in Oxfordshire, Dorset and Cambridgeshire, the UK media always foul-mouthing the Lib Dems and Labour, Scottish independence, the London Bridge terror attack, the UK media lionising the Conservatives and SNP, Welsh independence, keeping N. Ireland in the UK, Brexit, immigration and the economy.

The report by the Oil and Gas Authority (OGA) said fracking was to risky after a scale 2.9 earthquake in the Blackpool area.

The London bridge terrorist attack
2 died, several wounded, the Islamic terrorist was nearly arrested and then got away. He was shot dead by cops on London Bridge, Central London.

Boris Johnson ultimately blamed Labour and "Lefty" judges for the London Bridge attack, but this was a load of trash. Although the early release law was put in place by Labour, he was released in 2012, during a Conservatives that had supported the early release law! The judges acted normally (possibly foolishly) and above all legally!

The UK's probation board claimed they were ordered to do the relese by the government.

The one deceased persons' families said that the thug should have been rehabilitated and the other said it was part of a Tory\press conspiracy to start an anti-Islam war.

Indian and Bangladeshi interference
The Indian Congress party overtly backed the Tories and undermined Labour in the Indian community since the Conservatives were pro-India and Labour was pro-Jammu and Kashmir. Bangladesh's Adawi Party covertly did likewise for Labour and against the Tories. Labour's Tulip SIddiq and possibly some more Bangladeshi party members were apparently puppets of the Bangladeshi regime. The Tories supported India against Bangladesh.

UK floods


November 11th, 2019, the average rainfall for the entire amount of rain for month of November fell in South Yorkshire and north Derbyshire in just 24 hours. The rain induced floods had been going on for about a week by then.

Locals said a lack of official prapeidess, crappy flood defences,no one dredging the River Don for about 20 years, lack of government help, Doncaster council screwing up and insurance firms renaging on thire commitments. Several residents and farmers said it was the worst in 17 to 78 years depending on location.

The Lib Dems call for a national emergency. Labour agreed with the Lib Dems and said that the Tories on loved Southern England. The Tories say it is a non event and criticise the stay behind element who basslesly feared mass looting in Doncaster Borough territory. The government also said it was planning making better flood defences in time.

The floods hit all of South Yorkshire, as well as large parts of Nottinghamshire, Derbyshire, Northamptonshire, Oxfordshire, Warwickshire, Leicestershire and Lincolnshire. Some also occered in parts of N. Ireland, north Wales and Cumbria

The army did it's best, but got thire to late since both the Environment Agency and at least Doncaster Borough Council had previously screwed up and hoplesy failed in the face of the floods.

Electoral system
UK elections to The House of Commons and the various local councils across both England and Wales use the first-past-the-post system. The UK as a whole is divided into constituencies and the Local authorities into wards. When the ballot papers are counted, the candidate with the most votes wins.

NHS complaints
Early on they said they did not want or need more money, nor did they want any politically motivated hollow-promises.

After the debacle over the PM's attitude towards NHS children's services and ITV’s political correspondent Joe Pike's mobile phone on 09\12\2019, the health secretary, Matt Hancock, went to the Leeds hospital that was at the heart of it all to apologize to the waiting parents over the appalling state of child care at its facility. A Labour activist shoved and allegedly punched Matt Hancock's personal adviser at that hospital visit. It was later revealed that sycophantically pro-Tory BBC News' political editor Laura Kuenssberg had faked claims he was shoved and\or pushed in a dishonest Tweet. A senior nurse at the hospital soon tried a short-lived cover up at the Leeds hospital and failed hopelessly. t At about the same time horde of pro-Tory bot accounts and sockpuppet accounts briefly filled Twitter with claims the picture of the ill kid at the centre of the debate was a fake.

Who can vote in this election

 *  To vote in this election you must: 
 * 1) have registered to vote at your current address by the 26th of November on 2019.
 * 2) be 18 or over on the day of the election.
 * 3) be a British, Irish, Commonwealth or EU citizen.
 * 4) be registered at an address in the area in which you want to vote.
 * 5) not be legally excluded from voting, such as prisoners.
 * 6) It was not made clear if expats or people with UK passports living abroad could vote in it or not. UK tourists,  overseas forces and diplomats could still do so.

English regions



 * The M4 corridor is an area in the United Kingdom adjacent to the M4 motorway, which runs from London to South Wales. It is a major high-technology hub. Important cities and towns linked by the M4 include (from east to west) London, Slough, Bracknell, Maidenhead, Reading, Newbury, Swindon, Bath, Bristol, Newport, Cardiff, and Swansea. The area is also served by the Great Western Main Line, including the South Wales Main Line, and London Heathrow Airport.[4] Technology companies with major operations located in the area include Adobe, Amazon, Citrix Systems, Dell, Alcatel-Lucent, Huawei, Lexmark, LG, Microsoft, Novell, Nvidia, O2, Panasonic, SAP, and Symantec.
 * The M62 corridor Named after the M62 motorway that runs east-west across the north of England from Liverpool to Hull.
 * Cornwall (/ˈkɔːrnwɔːl, -wəl/; Cornish: Kernow [ˈkɛrnɔʊ]) is a ceremonial county in South West England, bordered to the north and west by the Celtic Sea, to the south by the English Channel, and to the east by Devon, the River Tamar forming the border between them. Cornwall is the westernmost part of the South West Peninsula of the island of Great Britain. The southwesternmost point is Land's End and the southernmost Lizard Point. Cornwall has a population of 563,600 and an area of 3,563 km2 (1,376 sq mi). The county has been administered since 2009 by the unitary authority, Cornwall Council. The ceremonial county of Cornwall also includes the Isles of Scilly, which are administered separately. The administrative centre of Cornwall is Truro, its only city.
 * The South Midlands is a notional area of England, (as distinct from the formally designated Regions of England). According to one definition, it is the southern portion of the East Midlands Region (Northamptonshire, south Leicestershire and Rutland) together with the northern portion of the South East England Region (Aylesbury Vale and the Borough of Milton Keynes in north Buckinghamshire) and the western portion of the East of England Region (Bedfordshire). Various organisations also use the name South Midlands to refer to an area that is specific to their own way of dividing up the country. One major usage is as a label for one of the areas identified by HM Government for urban development.
 * The Thames Valley is an informally-defined sub-region of South East England, centred on the River Thames west of London, with Oxford as a major centre. Its boundaries vary with context. The area is a major tourist destination and economic hub, includes part of the M4 corridor, and is sometimes referred to as England's Silicon Valley due to the concentration of high-technology companies. The area east of Reading is defined by Natural England as the Thames Valley National Character Area, while Thames Valley Police cover the counties of Berkshire, Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire. As a National Character Area, the Thames Valley is bounded to the west by Reading, fanning out roughly in a wedge shape towards the fringes of London. It contains 38 Sites of Special Scientific Interest and significant amounts of broadleaf forest, including Burnham Beeches, Windsor Great Park and Richmond Park. The Thames Valley is a technology hub centred around Reading, considered to stretch as far out as Swindon, Oxford and Slough. It is considered to be part of the M4 corridor.
 * Northern England, also known as the North of England or simply the North, is the northern part of England, considered as a single cultural area. It extends from the Anglo-Scottish border in the north to near the River Trent in the south, although precise definitions of its southern extent vary. Northern England approximately comprises three statistical regions: the North East, North West and Yorkshire and the Humber. These have a combined population of around 14.9 million as of the 2011 Census and an area of 37,331 km2 (14,414 sq mi). Northern England contains much of England's national parkland but also has large areas of urbanisation, including the conurbations of Greater Manchester, Merseyside, Teesside, Tyneside, Wearside, and South and West Yorkshire. The region has been controlled by many groups, from the Brigantes, the largest Brythonic kingdom of Great Britain, to the Romans, to Anglo-Saxons and Danes. After the Norman conquest in 1066, the Harrying of the North brought destruction. The area experienced Anglo-Scottish border fighting until the personal union of England and Scotland under the Stuarts, with some parts changing hands between England and Scotland many times. Many of the innovations of the Industrial Revolution began in Northern England, and its cities were the crucibles of many of the political changes that accompanied this social upheaval, from trade unionism to Manchester Capitalism. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the economy of the North was dominated by heavy industry such as weaving, shipbuilding, steel-making and mining. The deindustrialisation that followed in the second half of the 20th century hit Northern England hard, and many towns remain deprived compared with those in Southern England. Urban renewal projects and the transition to a service economy have resulted in strong economic growth in some parts of Northern England, but a definite North–South divide remains both in the economy and the culture of England. Centuries of migration, invasion and labour have shaped Northern culture, and the region retains distinctive dialects, music and cuisine. For government and statistical purposes, Northern England is defined as the area covered by the three statistical regions of North East England, North West England and Yorkshire and the Humber. This area consists of the ceremonial counties of Cheshire, Cumbria, County Durham, East Riding of Yorkshire, Greater Manchester, Lancashire, Merseyside, Northumberland, North Yorkshire, South Yorkshire, Tyne and Wear and West Yorkshire, plus the unitary authority areas of North Lincolnshire and North East Lincolnshire. This definition will be used in this article, except when otherwise stated. For government and statistical purposes, Northern England is defined as the area covered by the three statistical regions of North East England, North West England and Yorkshire and the Humber. This area consists of the ceremonial counties of Cheshire, Cumbria, County Durham, East Riding of Yorkshire, Greater Manchester, Lancashire, Merseyside, Northumberland, North Yorkshire, South Yorkshire, Tyne and Wear and West Yorkshire, plus the unitary authority areas of North Lincolnshire and North East Lincolnshire. This definition will be used in this article, except when otherwise stated. Other definitions use historic county boundaries, in which case the North is generally taken to comprise Cumberland, Northumberland, Westmorland, County Durham, Lancashire and Yorkshire, often supplemented by Cheshire, or are drawn without reference to human borders, using geographic features such as the River Mersey and River Trent. The Isle of Man is occasionally included in definitions of "the North" (for example, by the Survey of English Dialects, VisitBritain and BBC North West), although it is politically and culturally distinct from England. Some areas of Derbyshire, Lincolnshire, Nottinghamshire and Staffordshire that have Northern characteristics and include satellites of Northern cities. Towns in the High Peak borough of Derbyshire are included in the Greater Manchester Built-Up Area, as villages and hamlets there such as Tintwistle, Crowden and Woodhead were formerly in Cheshire before local government boundary changes in 1974, due to their close proximity to the city of Manchester, and before this the borough was considered to be part of the Greater Manchester Statutory City Region. More recently, the Chesterfield, North East Derbyshire, Bolsover, and Derbyshire Dales districts have joined with districts of South Yorkshire to form the Sheffield City Region, along with the Bassetlaw District of Nottinghamshire, although for all other purposes these districts still remain in their respective East Midlands counties. The geographer Danny Dorling includes most of the West Midlands and part of the East Midlands in his definition of the North, claiming that "ideas of a midlands region add more confusion than light". Conversely, more restrictive definitions also exist, typically based on the extent of the historical Northumbria, which exclude Cheshire and Lincolnshire.
 * Watford Gap /ˈwɒtfərd ɡæp/ is a low-lying area between two hills, close to the village of Watford, Northamptonshire, England. Engineers from Roman times onwards have found it to be an ideal route for connecting the Midlands with South East England. The A5 road, the West Coast Main Line railway, the M1 motorway and a branch of the Grand Union Canal traverse in parallel a space about 400 metres (1,300 ft) wide. It has been written and spoken of as marking the divide between Northern England and Southern England. Watford Gap is a low point through a range of hills providing an easy route between the South Eastern and Midland areas of England. It is near the small village of Watford, Northamptonshire. The gap is 3.5 miles (6 km) north-east of Daventry and 2 miles (3 km) west of Long Buckby. In the era of Roman Britain, the Watling Street Roman road used the gap. The road here forms the A5,[n 1] which for national journeys has been superseded by the M1 motorway which also passes through this gap. Later the road was joined by the Leicester Line of the Grand Union Canal, which passes through the Watford Locks just to the north of the gap. The historical geographic importance of the area led to many modern communication routes passing through this narrow gap: the coming of the railways brought the London and Birmingham Railway, now known as the West Coast Main Line; the most recent addition, in 1959, was the M1, Britain's first inter-urban motorway, bringing with it Watford Gap services, the first motorway service station.
 * The Pennines (/ˈpɛnaɪnz/), also known as the Pennine Chain or Pennine Hills, are a range of hills and mountains in England separating North West England from Yorkshire and North East England. Often described as the "backbone of England", the Pennine Hills form a more-or-less continuous range in most of Northern England. The range stretches northwards from the Peak District in the northern Midlands, through the South Pennines, Yorkshire Dales and North Pennines up to the Tyne Gap, which separates the range from the Cheviot Hills. Some definitions of the Pennines also include the Cheviot Hills across the Anglo-Scottish border while excluding the southern Peak District. South of the Aire Gap is a western spur into east Lancashire, comprising the Rossendale Fells, West Pennine Moors and the Bowland Fells in North Lancashire. The Howgill Fells and Orton Fells in Cumbria are sometimes considered to be Pennine spurs to the west of the range. The Pennines are an important water catchment area with numerous reservoirs in the head streams of the river valleys. The region is widely considered to be one of the most scenic areas of the United Kingdom. The North Pennines and Nidderdale are designated Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) within the range, as are Bowland and Pendle Hill. Parts of the Pennines are incorporated into the Peak District National Park and the Yorkshire Dales National Park. Britain's oldest long-distance footpath, the Pennine Way, runs along most of the Pennine Chain and is 268 miles (429 km) long.
 * The Broads (known for marketing purposes as The Broads National Park) is a network of mostly navigable rivers and lakes in the English counties of Norfolk and Suffolk. The lakes, known as broads, were formed by the flooding of peat workings. The Broads, and some surrounding land, were constituted as a special area with a level of protection similar to a national park by the Norfolk and Suffolk Broads Act 1988. The Broads Authority, a special statutory authority responsible for managing the area, became operational in 1989. The area is 303 square kilometres (117 sq mi), most of which is in Norfolk, with over 200 kilometres (120 mi) of navigable waterways. There are seven rivers and 63 broads, mostly less than 4 metres (13 ft) deep. Thirteen broads are generally open to navigation, with a further three having navigable channels. Some broads have navigation restrictions imposed on them in autumn and winter, although the legality of the restrictions is questionable. Although the terms Norfolk Broads and Suffolk Broads are used to identify specific areas within the two counties respectively, the whole area is frequently referred to as the "Norfolk Broads". The Broads has similar status to the national parks in England and Wales; the Broads Authority has powers and duties akin to the national parks, but is also the third-largest inland navigation authority. Because of its navigation role the Broads Authority was established under its own legislation on 1 April 1989. The Broads Authority Act 2009, which was promoted through Parliament by the authority, is intended to improve public safety on the water.
 * The Bristol Channel (Welsh: Môr Hafren) is a major inlet in the island of Great Britain, separating South Wales from Devon and Somerset in South West England. It extends from the lower estuary of the River Severn (Welsh: Afon Hafren) to the North Atlantic Ocean. It takes its name from the English city of Bristol, and is over 30 miles (50 km) wide at its western limit. Long stretches of both sides of the coastline are designated as Heritage Coast. These include Exmoor, Bideford Bay, the Hartland Point peninsula, Lundy Island, Glamorgan, Gower Peninsula, Carmarthenshire, south Pembrokeshire, and Caldey Island. Until Tudor times the Bristol Channel was known as the Severn Sea, and it is still known as this in both Welsh: Môr Hafren and Cornish: Mor Havren. The International Hydrographic Organisation now defines the western limit of the Bristol Channel as "a line joining Hartland Point in Devon (51°01′N 4°32′W) to St. Govan's Head in Pembrokeshire (51°36′N 4°55′W)". The IHO previously put the western limit at a line from Trevose Head in Cornwall to Skomer Island in Pembrokeshire, in an area now considered part of the Celtic Sea. The upper limit of the Channel is between Sand Point, Somerset (immediately north of Weston-super-Mare) and Lavernock Point (immediately south of Penarth in South Wales). East of this line is the Severn Estuary. Western and northern Pembrokeshire, and north Cornwall are outside the defined limits of the Bristol Channel, and are considered part of the seaboard of the Atlantic Ocean, more specifically the Celtic Sea. Within its officially defined limits, the Bristol Channel extends for some 75 miles (120 km) from west to east, but taken as a single entity the Bristol Channel - Severn Estuary system extends eastward to the limit of tidal influence near Gloucester. The channel shoreline alternates between resistant and erosional cliff features, interspersed with depositional beaches backed by coastal sand dunes; in the Severn Estuary, a low-lying shoreline is fronted by extensive intertidal mudflats.
 * Geordieland is the home of the Geordies and akin people people. Geordie (/ˈdʒɔːrdi/) is a nickname for a person from the Tyneside area of North East England, and the dialect used by its inhabitants. The term is sometimes used to refer to anyone from North East England. 'Geordie' is a continuation and development of the language spoken by Anglo-Saxon settlers, initially employed by the ancient Brythons to fight the Pictish invaders after the end of Roman rule in Britain in the 5th century. The Angles, Saxons and Jutes who arrived became ascendant politically and culturally over the native British through subsequent migration from tribal homelands along the North Sea coast of mainland Europe. The Anglo-Saxon kingdoms that emerged in the Dark Ages spoke largely mutually intelligible varieties of what is now called Old English, each varying somewhat in phonology, morphology, syntax and lexicon. This linguistic conservatism means that poems by the Anglo-Saxon scholar the Venerable Bede translate more successfully into Geordie than into Standard English. In Northern England and the Scottish borders, then dominated by the kingdom of Northumbria, there developed a distinct Northumbrian Old English dialect. Later Irish migrants influenced Geordie phonology from the early 19th century onwards. The word "Geordie" can refer to a supporter of Newcastle United. The Geordie Schooner glass was traditionally used to serve Newcastle Brown Ale. The Geordie dialect and identity are primarily associated with those of a working-class background. A 2008 newspaper survey found the Geordie accent the "most attractive in England".
 * The West Country is a loosely defined area of south-western England. The term usually encompasses the historic counties of (from west to east) Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, and Somerset, and is often extended to include Wiltshire and Gloucestershire, in the South West region. Some definitions also include Herefordshire. The West Country is host to distinctive regional English dialects and accents as well as to the Cornish language.
 * The Welsh Marches (Welsh: Y Mers) is an imprecisely defined area along the border between England and Wales in the United Kingdom. The precise meaning of the term has varied at different periods. The English term Welsh March (in Medieval Latin Marchia Walliae) was originally used in the Middle Ages to denote the marches between England and the Principality of Wales, in which Marcher lords had specific rights, exercised to some extent independently of the king of England. In modern usage, "the Marches" is often used to describe those English counties which lie along the border with Wales, particularly Shropshire and Herefordshire, and sometimes adjoining areas of Wales. However, at one time the Marches included all of the historic counties of Cheshire, Shropshire, Herefordshire, Worcestershire and Gloucestershire.
 * 1) The M11 Corridor is an area along the M11 motorway in the United Kingdom which begins in East London and runs from Essex to Cambridgeshire, which has been identified by the British government as a key location for economic and population growth. London Stansted Airport is situated within the area, and is one of the main reasons the government has earmarked this region for house building and infrastructure improvements. There is also a housing shortage in the South East, East, and London regions of the country and new homes are required for this purpose also. A similar scheme is already underway to the south of Essex and North of Kent, known as the Thames Gateway project. Major towns covered in this corridor include Harlow, Great Dunmow, Epping and Braintree in Essex, Bishop's Stortford in Hertfordshire and parts of South Cambridgeshire.
 * 2) The Cotswolds (/ˈkɒtswoʊldz/ KOTS-wohldz, /-wəldz/ -⁠wəldz) are an area in south central and south west England comprising the Cotswold Hills, a range of rolling hills that rise from the meadows of the upper Thames to an escarpment, known as the Cotswold Edge, above the Severn Valley and Evesham Vale. The area is defined by the bedrock of Jurassic limestone that creates a type of grassland habitat rare in the UK and that is quarried for the golden-coloured Cotswold stone. It contains unique features derived from the use of this mineral; the predominantly rural landscape contains stone-built villages, historical towns and stately homes and gardens. Designated as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) in 1966,[3] the Cotswolds covers 787 square miles (2,040 km2) and is the second largest protected landscape in England (second to the Lake District) and the largest AONB. Its boundaries are roughly 25 miles (40 km) across and 90 miles (140 km) long, stretching south-west from just south of Stratford-upon-Avon to just south of Bath. It lies across the boundaries of several English counties; mainly Gloucestershire and Oxfordshire, and parts of Wiltshire, Somerset, Worcestershire and Warwickshire. The highest point of the region is Cleeve Hill at 1,083 ft (330 m),[6] just east of Cheltenham. The hills give their name to the Cotswold local-government district, formed on 1 April 1974, which administers over half of the area. Most of the District is in the county of Gloucestershire; some 80% of it is within the Cotswold Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The main town is Cirencester and the Cotswold District Council offices are located in that community. The population of the 450-square-mile (1,200 km2) District was about 83,000 in 2011. The much larger area referred to as the Cotswolds encompasses nearly 800 square miles (2,100 km2), over five counties: Gloucestershire, Oxfordshire, Warwickshire, Wiltshire, and Worcestershire. The population of the Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty was 139,000 in 2016.
 * 3) The Chiltern Hills or, as they are known locally and historically, the Chilterns, is a range of hills northwest of London. They form a chalk escarpment across Oxfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Hertfordshire, and Bedfordshire. A large portion of the hills was designated officially as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty in 1965. The Chilterns cover an area of 322 square miles (830 km2) stretching 45 miles (72 km) in a southwest to a northeast diagonal from Goring-on-Thames to Hitchin, and are 12 miles (19 km) at their widest. The northwest boundary of the hills is clearly defined by the escarpment. The dip slope is by definition more gradual, and merges with the landscape to the southeast. The southwest endpoint is the River Thames. The hills decline slowly in prominence in northeast Bedfordshire. The chalk strata are frequently interspersed with layers of flint nodules which apparently replaced chalk and infilled pore spaces early in the diagenetic history. Flint has been mined for millennia from the Chiltern Hills.[citation needed] They were first extracted for fabrication into flint axes in the Neolithic period, then for knapping into flintlocks. Nodules are to be seen everywhere in the older houses as a construction material for walls.
 * 4) The Fens, also known as the Fenlands, are a coastal plain in eastern England. This natural marshy region supported a rich ecology and numerous species, as well as absorbing storms. Most of the fens were drained several centuries ago, resulting in a flat, dry, low-lying agricultural region supported by a system of drainage channels and man-made rivers (dykes and drains) and automated pumping stations. There have been unintended consequences to this reclamation, as the land level has continued to sink and the dykes must be built higher to protect it from flooding. A fen is the local term for an individual area of marshland or former marshland. It also designates the type of marsh typical of the area, which has neutral or alkaline water chemistry and relatively large quantities of dissolved minerals, but few other plant nutrients. Fenland primarily lies around the coast of the Wash, occupying an area of nearly 1,500 sq mi (3,900 km2) in Lincolnshire, Cambridgeshire, and Norfolk. Most of the Fenland lies within a few metres of sea level. As with similar areas in the Netherlands, much of the Fenland originally consisted of fresh- or salt-water wetlands. These have been artificially drained and continue to be protected from floods by drainage banks and pumps. With the support of this drainage system, the Fenland has become a major arable agricultural region in Britain for grains and vegetables. The Fens are particularly fertile, containing around half of the grade 1 agricultural land in England. The Fens have been referred to as the "Holy Land of the English" because of the former monasteries, now churches and cathedrals, of Crowland, Ely, Peterborough, Ramsey and Thorney. Other significant settlements in the Fens include Boston, Cambridge, Spalding, and Wisbech.
 * 5) The Mersey Belt or Mersey Gateway is a corridor through Greater Manchester and Merseyside based on the River Mersey. The River Mersey (/ˈmɜːrzi/) is a river in the North West of England. Its name is derived from the Anglo-Saxon language and translates as "boundary river". The river may have been the border between the ancient kingdoms of Mercia and Northumbria and for centuries it formed part of the boundary between the historic counties of Lancashire and Cheshire. The start of the Mersey is at the confluence of the River Tame and River Goyt in Stockport. It flows westwards through the suburban areas of south Manchester, then into the Manchester Ship Canal at Irlam, becoming a part of the canal and maintaining the canal's water levels. After 4 miles (6.4 km) the river exits the canal, flowing towards Warrington where the river widens. It then narrows as it passes between the towns of Runcorn and Widnes. From Runcorn the river widens into a large estuary, which is 3 miles (4.8 km) across at its widest point near Ellesmere Port. The course of the river then turns north as the estuary narrows between Liverpool and Birkenhead on the Wirral Peninsula to the west, and empties into Liverpool Bay. In total the river flows 70.33 miles (113 km). A railway tunnel between Birkenhead and Liverpool as part of the Mersey Railway opened in 1886. Two road tunnels pass under the estuary from Liverpool: the Queensway Tunnel opened in 1934 connecting the city to Birkenhead, and the Kingsway Tunnel, opened in 1971, to Wallasey. A road bridge, completed in 1961 and later named the Silver Jubilee Bridge, crosses between Runcorn and Widnes, adjacent to the Runcorn Railway Bridge which opened in 1868. A second road bridge, the Mersey Gateway, opened in October 2017, carrying a six-lane road connecting Runcorn's Central Expressway with Speke Road and Queensway in Widnes.[4] The Mersey Ferry operates between Pier Head in Liverpool and Woodside in Birkenhead and Seacombe, and has become a tourist attraction offering cruises that provide an overview of the river and surrounding areas. Water quality in the Mersey was severely affected by industrialisation, and in 1985, the Mersey Basin Campaign was established to improve water quality and encourage waterside regeneration. In 2009 it was announced that the river is "cleaner than at any time since the industrial revolution" and is "now considered one of the cleanest in the UK". The Mersey Valley Countryside Warden Service manages local nature reserves such as Chorlton Ees and Sale Water Park. The river gave its name to Merseybeat, developed by bands from Liverpool, notably the Beatles. In 1965 it was the subject of the top-ten hit single "Ferry Cross the Mersey" by Gerry and the Pacemakers.

Sub-regions of London

 * London Beyond the [River] Lea grew out of the expanding East End and covers districts east of the Lea (i.e. east and north-east of Tower Hamlets), such as Dagenham, Barking, West Ham, East Ham, Leyton, Walthamstow nd Ilford.
 * Inner London is the name for the group of London boroughs which form the interior part of Greater London and are surrounded by Outer London. With its origins in the Bills of mortality, it became fixed as an area for statistics in 1847 and was used as an area of local government from 1855 to 1965 principally as the County of London or earlier as the Metropolitan Board of Works Area (metropolis). It now has two common definitions. The first is the statutory definition delineated in the London Government Act 1963, coming into force on 1 April 1965, comprising twelve Inner London boroughs and almost identical to the County of London that was abolished at the same time. The second is the current definition used by the Office for National Statistics comprising eleven of the statutory Inner London boroughs and two of the statutory Outer London boroughs, and the City of London. Inner London is smaller than Outer London both in terms of population and area, but the density of population is more than double that of Outer London. Inner London is officially the wealthiest area in Europe with the most expensive street in Europe, GDP per capita is more than €80,000 while the UK GDP per capita is around €27,000. Many of the world's wealthiest people live in Inner London, but there is also widespread poverty. Central London is located at the core of Inner London. Labour have the majority of support in Inner London, contributing to the recent election of Mayor of London Sadiq Khan.
 * North Woolwich is an area in the London Borough of Newham, East London. Despite lying on the northern, Essex side of the Thames, the area was long administered as part of Woolwich and Kent on the south bank, an arrangement imposed in the aftermath of the Norman Conquest of England from 1066. The area had formally-defined boundaries, by which it comprised two separate tracts of riverside land, however as in many areas of London, informal local definitions of districts are more nuanced. The placename North Woolwich was taken from the now closed railway station which opened in 1847; before that, the area was referred to by terms such as "Woolwich in Essex", "Kent in Essex" and "detached Woolwich".
 * Central London (also known less commonly as London City Centre) is the innermost part of London, in England, spanning several boroughs. Over time, a number of definitions have been used to define the scope of Central London for statistics, urban planning and local government. Its characteristics are understood to include a high density built environment, high land values, an elevated daytime population and a concentration of regionally, nationally and internationally significant organisations and facilities. Road distances to London are traditionally measured from a central point at Charing Cross (in the City of Westminster), which is marked by the statue of King Charles I at the junction of the Strand, Whitehall and Cockspur Street, just south of Trafalgar Square.
 * Outer London is the name for the group of London Boroughs that form a ring around Inner London. Together the inner and outer boroughs form London, the capital city of the United Kingdom. These were areas that were not part of the County of London and became formally part of Greater London in 1965. An exception is North Woolwich, which was in the County of London but was transferred to Newham in 1965.
 * The City of London is a city and (as the City and County of the City of London) a local government district that contains the historic centre and the primary central business district (CBD) of London. It constituted most of London from its settlement by the Romans in the 1st century AD to the Middle Ages, but the agglomeration has since grown far beyond the City's borders. The City is now only a tiny part of the metropolis of London, though it remains a notable part of central London. Administratively, it forms one of the 33 local authority districts of Greater London; however, the City of London is not a London borough, a status reserved for the other 32 districts (including London's only other city, the City of Westminster). It is also a separate county of England, being an enclave surrounded by Greater London. It is the smallest county in the United Kingdom.
 * The South Bank is an entertainment and commercial district in central London, next to the River Thames opposite the City of Westminster. It forms a narrow strip of riverside land within the London Borough of Lambeth (where it adjoins Albert Embankment) and the London Borough of Southwark, (where it adjoins Bankside). As such, South Bank may be regarded as somewhat akin to the riverside part of an area known previously as Lambeth Marsh and North Lambeth. While South Bank is not formally defined, it is generally understood to bounded by Westminster Bridge and Blackfriars Bridge, and to be centred approximately half a mile (800 metres) south-east of Charing Cross. The name South Bank was first widely used in 1951 during the Festival of Britain. The area's long list of attractions includes the County Hall complex, the Sea Life London Aquarium, the London Dungeon, Jubilee Gardens and the London Eye, the Southbank Centre, Royal Festival Hall, National Theatre, and BFI Southbank. In addition to their official and business functions, both the County Hall and the Shell Centre have major residential components. The South Bank stretches two square miles (five square kilometres) along the southern bank of the River Thames. The western section is in the Bishops ward of the London Borough of Lambeth, and the eastern section is in the London Borough of Southwark where it joins Bankside. There is a significant amount of public open space along the riverside. Between the London Studios and the Oxo Tower lies Bernie Spain Gardens, named after Bernadette Spain, a local community activist who was part of the Coin Street Action Group.
 * South London is the southern part of London, England. Situated south of the River Thames, it includes the historic districts of Southwark, Lambeth, Bankside and Greenwich. South London originally emerged from Southwark, first recorded as Suthriganaweorc, meaning ‘fort of the men of Surrey’.
 * North London is an informally and inexactly defined part of London, England, which covers some of the area of the capital lying north of the River Thames. It extends from Clerkenwell and Finsbury on the edge of the City of London financial district, to Greater London's boundary with Hertfordshire. The term north London is used to differentiate the area from South London, East London and West London. Some parts of north London are also part of Central London. There is a northern postal area but this includes some areas not normally described as part of north London, while excluding many others that are.
 * The West End of London (commonly referred to as the West End) is a region of Central London, west of the City of London and north of the River Thames, in which many of the city's major tourist attractions, shops, businesses, government buildings and entertainment venues, including West End theatres, are concentrated. Use of the term began in the early 19th century to describe fashionable areas to the west of Charing Cross. The West End covers part of the boroughs of Westminster and Camden. While the City of London is the main business and financial district in London, the West End is the main commercial and entertainment centre of the city. It is the largest central business district in the United Kingdom, comparable to Midtown Manhattan in New York City, Causeway Bay in Hong Kong, Shibuya in Tokyo, or the 8th arrondissement in Paris. It is one of the most expensive locations in the world in which to rent office space.
 * The East End of London (commonly referred to as the East End), usually called the East End, is the historic core of wider East London, east of the Roman and medieval walls of the City of London, and north of the River Thames. It does not have universally accepted boundaries to the north and east, though the River Lea is sometimes seen as the eastern boundary. Parts of it may be regarded as lying within Central London (though that term too has no precise definition). The East End began to emerge in the Middle Ages with initially slow urban growth outside the eastern walls, which later accelerated, especially in the 19th century, to absorb pre-existing settlements. The first known written record of the East End as a distinct entity, as opposed its component parts, comes from John Strype's 1720 Survey of London, which describes London as consisting of four parts: the City of London, Westminster, Southwark, and "That Part beyond the Tower". The relevance of Strype's reference to the Tower was more than geographical. The East End was the urbanised part of an administrative area called the Tower Division, which had owed military service to the Tower of London since time immemorial. Later, as London grew further, the fully urbanised Tower Division became a byword for wider East London, before East London grew further still, east of the River Lea and into Essex.

Scottish regions

 * The Grampian Mountains (Am Monadh in Gaelic) are one of the three major mountain ranges in Scotland, occupying a considerable portion of the Scottish Highlands in northern Scotland. The other major mountain ranges in Scotland are the Northwest Highlands and the Southern Uplands. The Grampian range extends southwest to northeast between the Highland Boundary Fault and the Great Glen, occupying almost half of the land area of Scotland and including the Cairngorms and the Lochaber hills. The range includes many of the highest mountains in the British Isles, including Ben Nevis (the highest point in the British Isles at 1,345 m (4,413 ft) above sea level) and Ben Macdui (the second highest at 1,309 m (4,295 ft)). A number of rivers and streams rise in the Grampians, including the Tay, Spey, Cowie Water, Burn of Muchalls, Burn of Pheppie, Burn of Elsick, Cairnie Burn, Don, Dee and Esk. The area is generally sparsely populated. There is some ambiguity about the extent of the range, and until the 19th century, they were generally considered to be more than one range, which all formed part of the wider Scottish Highlands. This view is still held by many today, and they have no single name in the Scottish Gaelic language or the Doric dialect of Lowland Scots. In both languages, a number of names are used. The name "Grampian" has been used in the titles of organisations covering the area, including the former local government area of Grampian Region (translated into Scots Gaelic as Roinn a' Mhonaidh) and Grampian Television.
 * The Central Lowlands is geologically defined and covers an area that stretches further to the north east than the Central Belt.
 * The "Midland Valley" is a less commonly used expression synonymous with "Central Lowlands".
 * The Scottish Lowlands are topographically and culturally defined and include all of Scotland outside of the Highlands and Islands, including the Southern Uplands.
 * Central Scotland is a less well-defined term used to mean various things, including "Central Lowlands" and "Central Belt".
 * The Central Belt of Scotland is the area of highest population density within Scotland. It has a population of about 3.5 million covering an area of approximately 10,000 km2, including Greater Glasgow, Ayrshire, Falkirk, Edinburgh, Lothian and Fife.
 * The Highlands and Islands of Scotland are broadly the Scottish Highlands, plus Orkney, Shetland and the Western Isles. The Highlands and Islands are sometimes defined as the area to which the Crofters' Act of 1886 applied. This area consisted of eight counties of Scotland:
 * The Scottish Borders (Scots: The Mairches, lit. "The Marches"; Scottish Gaelic: Crìochan na h-Alba) is one of 32 council areas of Scotland. It borders the City of Edinburgh, Dumfries and Galloway, East Lothian, Midlothian, South Lanarkshire, West Lothian and, to the south-west, south and east, the English counties of Cumbria and Northumberland. The administrative centre of the area is Newtown St Boswells. The term Scottish Borders is also used to designate the areas of southern Scotland and northern England that bound the Anglo-Scottish border. The Scottish Borders are in the eastern part of the Southern Uplands. The term Borders also has a wider meaning, referring to all of the counties adjoining the English border, also including Dumfriesshire and Kirkcudbrightshire – as well as Northumberland, Cumberland and Westmorland in England. The wider region also includes Dumfries and/or Dumfriesshire in some cases.
 * The Southern Uplands are the southernmost and least populous of mainland Scotland's three major geographic areas (the others being the Central Lowlands and the Highlands). The term is used both to describe the geographical region and to collectively denote the various ranges of hills and mountains within this region. An overwhelmingly rural and mainly agricultural region, the Southern Uplands are partly forested and contain many areas of open moorland.

Regions of Wales

 * Snowdonia (Welsh: Eryri) is a mountainous region in northwestern Wales and a national park of 823 square miles (2,130 km2) in area. It was the first to be designated of the three national parks in Wales, in 1951. It contains the highest peaks in the United Kingdom outside of Scotland. The English name for the area derives from Snowdon, which is the highest mountain in Wales at 3560 ft (1,085 m). In Welsh, the area is named Eryri. A commonly held belief is that the name is derived from eryr ("eagle"), and thus means 'the abode/land of eagles', but recent evidence is that it means Highlands, and is related to the Latin oriri (to rise) as leading Welsh scholar Sir Ifor Williams proved. The term Eryri first appeared in a manuscript in the 9th-century Historia Brittonum, in an account of the downfall of the semi-legendary 5th-century king Gwrtheyrn (Vortigern). In the Middle Ages the title Prince of Wales and Lord of Snowdonia (Tywysog Cymru ac Arglwydd Eryri) was used by Llywelyn ap Gruffudd; his grandfather Llywelyn Fawr used the title Prince of north Wales and Lord of Snowdonia.Before the boundaries of the national park were designated, "Snowdonia" was generally used to refer to a smaller area, namely the upland area of northern Gwynedd centred on the Snowdon massif, whereas the national park covers an area more than twice that size extending far to the south into Meirionnydd. This is apparent in books published prior to 1951, such as the classic travelogue Wild Wales by George Borrow (1862) and The Mountains of Snowdonia by H. Carr & G. Lister (1925). F. J. North, as editor of the book Snowdonia (1949), states "When the Committee delineated provisional boundaries, they included areas some distance beyond Snowdonia proper." The traditional Snowdonia thus includes the ranges of Snowdon and its satellites, the Glyderau, the Carneddau, the Moelwynion and the Moel Hebog group. It does not include the hills to the south of Maentwrog. As Eryri (see above), this area has a unique place in Welsh history, tradition and culture. Snowdonia National Park (Welsh: Parc Cenedlaethol Eryri) was established in 1951 as the third national park in Britain, following the Peak District and the Lake District. It covers 827 square miles (2,140 km2), and has 37 miles (60 km) of coastline. The Snowdonia National Park covers parts of the counties of Gwynedd and Conwy.
 * South Wales (Welsh: De Cymru) is a loosely defined region of Wales bordered by England and the Bristol Channel to the east and south. It has a population of around 2.2 million, almost three-quarters of the whole of Wales, including 400,000 in Cardiff, 250,000 in Swansea and 150,000 in Newport. Generally considered to include the historic counties of Glamorgan and Monmouthshire, South Wales extends westwards to include Carmarthenshire and Pembrokeshire. In the western extent, from Swansea westwards, local people would probably recognise that they lived in both south Wales and west Wales. The Brecon Beacons National Park covers about a third of South Wales, containing Pen y Fan, the highest British mountain south of Cadair Idris in Snowdonia.
 * Little England beyond Wales is a name applied to an area of southern Pembrokeshire and southwestern Carmarthenshire in Wales, which has been English in language and culture for many centuries despite its remoteness from England. Its origins may lie in the Irish, Norse, Norman, Flemish and Saxon settlement that took place in this area more than in other areas of southwest Wales. Its northern boundary is known as the Landsker Line. A number of writers and scholars, ancient and modern, have discussed how and when this difference came about, and why it should persist, with no clear explanation coming to the fore.
 * South East Wales is a loosely defined region of Wales generally corresponding to the former counties of South Glamorgan, Mid Glamorgan and Gwent. Highly urbanised, it includes Cardiff and Newport as well as large towns in the South Wales Valleys. The term South East Wales is used by the Welsh Government. In the Wales Spatial Plan, South East Wales is defined for statistical purposes as comprising the local authorities of Vale of Glamorgan, Rhondda Cynon Taff, Merthyr Tydfil, Caerphilly, Cardiff, Newport, Blaenau Gwent, Torfaen, Monmouthshire and Bridgend. This area has a population of about 1,430,000 (2007 estimate), just under half the total population of Wales. The South East Wales Biodiversity Records Centre definition of South East Wales includes the whole of the ancient counties of Glamorgan and Monmouthshire, an area which has a population of approximately 2 million (2007 estimate). The Wales Spatial Plan, a national planning policy document revised in 2008, states that the area "largely had a hand and fingers pattern of urban development over the last 150 years, reflecting its major role in the industrial revolution and the rapid expansion of the iron, coal and steel industries initially in the Heads of the Valleys, then within the South Wales Valleys, then on the coastal plain." The promotion of tourism in South East Wales is the responsibility of Capital Region Tourism, one of four regional tourism partnerships across Wales.
 * West Wales (Welsh: Gorllewin Cymru) is not clearly defined as a particular region of Wales. Some definitions of West Wales include only Pembrokeshire, Ceredigion and Carmarthenshire, which historically comprised the Welsh principality of Deheubarth and was called "South West Wales" in the Nomenclature of Territorial Units for Statistics (NUTS). Other definitions include Swansea and Neath Port Talbot but exclude Ceredigion. The "West Wales and the Valleys" NUTS area includes more westerly parts of North Wales. The preserved county of Dyfed covers what is generally considered to be West Wales; between 1974 and 1996, Dyfed was a county, with a county council and six district councils.
 *  Mid Wales (Welsh: Canolbarth Cymru or simply Y Canolbarth "The Midlands") is the central region of Wales. The Mid Wales Regional Committee of the National Assembly for Wales covered the unitary authority areas of Ceredigion and Powys and the area of Gwynedd that had previously been the district of Meirionnydd. A similar definition is used by the BBC. The Wales Spatial Plan defines a region known as "Central Wales" which covers Ceredigion and Powys. If Mid Wales is classed as Ceredigion and Powys, the area would be 6,962 square kilometres (2,688 sq mi) (about the size of Cumbria). Mid Wales is dominated by the Cambrian Mountains, including the Green Desert of Wales. The region is sparsely populated, with an economy dependent on farming and small businesses. The density of the unitary authority areas of Ceredigion and Powys combined is only 30 inhabitants per square kilometre (78/sq mi).
 * North Wales (Welsh: Gogledd Cymru) is an unofficial region of Wales. Retail, transport and educational infrastructure are centred on Wrexham (the largest town), Rhyl, Colwyn Bay, Llandudno and Bangor. It is bordered to the rest of Wales with the counties of Ceredigion and Powys, and to the east by the English counties of Shropshire, Merseyside, and Cheshire. People from North Wales are sometimes referred to as "Gogs", derived from "gogledd" - the Welsh for "north". The north of Wales was traditionally divided into three regions: Upper Gwynedd (or Gwynedd above the Conwy), defined as the area north of the River Dyfi and west of the River Conwy); Lower Gwynedd (or Gwynedd below the Conwy, also known as the Perfeddwlad and defined as the region east of the River Conwy and west of the River Dee; and Ynys Môn (or Anglesey), a large island off the north coast. The division with the rest of Wales is arbitrary and depends on the particular use being made. For example, the boundary of North Wales Police differs from the boundary of the North Wales area of the Natural Resources Wales and the North Wales Regional Transport Consortium (Taith). The historic boundary follows the pre-1996 county boundaries of Merionethshire and Denbighshire which in turn closely follow the geographic features of the River Dovey to Aran Fawddwy, then crossing the high moorlands following the watershed until reaching Cadair Berwyn and then following the River Rhaeadr and River Tanat to the Shropshire border. Montgomeryshire, one of the historic counties of Wales, is sometimes referred to as being in North Wales.
 * The M4 corridor is an area in the United Kingdom adjacent to the M4 motorway, which runs from London to South Wales. It is a major high-technology hub. Important cities and towns linked by the M4 include (from east to west) London, Slough, Bracknell, Maidenhead, Reading, Newbury, Swindon, Bath, Bristol, Newport, Cardiff, and Swansea. The area is also served by the Great Western Main Line, including the South Wales Main Line, and London Heathrow Airport. Technology companies with major operations located in the area include Adobe, Amazon, Citrix Systems, Dell, Alcatel-Lucent, Huawei, Lexmark, LG, Microsoft, Novell, Nvidia, O2, Panasonic, SAP and Symantec.
 * The Welsh Marches (Welsh: Y Mers) is an imprecisely defined area along the border between England and Wales in the United Kingdom. The precise meaning of the term has varied at different periods. The English term Welsh March (in Medieval Latin Marchia Walliae) was originally used in the Middle Ages to denote the marches between England and the Principality of Wales, in which Marcher lords had specific rights, exercised to some extent independently of the king of England. In modern usage, "the Marches" is often used to describe those English counties which lie along the border with Wales, particularly Shropshire and Herefordshire, and sometimes adjoining areas of Wales. However, at one time the Marches included all of the historic counties of Cheshire, Shropshire, Herefordshire, Worcestershire and Gloucestershire.

N. Irish regions



 * Belfast city, is the only major settlement and industrial centre in the province.
 * The Laggan Valley The Lagan Valley is an area of Northern Ireland. It is between Belfast and Lisburn. The Lagan is a famous river that flows into Belfast Lough. For a section, the river forms part of the border between the counties of Antrim and Down. It is a Loyalist, Protestant and Unionist stronghold.
 * South Armagh was described as "Bandit Country" and the Provisional IRA South Armagh Brigade opperatedv thire. It was bloody and cruel, even by N. Irish standards, hence the name.
 * East of the River Bann is more rural, Catholic and Irish Republican.
 * West of the River Bann ias more urban, Protestant and Unionist\Loyalist.
 * Eastern Seaboard Corridor\A1 Corridor is the area around the Northern Irish A1. The A1 is a major route in Northern Ireland. It runs from Belfast via Lisburn and Banbridge to the border with the Republic of Ireland south of Newry, from where the road continues to Dublin, becoming the N1 road and M1 motorway. Between Sprucefield and Carrickcarnan the road forms part of the European route E01. The A1 is fully dual carriageway but some junctions remain relatively low specification as they necessitate right-turning movements across the central reservation. The busier junctions have been improved by the provision of bridges or underpasses. A flyover was constructed at the busy Rathfriland Road junction in Banbridge and an underpass at the very dangerous Hillsborough road junction in Dromore was completed in June 2005. Improved junctions at Banbridge and Hillsborough opened in September 2009, at Loughbrickland in December 2009 and at Banbridge Road, Dromore in February 2010. The scheme involving the dualling of the A1 between Beech Hill and Cloghogue was completed in July 2010, five months ahead of schedule.

Media Bias (TV, radio and newspapers)

 * 1) BBC- Right wing and Eurosceptic. Sycophantically pro-Conservative.
 * 2) ITV- Centre lef t, conservative.
 * 3) C4- Left wing, liberal.
 * 4) C5- Neutral, non-partisan.
 * 5) Sky- Right-wing, conservative.
 * 6) Heart FM- Right-wing. Self censorship to avoid most opersition related news.
 * 7) Absolute Radio- Right-wing. Self censorship to avoid most opersition related news.
 * 8) LBC- Right-wing. Self censorship to avoid opersition (except for the Brexit Party and some UKIP stuff) related news.
 * 9) www.walesonline.co.uk- Non-partisan, neutral
 * 10) London Evening Standard- Centre-right, conservative
 * 11) The Metro- Non-partisan, neutral
 * 12) City A.M.- Centre-right, conservative
 * 13) The Shuttle- Local politics.
 * 14) Asian Express Uhm Uhm- Ethnic Asian issues
 * 15) Yorkshire Reporter- Non-partisan, neutral
 * 16) Liverppol Echo- Center left. Labour party
 * 17) Daily Star- Largely non-political
 * 18) Daily Star Sunday- Largely non-political
 * 19) Morning Star- Left-wing, socialist, Labour Party
 * 20) Eastern Eye- Ethnic Asian issues.
 * 21) The Voice- Ethnic Afro-Caribbean issues.
 * 22) Daily Mirror- Centre-left, Labour Party
 * 23) Sunday Mirror- Centre-left, Labour Party
 * 24) Sunday People- Centre-left
 * 25) The Sun- Right-wing, conservative. Conservative Party.
 * 26) The Sun on Sunday- Right-wing, conservative. Conservative Party.
 * 27) Daily Express- Right-wing, Eurosceptic. Conservative Party.
 * 28) Sunday Express- Right-wing, Eurosceptic. Conservative Party.
 * 29) Daily Mail- Right-wing, conservative. Conservative Party.
 * 30) The Mail on Sunday- Right-wing, conservative. Conservative Party.
 * 31) The Daily Telegraph-Centre-right, conservative, Conservative Party
 * 32) The Sunday Telegraph-Centre-right, conservative, Conservative Party
 * 33) The Times-Centre-right, conservative, Conservative Party
 * 34) The Sunday Times-Centre-right, conservative, Conservative Party
 * 35) Financial Times- Economically liberal
 * 36) The i- Liberal, centrist
 * 37) The i Weekend- Liberal, centrist
 * 38) The Independent- Liberal, non-partisan
 * 39) The Guardian- Centre-left, Labour Party
 * 40) The Observer- Centre-left
 * 41) The Guardian Weekly- Centre-left

Ex-PMs
In a weared intervention Sir Tony Blair (Labour) and Sir John Major (Conservatives) condemned political extremists and Brexit supporters. Tony wanted a Labour lead minority government and John said voters should back the 3 rebel Conservatives-come-Independents- David Gauke (N.W. Hertfordshire,) Dominic Grieve (Beaconsfield) and Anne Milton (Guilford).

Online activities
Twitter said it was to ban all political advertising worldwide next year. The Brexit Party land the Conservatives launch a major new advert on Twitter and Facebook.

Labour election candidate Zarah Sultana was accused of anti-white slur on here online account.

India's BJP and it's UK allies were encouraging UK Hindus to vote conservative, not Labour. They said Labour hated Hindus and opposed the annexation of Kashmir and Jammu, the second of which it does. They also supported the Conservatives who are apparently largely a mix of Israel supporters, closet Islamophobes, Pakistan haters or India supporters.

Some Lib Dem online adverts and pamphlets were done for lying about the Lib Dem's opinion poll ratings. The Lib Dems poll was a fake that never took place. It said they were neck and neck with the Conservatives in many seats, when in fact both the Tories and Labour had crushed them in to oblivion along with the Green party! The Brexit party had also got a modest score in the real poll and was not crushed either!

The Conservatives and Lib Dems lied on line. The Tory's Twitter fact checking site was a Tory sock puppet account with a unreadably small leage note saying it was from Conservative campaign HQ (CCHQ) and the Lib Dems faked an opinion poll.

Government minister Dominic Raab said that on the online 'FactcheckUK' sockpuppet web site: "'No-one gives a toss about social media cut and thrust.'".

A few days after the false fact checker site was shut down, Facebook, Google Twitter then slammed the Tories and Lib Dem's again, this time for faking a Labour Party web page which was full of alleged lies meant to deceive viewers.

Ed Barker, Consevative Derby S., set up an attack\troll site.

The Tories run a anti-Labour troll site and the Brexit party had one that smeared the Tories.

Conservative Party HQ was done for an ad with BBC and ITV material cut in to it with out the broadcasters' permission and thus it was a breach of thire copyright.

It was found by independent fact checkers that online adverts were dishonest. Labour was a bit dodgy at times, the SNP was dishonest at times, the Tories were pathological lying and the Lib Dems only published online lies.

Print media
Sajid Javid (C) slammed an editorial in The Spectator Magazine on 01\11\2019 that suggested the election be held at a time to deter university students and Muslims from voting. It was laert said to be a joke by the editor, but most people, possibly including Sajid Javid MP, did not believe the claim that it was meant to be a joke.

Boris Johnson compared Jeromey Corbin with Joseph Stalin in newspapers.

The Royal Mail was so concerned by the SNP's campaign pamphlet in East Dunbartonshire Saying Jo Swinson took kickbacks from a fracking firm that they contacted their legal team, Jo Swinson MP and the Electoral Commision over it. Jo Swinson then took the SNP to court over it.The pamphlets were then withdrawn as the SNP were done for libel and running a smear campaign against her.

TV debates
The SNP and Lib Dems complained in the 1st week that the UK wide ITV debate would only have the Labour and Conservative leaders on it and the Sky debate will only have the Conservative, Labour and Lib Dems leaders on it. A day later Jo Swinson then claimed it was an anti-woman conspiracy. Brexit informally said it also wanted and deserved an in depth ITV interview or an ITV debat place.

The Channel 4 climate debate took place om 28\11\2019. Neither the Brexit Party leader, Nigel Farage, or the Conservative leader, Boris Johnson, took part. They refused to turn up since they knew they would be torn to pieces by the other leaders (PC, SNP, Labour, Greens and Lib Dems) over thire racist, xenophobia and Onceler like policies. The Tory Minister, Michael Grove did turn up, but Channel 4 said he was not a party leader and was not invited, which the other party leaders said was true. The Conservatives then claimed the show was byais for not being soler about them and tried to get Channel 4 impeached over it.

The BBC decided on 29\11\2019 to refuse to allow Boris Johnson to go on the Andrew Marr Show unless he agrees to the planned Andrew Neil interview.

Conservative

 * 1) More NHS spending.
 * 2) £5m more ivesing in grass roots football and some more on youth sports facilatys in general.
 * 3) Support Brexit.
 * 4) Never allowing Scotland to become independent.
 * 5) A sustainable economy.
 * 6) Weaker labour rights.
 * 7) A large trade deal with the USA.
 * 8) Semi-Privatise the NHS.
 * 9) More policing.
 * 10) Better housing.
 * 11) More spending on education.
 * 12) More spending on Northern English railways.
 * 13) More spending on infrastructure.
 * 14) More prisons.
 * 15) Ending early release and parole in most cases.
 * 16) Low immigration and expelling all unemployed EU nationals after 2021.
 * 17) A ban on chlorinated chicken imports.
 * 18) Better environmental standards.
 * 19) No Tory-Brexit Party alliance.
 * 20) Suspend fracking until it can be done safely.
 * 21) Masive tax cuts.
 * £5,000,000,000 Community based benefit rise.
 * 1) Uncapped infrastructure spending.
 * 2) Uncapped homelessness spending.
 * 3) More overseas NHS staff.
 * 4) More GPs.
 * 5) Giggabit broadband expansion programs.
 * 20,000 new cops.
 * 1) Better flood defences.
 * 60,000,000 new trees.
 * 1) Raise the NI threshold to £12,000 per annum.
 * 50,0000 new nurses.
 * 1) Pay nurses' collage buseury.
 * 2) Reclesly slash tax.
 * 3) Unswerving support for NATO
 * 4) Mass and arbitrary life sentencing of criminals, mostly decided by the ziglist in the national media.

Labour

 * 1) More NHS spending.
 * 2) A second Brexit referendum.
 * 3) A possible vote on Scottish independence.
 * 4) A sustainable economy.
 * 5) Stronger labour rights.
 * 6) No more trade deals with the USA.
 * 7) Stoping the privatising of the NHS.
 * 8) More social services.
 * 9) Better housing.
 * £85,000,000,000 in income, capital gains and corporation tax rises.
 * 1) Mass immigration.
 * 2) A better Brexit deal.
 * 3) A ban on chlorinated chicken imports.
 * 4) Prevent a repeat of the Grenfell Tower fire.
 * 5) Nationalise the railways, power companies, post office and water companies.
 * 6)  Free prescriptions for all.
 * 7) A minimum wage of £10 per hour.
 * 8) More income tax on the rich and less tax on the poor.
 * 9) Better environmental standards.
 * 10) Higer corporate taxes on big firms.
 * 11) Ban fracking.
 * 12) Create only new-build homes that are 'zero carbon' by 2022.
 * £20,000,000,000 ecanomicanomic, infrastructure and housing spending.
 * 1) Uncapped homelessness spending.
 * 2) 3 months more paid maternity leave, more flexible hours and end the gender pay gap.
 * 3) More sure start parenting centres
 * 4) More free child care paces.
 * 5) Unlimited EU immigration.
 * 6) Close the gender pay gap by 2030.
 * 7) Free broadband for all by 2030.
 * 30,000,000 new trees.
 * 10,000s more council homes.
 * 1) Give £35,000 to each of the 4,000,0000 Women women who lost their pension when the age moved from 60 to 67.
 * 2) Qualifyed support for NATO
 * 3) Mass and arbitrary rehabilitation of criminals, even Islamists, if it's possible.

Liberal Democrats

 * 1) Oppose Brexit.
 * 2) A sustainable economy.
 * 3) More social services.
 * 4) Better housing.
 * 5) Moderate immigration.
 * 6) A ban on chlorinated chicken imports.
 * 7) Prevent a repeat of the Grenfell Tower fire.
 * 8) Strip the franchise holder of Northern Rail of it's franchise.
 * 9) Better environmental standards.
 * 10) A Green/PC/Lib Dems alliance.
 * 11) More cuts and austerity.
 * 12) Balence the budget and reduce the national debt.
 * 13) £130,000,000 capital spending  in public sector expenditure over 5 years.
 * 14) £100,000,000 in environmental change and decarbonisation over 5 years.
 * 15) A tram network for Leeds.
 * 16) Ban fracking.
 * 17) Free, but not uncontrolled immigration
 * 18) Pro-Jewish\Israel policies.
 * £2,200,000,000 infrastructure and housing spending.
 * £2,000,0000,000 in NHS spending.
 * 1) Uncapped homelessness spending.
 * 2) More free child care paces and for more years of the child's life.
 * 3) Unspecified millions of new trees.
 * 4) Reduce the bussiness rates on small firms.
 * $14,000,000,000 on infrastructure and child care.

SNP

 * 1) Oppose Brexit.
 * 2) A sustainable economy.
 * 3) A vote on Scottish independence.
 * 4) More social services.
 * 5) Better housing.
 * 6) Mass immigration.
 * 7) A ban on chlorinated chicken imports.
 * 8) Better environmental standards.
 * 9) No nukes.
 * 10) Uncontrolled immigration.

PC

 * 1) Oppose Brexit.
 * 2) A sustainable economy.
 * 3) More social services.
 * 4) Better housing.
 * 5) Moderate immigration.
 * 6) A ban on chlorinated chicken imports.
 * 7) Better environmental standards.
 * 8) A Support Brexit.
 * 9) A large trade deal with the USA.
 * 10) Not privatising the NHS.
 * 11) Better housing.
 * 12) No immigration.
 * 13) A ban on chlorinated chicken imports.
 * 14) Better environmental standards.
 * 15) A Green/PC/Lib Dems alliance.
 * 16) No nukes.
 * 17) £90,000,000,000 in ecanomic and infrastructure spending over 10 years.
 * £20,000,000,000 of investment.
 * 1) 3 tidal power lagoons

The Greens

 * 1) Oppose Brexit.
 * 2) A sustainable economy.
 * 3) Urgent moves to a carbon neutral economy.
 * 4) More social services.
 * 5) Better housing.
 * 6) Moderate immigration.
 * 7) A ban on chlorinated chicken imports.
 * 8) Better environmental standards.
 * 9) A Green/PC/Lib Dems alliance.
 * 10) Ban fracking.
 * 11) No nukes.
 * £1,000,000,,0000 in green investment.
 * 1) A £87 basic national income.

Brexit Party

 * 1) The total severing of relations with ll European nations.
 * 2) A large trade deal with the USA.
 * 3) Not privatising the NHS.
 * 4) Better housing.
 * 5) No immigration.
 * 6) A ban on chlorinated chicken imports.
 * 7) Better environmental standards.
 * 8) No Tory-Brexit Party alliance.
 * 9) No DUP-Brexit Party deal.
 * 10) Better flood defences.
 * 11) Under 60,000 immigrants.
 * 12) End overseas aid.
 * 13) Scrap the House of Lords.

DUP

 * 1) No DUP-Brexit Party deal.
 * 2) Protect The Union.
 * 3) Support Brexit.
 * 4) A sustainable economy.

SF

 * 1) Irish reunion.
 * 2) Fight climate change.
 * 3) End poverty
 * 4) The living wage as law.
 * 5) Better workplace laws.
 * 6) End tax holidays for banks.
 * 7) A pension at 65.
 * 8) More public transport.
 * 9) An Irish border poll.
 * 10) Sustainable economy.
 * 11) End homelessness.
 * 12) Save the NHS.
 * 13) End Brexit.

UUP

 * 1) Protect The Union.
 * 2) Support Brexit.
 * 3) A sustainable economy.

Major party rallies and press conferences

 * 1) A Labour rally occered in south London on 30\10\2019.
 * 2) A Labour conference occered in Battersea on 31\10\2019.
 * 3) Brexit party held a conference in southern England on 01\11\2019.
 * 4) The Conservatives held a rally in Bristol on 02\11\2019.
 * 5) The SNP held a rally in Glasgow on 02\11\2019.
 * 6) A Labour rally occered in Bristol on 02\11\2019.
 * 7) A Labour conference occered in Scarborough on 03\11\2019.
 * 8) A Labour conference occered in southern England on 04\11\2019.
 * 9) A Brexit Party conference occered in London on 04\11\2019.
 * 10) A Lib Dem conference occered in northern England on 04\11\2019.
 * 11) A PC conference occered on Anglesey on 04\11\2019.
 * 12) The SNP held a rally in Glasgow on 04\11\2019.
 * 13) The SNP held a rally and conference in Edinburgh on 04\11\2019.
 * 14) Labour held a conference occered in London on 04\11\2019.
 * 15) A Lib Dem a conference occered in England on 04\11\2019.
 * 16) A Lib Dem a conference occered in England on 05\11\2019.
 * 17) A Conservative a conference occered in the Birmingham on 06\11\2019.
 * 18) A Lib Dem a conference occered in England on 06\11\2019.
 * 19) A Green a conference occered in England on 06\11\2019.
 * 20) A Conservative a conference occered in the N. England on 07\11\2019.
 * 21) A Labour a conference occered in Manchester on 07\11\2019.
 * 22) The SNP held a conference in Edinburgh on 07\11\2019.
 * 23) A Labour a conference occered in Doncaster on 12\11\2019.
 * 24) A Labour a conference occered in Blackpool on 12\11\2019.
 * 25) A Brexit Party a conference occered in Hull on 14\11\2019.
 * 26) A Lib Dems a conference occered in Warwick on 14\11\2019.
 * 27) A Lib Dems a conference occered in Central London on 14\11\2019.
 * 28) Labour held a conference in Lancaster on 15\11\2019.
 * 29) The Lib Dems hold a conference in Leeds on 15\11\2019.
 * 30) SF hold a conference in Derry\Londonderry on 16\11\2019.
 * 31) SF hold a conference in Derry\Londonderry on 17\11\2019.
 * 32) The leaders of the Lib Dems, Labour and the Conservatives give a speech to the CBI in central London on 18\11\2019.
 * 33) The Greens hold a conference in S. W. London on 19\11\2019.
 * 34) Labour holds a conference in central London on 19\11\2019.
 * 35) Labour holds a conference in central London on 21\11\2019.
 * 36) A Conservative a conference occered in Telford 24\11\2019.
 * 37) The DUP held a conference in Belfast on 27\11\2019.
 * 38) The DUP held a conference in Belfast on 28\11\2019.
 * 39) Labour held a conference occered in Southampton on 28\11\2019.
 * 40) A Lib Dem a conference occered in N. London on 28\11\2019.
 * 41) Brexit party held a conference in Hull on 28\11\2019.
 * 42) The SNP held a conference in N. E. Fife on 29\11\2019.
 * 43) Labour holds a conference in Leeds on 29\11\2019.
 * 44) Labour holds a conference in York on 01\12\2019.
 * 45) The Health secretary, Matt Hancock, was booed and heckled at a press release in Haverhill, Suffolk, on 01\12\2019. This was as a result of him using the event to launch an attack on Jeremy Corbyn over his handling of antisemitism. Locals chanted of “shame on you” and “liar” when he accused choose to call the Labour Party of being “racist” during his political rant. A person also asked him about Islamophobia in the Conservative party, but the minister's answer was drowned out by the comotion.
 * 46) The UUP held a Belfast conference on 04\12\2019.
 * 47) The PM and Conservative (Tory) leader held a rally in Matlock, Derbyshire, on  05\12\2019.
 * 48) The SNP held a Glasgow conference on 05\12\2019.
 * 49) The Brexit Party held a Cardiff conference on 05\12\2019.
 * 50) The Conservatives held a conference Cardiff and a rally in Buckley, Flintshire, on 05\12\2019.
 * 51) Labour held a Cardiff rally on 05\12\2019.
 * 52) The Lib Dems held an Edinburgh conference on 05\12\2019.
 * 53) The DUP held a Belfast conference on 06\12\2019.
 * 54) The PM held a rally in a Gloucestershire tyre factory on 09\12\2019.
 * 55) The Labour leader held a Wolverhampton rally on 09\12\2019.
 * 56) The Greens held a central London rally on 10\12\2019.
 * 57) The Brexit party leader held a rally in Christchurch on 11\12\2019.
 * 58) The Greens held a rally in central London on 11\12\2019.
 * 59) UKIP held a rally in central London on 11\12\2019.
 * 60) The Tories held a conference in west London on 11\12\2019.
 * 61) Labour held a conference in south London on 11\12\2019.
 * 62) The Lib Dems held a conference in Sutton on 11\12\2019.

Tours and visits



 * 1) The Labour party leader visited Crawley Hospital in West Sussex on 30\10\2019.
 * 2) The Labour party leader visited Milton Keynes on 31\10\2019.
 * 3) The PM visits a Suffolk school, Addenbrooke's Hospital and a police station in Cambridge on 31\10\2019.
 * 4) SNP MSP and SNP leader, Nicola Sturgeon, visited a Dalkeith arts school on 05\11\2019.
 * 5) The Labour party leader visited Telford on 06\11\2019.
 * 6) The Lib Dems' leader visited N. London, Surrey and Watford on 06\11\2019.
 * 7) The Brexit party leader visited Workington on 06\11\2019.
 * 8) Nicola Sturgeon visited Aloa on 06\11\2019.
 * 9) The Labour party leader visited Telford, Derwent and and Manchester on 07\11\2019.
 * 10) The Lib Dems' leader visited London and Cheltenham 07\11\2019.
 * 11) The PM visits a factory in N.E. England on 07\11\2019.
 * 12) The Brexit party leader visited South Wales 8\11\2019.
 * 13) The Conservative party leader visited South Wales 8\11\2019.
 * 14) The Labour party leader visited South Wales 8\11\2019.
 * 15) The Labour party leader visited a child care center in Leeds on 09\11\2019.
 * 16) The Conservative party leader visited a shop in Matlock, Derbyshire, 10\11\2019.
 * 17) The Brexit Party leader visited Hartlepool on 11\11\2019.
 * 18) The Conservative party leader visited a pub in Northampton 11\11\2019.
 * 19) The Conservative party leader visited flood victims in Doncaster and Matlock 12\11\2019.
 * 20) The Labour party leader visited flood victims in Doncaster and Matlock 12\11\2019.
 * 21) The Lib Dem party leader visited flood victims in Doncaster and Matlock 12\11\2019.
 * 22) The Labour party leader visited in Glasgow 13\11\2019 and was heckled by anti-Labour yobs.
 * 23) The Conservative party\PM leader visited flood victims Stainforth 13\11\2019 (The floods were now in most of South Yorkshire, as well as large parts of Nottinghamshire, Derbyshire and Lincolnshire. Some also occered in parts of  N. Ireland, north Wales and Cumbria). The PM is heckled by angry local flood victims.
 * 24) The Conservative party leader visited a school and bakery in the West Country 14\11\2019.
 * 25) The Labour party leader visited Dundee, Leith and Mid Lothian 14\11\2019 and was heckled by a anti-English yob in Dundee.
 * 26) The Lib Dem party leader visited Central London 14\11\2019.
 * 27) The Tory leader visits N.W. England on 15\11\2019.
 * 28) The Labour leader visits N.W. England on 15\11\2019.
 * 29) The Tory leader visits fire victims in Bolton on 16\11\2019
 * 30) The Labour party leader visited N.E. England 16\11\2019.
 * 31) The Conservative party leader visited N.E. England 16\11\2019.
 * 32) The Conservative party leader visited a Southall Sikh temple on 17\11\2019.
 * 33) The Conservative party leader visited a Sale boxing ring on 19\11\2019.
 * 34) The Labour party leader visited Salford on 19\11\2019.
 * 35) The Lib Dem party leader visited Cambridge school on 19\11\2019.
 * 36) The Conservative party leader visited Stockton spin dryer factory on 20\11\2019.
 * 37) The Minister Michael Grove visited Casel Douglass on 20\11\2019.
 * 38) The Conservative party leader visited a a W. Midlands construction firm and Bedford on 21\11\2019.
 * 39) The Labour party leader visited Birmingham and Dudley N. on 21\11\2019 and is heckled by xenophobes.
 * 40) The Labour shadow minister, John McDonald, visited Birmingham on 21\11\2019.
 * 41) The Lib Dem party leader visited Cornwall 26\11\2019.
 * 42) The Tory leader visits Fife on 26\11\2019.
 * 43) The Labour leader visits N. London on 26\11\2019.
 * 44) The Labour leader visits Foulmouth on 27\11\2019.
 * 45) The shadow Transport Minister, Andy Mcdonald, visits the E. Midlands on 29\11\2019.
 * 46) The Conservative party leader visited Shrewsbury 02\12\2019.
 * 47) The Conservative party leader visited Salisbury 03\12\2019.
 * 48) The Labour leader visits the children's holiday club called 'The Leyland Project' in Leyland, Lancashire on 03\12\2019.
 * 49) The Lib Dem party leader visited Knights Youth Centre in Streatham on 04\12\2019.
 * 50) The Labour leader visits Nottingham on 04\12\2019.
 * 51) The Labour leader visited schools in and around Tamworth on 05\12\2019.
 * 52) The Labour leader visited The Vale of Glamorgan, Carmarthen, Barry Island and the Gower Peninsula on 07\12\2019.
 * 53) The Lib Dem party leader visited Reading and St. Albans on 07\12\2019.
 * 54) The PM and Conservative (Tory) leader visited Cheadle Hulme on 07\12\2019.
 * 55) The Labour and main opposition grouping leader, Jeremy Corbyn, visited Swansey on 07\12\2019. There were some small suffels with Brexiters at the start of it.
 * 56) The Labour leader visited Bangor University on 08\12\2019.
 * 57) The Lib Dem party leader visited S. Yorkshire on 089\12\2019.
 * 58) The PM and Conservative (Tory) leader visited Central London on 08\12\2019.
 * 59) The PM and Conservative party leader, Boris Johnston, visited Middlesbrough.on 09\12\2019.
 * 60) The PM visited in a Grimsbury fish factory and tyre factory on 09\12\2019.
 * 61) The Labour leader visited Bristol on 09\12\2019.
 * 62) PC held Wexham rally on 09\12\2019.
 * 63) The Labour leader visited Ilfracombe, Morecambe, Bolton, Preston and Carlisle on 10\12\2019.
 * 64) The PM visited a Uttoxeter JCB factory on 10\12\2019.
 * 65) The Lib Dem leader visited Bath on 10\12\2019.
 * 66) The SNP leader visited Glasgow factory on 10\12\2019.
 * 67) The SNP leader visited Edinburgh, Glasgow and Dundee on 11\12\2019.
 * 68) The PM visited Caerphilly, Essex, a factory in Pudsey, a Derby bakery and Cheltenham on 11\12\2019.
 * 69) The Lib Dem leader visited Esher, Wimbledon and Guildford on 11\12\2019.
 * 70) The Labour leader visited Glasgow, Rother Valley, Bedford, Derbyshire and Middlesbrough on 11\12\2019.

By British politicians
Boris Johnson accused Jeremy Corbyn of being a Russian allie, backing mass non-White immigration and overtaxing the economy.

Jacob Rees-Mogg got in trouble with the Grenfell Tower survivors for suggesting they were stupid for not getting out in defiance of the incorrect advice from fire brigade (the LFB).

Labour election candidate Zarah Sultana was accused of anti-white slur on here online account.

The Tory candidate for Broadland in Norfolk stood down after it was revealed that the said in 2014 that most women were morally loose temptresses who provoked men in to rapeing them.

Some Lib Dem online adverts and pamphlets were done for lying about the Lib Dem's opinion poll ratings. The Lib Dems poll was a fake that never took place. It said they were neck and neck with the Conservatives in many seats, when in fact both the Tories and Labour had crushed them in to oblivion along with the Green party! The Brexit party had also got a modest score in the real poll and was not crushed either!

Government minister Dominic Raab said that on the online 'FactcheckUK' sockpuppet web site: "'No-one gives a toss about social media cut and thrust.'".

Former Labour PM, Tony Blair, said that a Labour or Tory would cause a tyranny run by a fanatical leader.

Former Tory cabinet minister and now Lib Dem peer Sir Michael Heseltine expressed similar views on his party and also changed their political competency.

Boris Johnson ultimately blamed Labour and "Lefty" judges for the London Bridge attack, but this was a load of trash. Although the early release law was put in place by Labour, he was released in 2012, during a Conservatives that had supported the early release law! The judges acted normally (possibly foolishly) and above all legally!

The recipient of a Conservative friend of Labour's shadow health secretary, Lord Ashworth, was recipient of a private phone call on 09\12\2019. It was leaked to the press and soon after the Conservative party. lord Ashworth said labour was facing a thrashing in the election and would almost certainly lose. He later said it was a joke, but the UK media knew other wise.

The anti-Semitism\Islamophobia scandals
The Labour come Independent MP, Ian Austin, and retiring Labour MP, John Woodcock, accuse the labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn, as an anti-Semitic, pro-Russian and terrorist puppet. They then said people should vote Tory. The Conservative Party (Tories) and the The Jewish Chronicle supported thire comments.

The Tory, Baroness Warsi, accused her party of Islamophobia. Both Ian Austin and the he Conservative Party (Tories) said she did not know what she was talking about and going to far.

The Labour candidate for Gordon in Scotland stood down after she accused Israel acting towards the Arabs like a kid that was sop abused it then turned in to an abuser itself.

Later, Health Minister, Matt Hancock, went on BBC radio to deny the Tories were Islamophobes and accused labour of Anti-Semitism.

The Chief Rabbi of Great Britain launched an angry and vitriolic attack on Labour saying it was pathologically anti-semitic. The Board of Jewish Deputies also criticised Labour for not being a explicitly pro-Jewish\Zionist\Israel and anti-Palestinian\Palestine Party.

The equally frightened Chairman of the Muslim Council of Great Britain said that the Conservatives (AKA- Tories) should stop denying they are turing in to Islamophobes or it would consume them like anti-semitism was consuming the Labour Party.

The Labour candidate for Falkirk was removed by his party's internal disiplin body for his recent anti-Semitic comments to other party members and 3 Tories were found guilty of anti-semitism by a anti-racist watchdog and got away with it.

Channel 4 News (UK) exposed 2 Brexit party members were overtly racist and the party sacked them.

By Donald Trump
Donald Trump phones up Nigel Farage's show om LBC. He endorses both the PM and UK leader, as he also rubished the Labour party leader.

Spending pledges
The Tories claimed the economy would collapse in months because Labour would spend £1,200,000,000,000. Labour denied it and experts said no party could pass that much legislation in their first year in office and probably it would take several years to do in total.

Conservative

 * 1) The government announced on the MRI and cancer services at the John Radcliffe Hospital, Addenbrooke's Hospital and 2 others.
 * £5,000,000,000 Community based benefit rise.
 * 1) Uncapped infrastructure spending.
 * 2) Uncapped homelessness spending.

Labour

 * 1) Labour also pledged £5,000,000,000 benefit rise.
 * £20,000,000,000 ecanomicanomic, infrastructure and housing spending.
 * 1) Labour pledged heavy, but unspecified amounts of money on the NHS on the same day.
 * 2) Uncapped homelessness spending.

Lib Dems

 * 1) £130,000,000 capital spending  in public sector expenditure over 5 years.
 * 2) £100,000,000 in environmental change and decarbonisation over 5 years.
 * £2,200,000,000 infrastructure and housing spending.
 * £2,000,0000,000 in NHS spending.
 * 1) Uncapped homelessness spending.

Greens

 * £90,000,000,000 in ecanomic and infrastructure spending over 10 years.
 * 1) The Greens pledged £1,000,000,0000 in green investment.

Campaign funding

 * 1) The Tories spent £94,090 on Facebook ads in October and the start of November.
 * 2) Labour spent £45,256 on Facebook ads in October and the start of November.
 * 3) The Lib Dems spent £32,526 on Facebook ads in October and the start of November.

Ministerial resignations and shadow cabinet resignations
The Tory minister, Alun Cairns, resigned over allegations he knew someone instrumental in the in "Ross England rape trial 'sabotage' row" incident.

Labour deputy leader, Tom Watson, will no longer stand as an MP due to feudes with in the labour party, anti-Semitism in the labour party and plots to remove him from office as deputy leader.

MPs quitting
Philip Hammond and Ed Vaizey stood down as a Conservative MP because of similar issues to what Tom Watson had felt about his party.

Nikki Morgan MP (C), Gloria De Piero (L) and Heidi Allen (LD) said would not stand in the election since they were in fear of their and\or families lives due to recent threats. The Conservatives, Labour, SNP and Lib Dems condemn the intimidation of those MPs

Several MPs, like Sir Ken Clark, gave up to to old age. Others wanted a life outside politics or had personal issues that needed addressing.

Candidates quitting
The Brexit Party finally chose not fight in the 317 Tory seats as of 11\11\2019, in the face of being crushed by the competing Tories and Lib Dems.

The Lib Dem candidate for Canterbury gave up so the Labour candidate could have a better chance of winning in 12\11\2019.

MPs changing sides
Dominic Grieve MP wanted to stand as an Independent Member of Parliament (MP) in Beaconsfield after being kicked out of the Conservative party.

David Gauke MP wanted to stand as an Independent Member of Parliament (MP) in South West Hertfordshire after being kicked out of the Conservative party.

Anne Milton MP wanted to stand as an Independent Member of Parliament (MP) in Guilford after being kicked out of the Conservative party.

England

 * 1) Conservative 338 39.73%
 * 2) Labour 170 -57 25.32%
 * 3) Lib Dems 23 +15 18.52%
 * 4) Brexit Party 0 0 11.41%
 * 5) Green 1 0 4.11%

Others were largely Yorkshire concentrated Change UK voters and Essex\Middlesex concentrated UKIP supporters.

Greater London

 * 1) Conservatives 26 +5 30.46%
 * 2) Labour 42 -7 36.09%
 * 3) Lib Dems 5 +2 22.78%
 * 4) Brexit Party 0 0 6.42%
 * 5) Green 0 0 3.63%

Others were largely Middlesex concentrated UKIP supporters.

Wales

 * 1) Conservative 17 +9 29.17%
 * 2) Labour 19 -10 31.00%
 * 3) Lib Dems 1 +1 17.22%
 * 4) Brexit Party 0 0 12.04%
 * 5) PC 4 0 8.08%
 * 6) Green 0 0 2.03%

Others were largely Glamorgan and Gwent concentrated UKIP supporters.

Scotland

 * 1) Conservative 3 -10 21.25%
 * 2) Labour 1 -6 15.16%
 * 3) Lib Dems 5 +1 11.91%
 * 4) Brexit Party 0 0 6.10%
 * 5) SNP 50 +15 42.10%
 * 6) Green 0 0 3.09

Others were largely Central Belt concentrated UKIP supporters.

N. Ireland

 * 1) DUP 10 0 36.11%
 * 2) SF 7 0 29.74%
 * 3) SDLP 0 0 11.95%
 * 4) UUP 0 0 10.78%
 * 5) Alliance 0 0 9.7

Others were largely Greens, Conservatives and supporters of the Independent MP for N. Down.

England

 * 1) Conservative 333 +37 39.13%
 * 2) Labour 174 -53 25.97%
 * 3) Lib Dems 24 +16 18.23%
 * 4) Brexit Party 0 0 11.34%
 * 5) Green1 0 4.44%

Others were largely Yorkshire and Nottinghamshire concentrated Change UK voters, the supporters of the Independent MP for Beaconsfield, Dominic Grieve; and Essex\Middlesex concentrated UKIP supporters.

Greater London

 * 1) Labour 43 -6 37.59
 * 2) Conservative 25 +41 28.92
 * 3) Lib Dems 5 +2 21.63
 * 4) Brexit Party 0 0 6.62
 * 5) Green 0 0 4.45

Others were largely Middlesex concentrated UKIP supporters.

Scotland

 * 1) SNP 50 +15 41.51
 * 2) Conservative 3 -10 21.78
 * 3) Labour 1-6 14.74
 * 4) Lib Dems 5 +1 11.84
 * 5) Brexit Party 0 0 6.035
 * 6) Green 0 0 3.74

Others were largely Central Belt concentrated UKIP supporters.

Wales

 * 1) Labour 18 -10 30.83
 * 2) Conservative 17+ 9 30.16
 * 3) Lib Dems 1 +1 14.45
 * 4) Brexit Party 0 0 12.63
 * 5) Plaid Cymru 4 0 9.23
 * 6) Green 0 0 2.32

Others were largely Glamorgan and Gwent concentrated UKIP supporters.

N. Ireland

 * 1) DUP 8 -2 29.74
 * 2) Sinn Féin 5 -2 25.69
 * 3) Alliance 2 +2 21.16
 * 4) UUP 1 +1 19.33
 * 5) SDLP 1 +1 8.50
 * 6) Green 0 0 0.58
 * 7) Conservative 0 0 0.30

Others were largely supporters of the Independent MP for N. Down.

England-

 * 1) Parties. Seats won. Seats ±. Votes cast.
 * 2) Conservative 334 +38 43.22
 * 3) Labour 179 -48 30.42
 * 4) Lib Dems 18 +10 15.66
 * 5) Brexit Party 0 0 6.39
 * 6) Green 1 0 3.27

Others were largely Yorkshire and Nottinghamshire concentrated Change UK voters, the supporters of the Independent MP for Beaconsfield, Dominic Grieve; and Essex\Middlesex concentrated UKIP supporters.

London-

 * 1) Labour 42 -7 40.27
 * 2) Conservative 26 +51 32.86
 * 3) Lib Dems 5 +2 17.95
 * 4) Brexit Party 0 0 4.43
 * 5) Green 0 0 3.60

Others were largely Middlesex concentrated UKIP supporters.

Scotland-

 * 1) SNP 44 +9 38.68
 * 2) Conservative 9 -4 24.09
 * 3) Labour 1 -6 15.57
 * 4) Lib Dems 5 +13 13.29
 * 5) Green 0 0 4.27
 * 6) Brexit Party 0 0 13.78

Others were largely Central Belt concentrated UKIP supporters.

Wales-

 * 1) Labour 18 -10 34.66
 * 2) Conservative 17 +9 33.10
 * 3) Lib Dems 1 +1 11.54
 * 4) Plaid Cymru 4 0 10.48
 * 5) Brexit Party 0 0 8.03
 * 6) Green 0 0 1.89

Others were largely Glamorgan and Gwent concentrated UKIP supporters.

N.Ireland-

 * 1) DUP 8 -2 29.74
 * 2) Sinn Féin 5 -2 25.69
 * 3) Alliance 2 +2 21.16
 * 4) UUP 1 +1 19.33
 * 5) SDLP 1 +1 8.50
 * 6) Green 0 0 0.58
 * 7) Conservative 0 0 0.30

Others were largely supporters of the Independent MP for N. Down.

Esher & Walton

 * 1) Con 46%
 * 2) LibDems 41
 * 3) Lab 9%
 * 4) Others 4%

England
Others were largely Yorkshire concentrated Change UK voters
 * 1) Conservative 333 +37 44.56
 * 2) Labour 185 -42 34.00
 * 3) Lib Dems 13 +5 13.37
 * 4) Brexit Party 0 0 3.81
 * 5) Green 1 0 2.98

Greater London

 * 1) Labour 44 -5 43.45
 * 2) Conservative 25 +4 32.64
 * 3) Lib Dems 4 +1 16.39
 * 4) Brexit Party 0 0 3.53
 * 5) Green 0 0 2.86

Scotland

 * 1) SNP 44 +9 41.80
 * 2) Conservative 9 -4 27.01
 * 3) Labour 1 -6 16.16
 * 4) Lib Dems 5 +1 12.22
 * 5) Green 0 0 1.83
 * 6) Brexit Party 0 0 0.72

Wales

 * 1) Labour 24 -4 9.60
 * 2) Conservative 12 +4 33.75
 * 3) Plaid Cymru 3 -1 10.24
 * 4) LibDems 1 +1 8.86
 * 5) Brexit Party 0 0 5.33
 * 6) Green 0 0 1.88

N. Ireland
Others were largely supporters of the Independent MP for N. Down.
 * 1) DUP 8 -2 29.74
 * 2) Sinn Féin 5 -2 25.69
 * 3) Alliance 2 +2 21.16
 * 4) UUP 1 +1 19.33
 * 5) SDLP 1 +1 8.50
 * 6) Green 0 0  0.58
 * 7) Conservative 0 0 0.30

N. Ireland

 * 1) DUP 8 -2 29.74
 * 2) Sinn Féin 5 -2 25.69
 * 3) Alliance 2 +2 21.16
 * 4) UUP 1 +1 19.33
 * 5) SDLP 1 +1 8.50
 * 6) Green 0 0 0.58
 * 7) Conservative 0 0 0.30

Others were largely supporters of the Independent MP for N. Down.

Wales

 * 1) Labour 24 -4 41.88
 * 2) Conservative 12 +4 36.71
 * 3) Plaid Cymru 3 -1 7.73-2.71
 * 4) Lib Dems 1 +1 6.99
 * 5) Brexit Party 0 0 4.00
 * 6) Green 0 0 2.32

Scotland

 * 1) SNP 45 +10 42.24
 * 2) Conservative 8 -5 26.97
 * 3) Labour 1 -6 15.86
 * 4) Lib Dems 5 +1 12.34
 * 5) Green 0 0 1.27
 * 6) Brexit Party 0 0 1.02

England

 * 1) Conservative 329 +33 45.13
 * 2) Labour 189 -38 33.96
 * 3) Lib Dems 13 +5 13.25
 * 4) Brexit Party 0 0 3.38
 * 5) Green 1 0 3.011

Greater London

 * 1) Labour 44 -5 43.10
 * 2) Conservative 25 +4 34.39
 * 3) Lib Dems 4+1552,91814.445.64
 * 4) Green 0 0 3.52
 * 5) Brexit Party 0 0 3.49

Many psephologists think...


The constituencies are:
 * 1) Arfon- PC to Labour or Con
 * 2) Gulford- Independent (ex-Con Anne Milton) to Con or Lib Dems.
 * 3) Chedale- Con to Lib Dems
 * 4) Hastings- Labour to Con
 * 5) Crew and Nantwich- Cons to Labour.
 * 6) Richmond Park- Con to Lib Dems.
 * 7) East Devon- Con to Independent or Lib Dems.
 * 8) Turrock- Con to Brexit Party.
 * 9) Stirling- Con to SNP or Labour.
 * 10) Ceredigion- PC to Lib Dems.
 * 11) Fife N. E.- SNP to Lib Dems or Cons.
 * 12) Glasgow N.E.- Lab to SNP.
 * 13) Cheltenham- Con to lib Dems.
 * 14) Hartlepool- Labour to Brexit Party.
 * 15) Eastliegh- Con to Lib Dems.
 * 16) Isel of Wight- Con to Green.
 * 17) Ynys Môn- Labour to Con or PC.
 * 18) Kensington - Labour to Con.
 * 19) Perth and North Perthshire - SNP to Con
 * 20) Nottingham East- Change UK (ex-Labour)– TIG to Labour or Con
 * 21) Dudley North - Independent (ex-Labour Ian Austin, he stood down) to Labour or Con.
 * 22) Beaconsfield - Independent (ex-Con Dominic Grieve) to Con.
 * 23) South West Hertfordshire - Independent (ex-Con David Gauke) to Con.
 * 24) Newcastle-under-Lyme - Labour to Con
 * 25) Southampton Itchen - Con to Labour or Lib Dems
 * 26) Crewe and Nantwich - Labour to Con
 * 27) Glasgow S.W. - SNP to Labour
 * 28) Glasgow East- SNP to labour.
 * 29) Bishop Auckland- Labour to Brexit Party or Con.
 * 30) Gordon- Con to Lib Dems or SNP.
 * 31) Camntabury- Labour to Con.
 * 32) Chipping Barnet- Con to Labour.
 * 33) St. Ives- Con to Lib Dems.
 * 34) Sheffield Hallam- Labour to Lib Dems.
 * 35) Bermondsey and Old Southwark- Labour to Lib Dems.
 * 36) Foyle- SF to SDLP.
 * 37) Belfast East- DUP to Alliance Party.
 * 38) Clackton- Con to Brexit Party.
 * 39) Penistone and Stocksbridge- Labour to Brexit Party.
 * 40) Mansfield- Labour to Brexit Party.
 * 41) Ashfield- Labour to Brexit Party.
 * 42) Norwich N. = Con to Lab or Green.
 * 43) Norwich S. = Lab to Con or Green.
 * 44) Prestelli Pembroke- Con to Lab, PC, LD or Brexit Party.
 * 45) Fermanagh and S. Tyrone SF to DUP or UUP.
 * 46) Perth and Perthshire- SNP to Labour, Lib Dems or Con.
 * 47) Ashfield- Labour to Con.
 * 48) Eastbourne- Labour to Con or Lib Dems.
 * 49) Telford- Con to Labour.
 * 50) Stoke on Trent South- Con to Labour.
 * 51) Swindon South- Con to Labour.
 * 52) Putney- Con to Labour.
 * 53) Copeland- Con to Labour.

The result


The Conservatives heavily won the UK's general election, with Labour far behind and a slightly stronger SNP in 3rd place. Most Conservative wins were in N.E. England, the W. Midlands and Yorkshire despite no one talking about either Northern Rail, Class 144 units (AKA: pacer trains) or the Huddersfield line! Labour wanted all major railways nationalised and the other parties opposed this.

UK
.

England

 * 1) Conservative- 345
 * 2) Labour- 179
 * 3) Lib Dems- 7
 * 4) Green- 1
 * 5) Speaker- 1

N. Ireland

 * 1) DUP- 8
 * 2) Sinn Féin- 7
 * 3) Alliance- 1
 * 4) SDLP- 2

Wales

 * 1) Labour- 22
 * 2) Conservative- 14
 * 3) P.C.- 4

Scotland

 * 1) SNP- 48
 * 2) Conservative-6
 * 3) Labour- 1
 * 4) Lib Dems- 4

Oxfordshire

 * 1) Whitney=
 * 2) Wantage=
 * 3) Henley=
 * 4) Banbury=
 * 5) Victoria Prentis (C)= 54.27% (0.04)
 * 6) Suzette Watson (L)= 27.55% (-6.54)
 * 7) Tim Bearder (Lib Dems)= 14.04% (8.43)
 * 8) Ian Middleton (Grn)= 4.14% (2.15)
 * 9) Oxford W. and Abingdon=
 * 10) Oxford E.=

Greater London

 * 1) Streatham=

Buckinghamshire

 * 1) Beaconsfield=

Hertfordshire

 * 1) S.W. Hertfordshire=

Surrey

 * 1) Guilford=

Derbyshire

 * 1) Bolsover=
 * 2) Mark Fletcher (C) 47.44% (6.89)
 * 3) Dennis Skinner (L) 35.90% (-16.02)
 * 4) Kevin Harper (Brexit) 9.04% (4.46)
 * 5) David Hancock (Lib Dems) 3.83% (0.88)
 * 6) Others2.15%
 * 7) David Kesteven (Green) 1.65% (1.65)

TV debates
The SNP and Lib Dems wanted thire leaders to be on the first show (on ITV) along with the Conservative (Tory) and Labour leaders.

The Channel 4 climate debate took place om 28\11\2019. Neither the Brexit Party leader, Nigel Farage, or the Conservative leader, Boris Johnson, took part. The Tory Minister, Michael Grove did turn up, but Channel 4 said he was not a party leader and was not invited, which the other party leaders said was true. The Conservatives then claimed the show was basis for not being soler about them and tried to get Channel 4 impeached over it.

Copyright theft
Conservative Party HQ was done for an online ad with BBC and ITV material cut in to it with out the broadcasters' permission and thus it was a breach of thire copyright. Labour faced similar accustions over an advert that conained material stolen from a Coca-Cola advert.

Voting system integrity issues
Boris Johnson faced early calls from the former attorney general, Dominic Grieve, and other MPs to publish the legally concealed Russian interference report.

Disrupted campaigning
The GPO allegedly dumped pamphlets sent from these candidates and\or their rivals tore down loads of there posters and placards as a deliberate election ploy, according to social media claims-


 *  Thealedged victims were- 
 * 1) Suzette Watson (L)- Banbury
 * 2) Zoe Franklin (Lib Dems)- Guilford.
 * 3) Zoe Hatch (Grn)- Beaconsfield.
 * 4) Angela Richardson (C)- Beaconsfield.
 * 5) Sarah Bool (C)- Vauxhall
 * 6) Ike Ijeh (Brexit)- Enfield N.
 * 7) Fleur Anderson (L)- Putney.

Hacked computers and websites
Labour's website was hacked and disrupted by a D.o.S. attack for a short while on the morning of 12\11\2019.

Alleged fraud
Voters were turned away for not having photo ID, which they did not need, in Cambridge, Halewood in Liverpool, Putney, Bermondsey and Old Southwark.

Voter impersonation fraud has lead to a police investigation in Paisley.

Withdrawn or disowned candidates
The following candidates withdrew from campaigning or had support from their party withdrawn after the close of nominations, and so they remained on the ballot paper in their constituency. Hanvey was elected.
 * 1)  ^ A Labour MP until 2018. 

Pre-election violence and intimidation

 * 1) Nikki Morgan MP (C), Gloria De Piero (L) and Heidi Allen (LD) said would not stand in the election since they were in fear of their and\or families lives due to recent threats. David Lammy (L) and Ian Duncan Smith (C) also received a lot, but were still willing to continue in politics. The Conservatives, Labour, SNP, Greens, PC and Lib Dems condemn the intimidation of those MPs.
 * 2) It was revealed that several MPs had received threatening emails and letter in the previous few weeks on 01\11\2019.
 * 3) The Conservative party\PM leader visited flood victims Stainforth 13\11\2019 (The floods were now in most of South Yorkshire,  as well as large parts of Nottinghamshire, Derbyshire and Lincolnshire. Some also occered in parts of  N. Ireland, north Wales and Cumbria). The PM is heckled by angry local flood victims.
 * 4) The Labour party leader visited Glasgow 13\11\2019 and was hakkeled by anti-Labour yobs.
 * 5) The Labour party leader visited Dundee on 14\11\2019 and was heckled by a anti-English yob in Dundee.
 * 6) Brexit party leader, Nigel Farage, accused the Conservatives (Tories) of intimidating and bribing his party candidates in to standing down.
 * 7) The Labour party leader visited Birmingham and Dudley N. on 21\11\2019 and is heckled by xenophobes.
 * 8) The Health secretary, Matt Hancock, was booed and heckled at a press release in Haverhill, Suffolk, on 01\12\2019. This was as a result of him using the event to launch an attack on Jeremy Corbyn over his handling of antisemitism. Locals chanted of “shame on you” and “liar” when he accused choose to call the Labour Party of being “racist” during his political rant. A person also asked him about Islamophobia in the Conservative party, but the minister's answer was drowned out by the comotion.
 * 9) The Labour and main opposition grouping leader, Jeremy Corbyn, visited Swansey on 07\12\2019. There were some small suffels with Brexiters at the start of it.
 * 10) After the debacle over the PM's attitude towards NHS children's services and ITV’s political correspondent Joe Pike's mobile phone on 09\12\2019, the health secretary, Matt Hancock, went to the Leeds hospital that was at the heart of it all to apologize to the waiting parents over the appalling state of child care at its facility. A Labour activist shoved and allegedly punched Matt Hancock's personal adviser at that hospital visit. It was later revealed that sycophantically pro-Tory BBC News' political editor Laura Kuenssberg had faked claims he was shoved and\or pushed in a dishonest Tweet. A senior nurse at the hospital soon tried a short-lived cover up at the Leeds hospital and failed hopelessly. At about the same time horde of pro-Tory bot accounts and sockpuppet accounts briefly filled Twitter with claims the picture of the ill kid at the centre of the debate was a fake.

Election day violence
A small and unviable explosive device was defused out side a East Renfrewshire polling station. No one claimed responsibility.

Post-election violence
Some scuffles occerd outside Downing Street, Trafalgar Squaire and in Slone Squair in the small hours of the next day.

Domestic
The Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn, prepares to stand down and said he will not contest the next election. Several female Labour MPs claimed he deliberately lost the election and pouted on about becoming leader. Sir Keir Starmer said Labour had become to left-wing. The PM visited Sedgefield in Durhamshire 2 days after his victory.

The Lib Dems' leader, Jo Swinson, lost her seat and gives up being party leader.

International
President Donald Trump openly praised PM Boris Johnson. German Chancellor Angela Merkel also welcomed his victory.

UK economics

 * The £ fell to just below $1.30 on 01\11\2019.
 * The Institute of Fiscal Studies (IFS) accuses both Labour and the Conservatives of fiscal recklessness 28\11\2019. They said the Tories lied about the true costs of thire plans and they Labour's planned tax risers were to puny to work.
 * The £ reached the £1.00 = US$1.31 mark on 5\12\2019.
 * The £ rose after polls closed to 1.342 Dollars and to 1.202 Euros.

Legality
A SNP, PC, KM, YP and or SF majority win in thire home provinces or a major event such as Brexit would justify one taking place soon afterwards.

National sentiment
Pro-Brexit England slipped in to far-right White\English supremacism. They wanted to repress and financially rip off Scotland. Pro-Remain Scotland slipped in to far-right multi-ethnic Scots supremacism. It was wanting to become independent since they were pro-EU, feared England ripping them off and rerated not being able to rip off it do the same to England.

Sone in urban Yorkshire fancied a fascist police state and blames Southern England for there ex-industrial areas' woes.

The W. Midlands is pro-dumping the Union since they want lots more cuts and austerity, racial hatred of European Union nationals and regard the rest of the English as racially soiled by foreign blood. Many had developed an english version of the German ‘stab-in-the-back’ legend and blamed the EU for the post 1970s decline of the region's industry and the 2008 Credit Crunch.

Liverpool and Greater London also had a massive problem with anti-semitism and Islamophobia in places.

Both the Southern Uplands and Welsh Marches feared the occurrence of cross-border trade disruption if the union broke up.

Pro-Brexit Wales and pro-Remain N. Ireland did not want to give up democracy, political moderation or the Union with the UK, but feared a toxic and racist England. The N. Irish Republicans wanted to join Ireland and the Loyalist looked to the EU for help, not an ungrateful England. Wales was the most reluctant province to express opinions on leaving since most oppose independence by a wide margin. Most Welsh would like a customs union with the EU and for England to be both honest and a multicultural democracy. A racist and totalitarian England would drive Wales off.

The resulting outcomes
.

Why labour lost?



 *  Most people in the UK had apparently, rightly or wrong, thought labour's faults were: 


 * 1) Jeremy Corbyn
 * 2) He's too old.
 * 3) He's a Socialist, if not a Communist.
 * 4) He's got ugly glasses.
 * 5) He's an anti-semite.
 * 6) He's a goofy idiot.
 * 7) He's too honest.
 * 8) He's opposed to privatising the NHS.
 * 9) He wanted to nationalise to much to be fiscally viable.
 * 10) He's too willing to talk to journalists on dodgy issues.
 * 11) He's too London\Islington set orrentated.
 * 12) He not xenophobic enough.
 * 13) He did not talk alot about Northern Rail enough.
 * 14) He's to remote.
 * 15) He's disorganised.
 * 16) Diane Abbott.
 * 17) She's Afro-Caribbean.
 * 18) She's too fat.
 * 19) She's cocky.
 * 20) She's to remote.
 * 21) Dennis Skinner.
 * 22) He's too old.
 * 23) He to remote.
 * 24) The party as a whole
 * 25) It's Socialist, if not a Communist.
 * 26) It's very anti-semitic.
 * 27) It's too London\Islington set orrentated.
 * 28) It's not xenophobic enough.
 * 29) It's opposed to privatising the NHS.
 * 30) It's wanted to nationalise to much to be fiscally viable.
 * 31) The campaign itself
 * 32) It ignored  N.E. England, Scotland and Wales.
 * 33)  It was totally F***ed up and goofy!
 * 34) The party manafesto
 * 35) It's Socialist, if not a Communist.
 * 36) It's too London\Islington set orrentated.
 * 37) It's not xenophobic enough.
 * 38) It's opposed to privatising the NHS.
 * 39) It's wanted to nationalise to much to be fiscally viable.


 * It is worth knowing that the BBC habitually smeared Labour and the SNP with thire pro-Conservative\Brexit Party bias coverage. The SNP leader, Nicola Sturgeon, crushed it every time, but Jeremy Corbyn was just pathetic.

Tony Blair's post-election comments
He publicly slammed Jeremy Corbyn and the Momentum faction of the party for lacking:- a true understanding of personal liberty, political freedom, a compromise position, fiscal responsibility, voter apathy, voter disenchantment, political legitimacy, personal autonomy, the will of the people, the rule of law, political correctness, the authority of Parliament, the authority of the courts in politics, a sustainable fiscal policy, political insight and political competence in a set of post election speeches and lectures in the weeks directly after the election.

Also see

 * 1) Islington set
 * 2) The European Research Group (The ERG)
 * 3) 13\12\2019 UK alert
 * 4) 12\12\2019 UK alert
 * 5) 29\10\2019 UK alert 2
 * 6) 02\11\2019 UK alert
 * 7) 20\11\2019 UK alert
 * 8) 21\11\2019 UK alert
 * 9) 22\11\2019 UK alert
 * 10) 29\11\2019 UK alert
 * 11) 02\01\2020 UK alert
 * 12) How the Conservative Party of the UK has changed between 1980 and 2017!
 * 13) How the Labour Party of the UK has changed between 1980 and 2018!
 * 14) List of the major and secondary UK political parties and political stances at selected dates in 2019
 * 15) Late 20th century UK political parties (pre-2019 ideology reboot)