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Yokai Man’s Test Thread Thing

@Time Enough

Breakdown

1970-1973 Edward Heath (Conservative Majority)

1970: Edward Heath-Conservative [330],Harold Wilson-Labour [288],Jeremy Thorpe-Liberal [6]

1973-1974 Peter Carrington,6th Baron Carrington (Conservative Majority,Conservative Minority)
1974: Peter Carrington-Conservative [315],Harold Wilson-Labour [281],Jeremy Thorpe-Liberal [15]

1974-1976 William Whitelaw (Conservative-Liberal Coalition)

1976-1979 Jim Prior (Conservative-Liberal Coalition)
Is Heath killed by the IRA?

Also I guess 1979 is, ‘And then Peter Shore wins’.
 
Is Heath killed by the IRA?

Also I guess 1979 is, ‘And then Peter Shore wins’.
Not quite-basically on 12 December 1973,after 4 unslept days,Heath collapses and is sent to the hospital for care,being forced to resign due to poor health. Same with Barber and Carr and,with Whitelaw being temporally out due to drinking one whisky too many,Lord Carrington as the most senior Cabinet Member present becomes PM for awhile and calls for an early election,as well as agreeing with the TUC on the OTL January 9 deal.

Also I don’t think that scenario can happen while Woy,Foot,Healey and Ben are still on the up.
 
Also I don’t think that scenario can happen while Woy,Foot,Healey and Ben are still on the up.
It’s probably Healey then, as Foot would crash the economy, Benn was just seen as weird (and why vote for Benn when Shore would more likely gain Union support and not crash the economy) and Woy is slowly been shown the door (as he was increasingly seen as a busted flush).
 
A Reputation Is A Fragile Thing

1928-1953 Carol II (House of Hohenzollern)

1928: Iuliu Maniu-PNȚ led Alliance [357],György Bethlen-Hungarian Party [18],Nicolae Lupu-PNȚ-Lupu [6],A.C. Cuza/Alexandru Averescu-PND/PP [6]
1931: Constantin Argentoianu-National Rebirth Front [289],Iuliu Maniu-PNȚ [13],I.C. Duca-PNL-Duca [12],Gheorghe Brătianu-PNL-Brătianu [12],Ioan Theodor Florescu-Liberal-Democrat [10],Alexandru Averescu-PP [10],György Bethlen-Hungarian Party [9],A.C. Cuza-LANC [8],Nicolae Lupu-PNȚ-Lupu [8],Titel Petrescu-PSD [6],Eftimie Antonescu/Constantin Stere-League Against Usury/PNȚ-Stere [6],Tivadar Fischer-Jewish Party [4]
1934: Ban of Political Parties,National Rebirth Front Only Political Party Allowed


1953-19xx Michael I (House of Hohenzollern)
1954: End of Royal Dictatorship,Gradual Disintegration of the National Rebirth Front
1954:
Gabriel Țepelea-PNȚ [195],Dinu Brătianu-PNL [112],Iosif Jumanca-PSD [57],
István Kecskeméthy-Hungarian Party [18],Mișu Benvenisti-Jewish Party [5]
 
1953-19xx Michael I (House of Hohenzollern)
1954: End of Royal Dictatorship,Gradual Disintegration of the National Rebirth Front
1954:
Gabriel Țepelea-PNȚ [195],Dinu Brătianu-PNL [112],Iosif Jumanca-PSD [57],
István Kecskeméthy-Hungarian Party [18],Mișu Benvenisti-Jewish Party [5]
This seems like a scenario which could at least lead to a Romania that doesn’t suffer from as much repression, though I can see it still dealing with the aftermath of having a semi-fascist government for nearly 20s and likely a military that is apathetic towards democracy.
 
2024-20xx Jeffrey Donaldson (Social and Unionist Democrat)
2024 First Round def: Tommy Robinson (BNP),Richard Dearlove (Unionist Liberal),Piers Corbyn (SOS Britain),Carol Vorderman (Save Britain Alliance)
2024 Second Round def: Tommy Robinson (BNP)


A silly little Britain as Romania parallel for next year’s Presidential elections.
 
@Time Enough @Walpurgisnacht


2019 Presidential Election,First Round:

Klaus Iohannis (PNL) : 38,00%

Mircea Diaconu (Just A Man Alliance) : 16,55%

Viorica Dăncilă (PSD) : 16,43%

Dan Barna (2020 Alliance USR-PLUS) : 13,59%


Kelemen Hunor (UDMR) : 6,02%

Theodor Paleologu (PMP) : 5,70%

Ramona Ioana Bruynseels (PPUSL) : 2,65%

Bogdan Stanoevici (Independent) : 0,76%

Ion John Banu (PNR) : 0,30%


2019 Presidential Election,Second Round:

Mircea Diaconu (Just A Man Alliance) : 50,40%

Klaus Iohannis (PNL) : 49,60%



-basically the main PoD is that Cumpănașu,Cataramă,Peia,Ivan and Sebastian Popescu lose in court and the Electoral Commission doesn’t allow them to run due to forging the necessary signatures,thus making their potential voters reorientate towards Diaconu.

This,along with Barna and Dăncilă doing worse in their campaigns,Iohannis winning more counties that he did nearly win OTL and Hunor winning Satu Mare,means that Diaconu enters the second round by the narrowest of ways.

-due to feeling overconfident,Ioha and PNL decide not bothering with campaigning that much while Diaconu,now strongly backed by the main 3 TV news channels and Pro Romania/ALDE (as well as PSD unofficially),campaigns slighty more strongly and wins again narrowly,which could have happened btw if PSD had a slightly stronger candidate.

-Due to a more worse result than OTL,Barna’s position is openly challenged by Cioloș,with the latter becoming Leader after a special congress.

-Diaconu,being a massive nut job,turns against his allies and joins AUR like OTL,aiding it and the anti vaxx movement even more as well refusing to accept the state of emergency and deliberately trying to start early elections by refusing to reappoint Orban.

-because of him the CoVid Pandemic goes slightly worse due to a open anti vaxx conspiracy theory being Prez.

-a crisis is created when Diaconu dies of Covid,boosting AUR and fueling the conspiracy theorists even more.
 
A Most Perfidious Crime

1886-1887 Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury (Conservative and Liberal Unionist Majority)

1886: Robert Gascoyne-Cecil,3rd Marquess of Salisbury-Conservative (393),William Gladstone-Liberal (192),Charles Stewart Parnell-IPP (85)

1887-1887 George Goschen (Conservative Majority)

1887-1895 William Gladstone (Liberal Minority,Liberal Majority)
1887: William Gladstone-Liberal (475),Charles Stewart Parnell-IPP (89),George Goschen-Conservative (31),Joseph Chamberlain-Liberal Unionist (14)

1892: William Gladstone-Liberal (472),Randolph Churchill-Conservative (20),Joseph Chamberlain-Liberal Unionist (14),Kier Hardie-ILP (3)

1895-1903 John Spencer,5th Earl Spencer (Liberal Majority)
1897: John Spencer,5th Earl Spencer-Liberal (468),George Curzon-Conservative (20),Joseph Chamberlain-Liberal Unionist (18),Kier Hardie-ILP (3)
1902: John Spencer,5th Earl Spencer-Liberal (460),Joseph Chamberlain-Conservative (43),Kier Hardie-ILP (5)


1903-19xx Henry Campbell-Bannerman (Liberal Majority)
 
Emperors of the Roman Empire

54-68 Nero (Julio-Claudian)


68-69 Titus Vinius

69-69 Cornelius Laco

69-69 Vitellius

69-70 Marcus Antonius

70-71 Domitius

71-71 disputed between Titus and Quintus Petillius Cerialis

71-83
Quintus Petillius (Cerialis)

83-127 Titus (Cerialis)


1) No one truly knows what happened to Nero after he ran away in the night of 10 June,abandoned by everyone he ever knew. Some say he was killed during the reign of Cornelius Laco by ordinary soldiers who were looting a village near Rome. Some say he died during the Civil War of 71. Some even say he went on living as an ordinary man,either finally free to persue his artistic career or rumbling around the Empire as a mad man.

Whatever the case,he was gone and with him went the last member of the house founded by Augustus.

The Years of Chaos soon followed.
 
Bigger Landslide ’Analysis’ part (isert number here) :

1906:

Liberal: 476 seats

Irish Parliamentary Party: 82 seats

Conservative and Liberal Unionist: 72 seats

Labour Representative Commitee: 34 seats



1945

Labour: 471 seats

Conservative: 102 seats

Liberal: 33 seats

Independents: 9 seats

Common Wealth: 6 seats

Communist: 2 seats

SNP: 1 seat
 
PR Britain,Part 1:

1918:

Coalition Government: 358 seats

Labour: 142 seats

Liberal: 87 seats

Sinn Féin: 51 seats

Ulster Unionist: 27 seats

Irish Parliamentary Party: 23 seats

National: 6 seats

Silver Badge: 3 seats

Labour Unionist: 3 seats

Co-operative Party: 3 seats

Independents: 2 seats

Agricultural: 1 seats

Belfast Labour: 1 seat


1922:

Conservative: 242 seats

Labour: 186 seats

Liberal: 118 seats

National Liberal: 61 seats

Independents: 5 seats

Nationalist: 2 seats

Communist: 1 seat



1923:

Conservative: 236 seats

Labour: 191 seats

Liberal: 185 seats

Nationalist: 1 seat

Communist: 1 seat

Belfast Labour: 1 seat


1924:

Conservative: 289 seats

Labour: 206 seats

Liberal: 110 seats

Constitutionalist: 7 seats

Communist: 2 seats

Sinn Féin: 1 seat


1929:

Conservative: 236 seats

Labour: 230 seats

Liberal: 145 seats

Independents: 2 seats

Communist: 1 seat

Independent Conservative: 1 seat


1931:

National Government: 415 seats


Labour: 191 seats

Independent Liberals: 3 seats

Nationalist: 2 seats

Communist: 2 seats

Independents: 1 seat

New Party: 1 seat



1935:

National Government: 330 seats


Labour: 236 seats

Liberal: 41 seats

Independent Labour Party: 4 seats

Independent Liberals: 2 seats

Nationalist: 1 seat

Independent Republican: 1 seat


1945:

Labour: 318 seats

Conservative: 232 seats

Liberal: 57 seats

National Liberal: 18 seats

Independents: 3 seats

National: 3 seats

Common Wealth: 2 seats

Communist: 2 seats

Nationalist: 2 seats

National Independents: 1 seat

ILP: 1 seat

Independent Progressive: 1 seat

Independent Liberal: 1 seat
 
PR Britain,Part 2:

1950:

Labour: 290 seats

Conservative: 273 seats

Liberal: 57 seats

Communist: 2 seats

Nationalist: 1 seat

Irish Labour: 1 seat

Independents: 1 seat

1951:

Labour: 306 seats

Conservative: 301 seats

Liberal: 16 seats

Independent Republicans: 2 seats

1955:

Conservative: 313 seats

Labour: 291 seats

Liberal: 16 seats

Sinn Féin: 3 seats

Plaid Cymru: 1 seat

Independents: 1 seat

1959:

Conservative: 314 seats

Labour: 278 seats

Liberal: 37 seats

Plaid Cymru: 1 seat

1964:

Labour: 279 seats

Conservative: 275 seats

Liberal: 71 seats

Independent Republicans: 2 seats

Plaid Cymru: 1 seat

SNP: 1 seat

Communist: 1 seat

1966:

Labour: 305 seats

Conservative: 266 seats

Liberal: 54 seats

SNP: 2 seats

Independent Republicans: 1 seat

Communist: 1 seat

Plaid Cymru: 1 seat

1970:

Conservative: 296 seats

Labour: 275 seats

Liberal: 47 seats

SNP: 6 seats

Plaid Cymru: 3 seats

Unity: 3 seats

February 1974:

Conservative: 244 seats

Labour: 240 seats

Liberal: 124 seats

SNP: 13 seats

Ulster Unionist: 4 seats

Plaid Cymru: 3 seats

SDLP: 3 seats

Pro-Assembly Unionist: 1 seat

National Front: 1 seat

Vanguard: 1 seat

DUP: 1 seat


October 1974:

Labour: 252 seats

Conservative: 231 seats

Liberal: 118 seats

SNP: 18 seats

Ulster Unionist: 5 seats

Plaid Cymru: 3 seats

SDLP: 3 seats

National Front: 2 seats

Vanguard: 2 seats

DUP: 1 seat

1979:

Conservative: 283 seats

Labour: 239 seats

Liberal: 89 seats

SNP: 10 seats

Ulster Unionist: 5 seats

National Front: 3 seats

Plaid Cymru: 2 seats

SDLP: 2 seats

Alliance: 1 seat

DUP: 1 seat
 
PR Britain,Part 3

1983:

Conservative: 279 seats

Labour: 181 seats

SDP/Liberal Alliance: 167 seats

SNP: 7 seats

Ulster Unionist: 5 seats

DUP: 3 seats

SDLP: 2 seats

Plaid Cymru: 2 seats

Sinn Féin: 2 seats

Alliance: 1 seat

Ecology: 1 seat


1987:

Conservative: 278 seats

Labour: 202 seats

SDP/Liberal Alliance: 148 seats

SNP: 8 seats

Ulster Unionist: 5 seats

SDLP: 3 seats

Plaid Cymru: 2 seats

Green: 1 seat

DUP: 1 seat

Sinn Féin: 1 seat

Alliance: 1 seat


1992:

Conservative: 277 seats

Labour: 227 seats

Liberal Democrat: 118 seats

SNP: 12 seats

Ulster Unionist: 5 seats

SDLP: 3 seats

Green: 3 seats

Plaid Cymru: 2 seats

DUP: 1 seat

Sinn Féin: 1 seat

Alliance: 1 seat

Liberal: 1 seat

Natural Law: 1 seat


1997:


Labour: 290 seats

Conservative: 205 seats

Liberal Democrat: 112 seats

Referendum: 17 seats

SNP: 13 seats

Ulster Unionist: 5 seats

SDLP: 4 seats

Plaid Cymru: 3 seats

Sinn Féin: 2 seats

DUP: 2 seats

UKIP: 2 seats

Independents: 1 seat

Alliance: 1 seat

Green: 1 seat

Socialist Labour: 1 seat


2001:

Labour: 273 seats

Conservative: 213 seats

Liberal Democrat: 122 seats

SNP: 11 seats

UKIP: 9 seats

Ulster Unionist: 5 seats

Plaid Cymru: 4 seats

DUP: 4 seats

Sinn Féin: 4 seats

SDLP: 4 seats

Green: 4 seats

Independents: 2 seats

Scottish Socialist: 1 seat

Socialist Alliance: 1 seat

Socialist Labour: 1 seat

BNP: 1 seat


2005:

Labour: 231 seats

Conservative: 213 seats

Liberal Democrat: 145 seats

UKIP: 14 seats

SNP: 10 seats

Green: 6 seats

DUP: 5 seats

BNP: 4 seats

Plaid Cymru: 4 seats

Sinn Fein: 4 seats

Ulster Unionist: 3 seats

SDLP: 3 seats

Independents: 2 seats

Respect: 1 seat

Scottish Socialist: 1 seat


2010:

Conservative: 241 seats

Labour: 193 seats

Liberal Democrat: 154 seats

UKIP: 20 seats

BNP: 12 seats

SNP: 11 seats

Green: 5 seats

Sinn Féin: 3 seats

DUP: 3 seats

Plaid Cymru: 3 seats

SDLP: 2 seats

UCU-NF: 2 seats

English Democrat: 1 seat


2015:

Conservative: 244 seats

Labour: 201 seats

UKIP: 83 seats

Liberal Democrat: 52 seats

SNP: 31 seats

Green: 24 seats

DUP: 3 seats

Plaid Cymru: 3 seats

Sinn Féin: 3 seats

Ulster Unionist: 2 seats

Independents: 2 seats

SDLP: 2 seats

Alliance: 1 seat


2017:

Conservative: 279 seats

Labour: 263 seats

Liberal Democrat: 48 seats

SNP: 20 seats

UKIP: 12 seats

Green: 10 seats

DUP: 5 seats

Sinn Féin: 4 seats

Plaid Cymru: 3 seats

Independents: 3 seats

SDLP: 1 seat

Ulster Unionist: 1 seat

Alliance: 1 seat


2019:

Conservative: 290 seats

Labour: 213 seats

Liberal Democrat: 76 seats

SNP: 25 seats

Green: 17 seats

Brexit Party: 13 seats

DUP: 5 seats

Sinn Féin: 3 seats

Plaid Cymru: 3 seats

Alliance: 2 seats

SDLP: 2 seats

Ulster Unionist: 1 seat
 
@Time Enough

Failed State

1950-1955 Winston Churchill (Conservative Majority)

1950: Winston Churchill-Conservative [457],Clement Attlee-Labour [153],Clement Davies-Liberal [9],Harry Pollitt-Communist [3],James McSparran-Nationalist [2],John MacCormick-Independent

1955-1957 Clement Attlee (Labour Majority)
1955: Clement Attlee-Labour [455],Winston Churchill-Conservative [143],Clement Davies-Liberal [19],Harry Pollitt-Communist [3],Paddy McLogan-Sinn Féin [2]

1957-1960 James Chuter Ede (Labour Majority)

1960-1961 Oliver Stanley (Conservative Majority,Conservative Minority)

1960: Oliver Stanley-Conservative [322],James Chuter Ede-Labour [275],Jo Grimond-Liberal [24],Tom Loyd-North Irish Labour [1],Frank Hanna-Independent Labour Group [1]
February 1961: Oliver Stanley-Conservative [299],James Chuter Ede-Labour [289],Jo Grimond-Liberal [33],Tom Loyd-North Irish Labour [1],Frank Hanna-Independent Labour Group [1]


1961-1961 James Chuter Ede (Labour-Liberal Coalition)

1961-196x Richard Crossman (Labour-Liberal Coalition)
1962 AV Referendum: 52,39% Yes
 
Y2K


2000-2008 Yukio Hatoyama (Democratic-Liberal-SDP Coalition,Democratic-SDP Coalition)

2000: Yukio Hatoyama-DJP [173],Yoshirō Mori-LDP [90],Takenori Kanzaki-NKP [56],Tetsuzo Fuwa-JCP [49],Ichirō Ozawa-LP [48],Takako Doi-SDP [42],various Independents [20],Chikage Oogi-NCP [7],Torao Tokuda-JR [1]
2004: Yukio Hatoyama-DJP [221],Junichiro Koizumi-LDP [117],Takenori Kanzaki-NKP [56],Tetsuzo Fuwa-JCP [49],Takako Doi-SDP [32],various Independents [5]
2008: Yukio Hatoyama-DJP [200],Shinzo Abe-LDP [138],Akihiro Ota-NKP [61],Kazuo Shii-JCP [49],Takako Doi-SDP [32]


2008-2012 Katsuya Okada (Democratic-SDP Coalition with Communist support and confidence)


2000-201x Kostas Karamantis (New Democracy Majority)
2000: Kostas Karamantis-ND [246],Costas Simitis-PASOK [36],Aleka Papariga-KKE [21]
2004: Kostas Karamantis-ND [216],George Papandreou-PASOK [50],Aleka Papariga-KKE [22],Georgios Karatzaferis-LAOS [10]
2008: Kostas Karamantis-ND [190],George Papandreou-PASOK [70],Aleka Papariga-KKE [22],Georgios Karatzaferis-LAOS [16]



2000-2002 Paul Martin (Liberal Minority)
2000: *Jean Chrétien-Liberal [108],Stockwell Day-Alliance [102],Gilles Duceppe-Bloc Québécois [54],Joe Clark-Progressive Conservative [21], Alexa McDonough-NDP [15]



2001-20xx Gordon Brown (Labour-Liberal Democratic Coalition)

2001-20xx Kim Beazley (Labor Majority)

2001: Kim Beazley-Labor [125],*John Howard-Liberal/National [21],various Independents [4]
 
Y2K


2000-2008 Yukio Hatoyama (Democratic-Liberal-SDP Coalition,Democratic-SDP Coalition)

2000: Yukio Hatoyama-DJP [173],Yoshirō Mori-LDP [90],Takenori Kanzaki-NKP [56],Tetsuzo Fuwa-JCP [49],Ichirō Ozawa-LP [48],Takako Doi-SDP [42],various Independents [20],Chikage Oogi-NCP [7],Torao Tokuda-JR [1]
2004: Yukio Hatoyama-DJP [221],Junichiro Koizumi-LDP [117],Takenori Kanzaki-NKP [56],Tetsuzo Fuwa-JCP [49],Takako Doi-SDP [32],various Independents [5]
2008: Yukio Hatoyama-DJP [200],Shinzo Abe-LDP [138],Akihiro Ota-NKP [61],Kazuo Shii-JCP [49],Takako Doi-SDP [32]


2008-2012 Katsuya Okada (Democratic-SDP Coalition with Communist support and confidence)


2000-201x Kostas Karamantis (New Democracy Majority)
2000: Kostas Karamantis-ND [246],Costas Simitis-PASOK [36],Aleka Papariga-KKE [21]
2004: Kostas Karamantis-ND [216],George Papandreou-PASOK [50],Aleka Papariga-KKE [22],Georgios Karatzaferis-LAOS [10]
2008: Kostas Karamantis-ND [190],George Papandreou-PASOK [70],Aleka Papariga-KKE [22],Georgios Karatzaferis-LAOS [16]



2000-2002 Paul Martin (Liberal Minority)
2000: *Jean Chrétien-Liberal [108],Stockwell Day-Alliance [102],Gilles Duceppe-Bloc Québécois [54],Joe Clark-Progressive Conservative [21], Alexa McDonough-NDP [15]



2001-20xx Gordon Brown (Labour-Liberal Democratic Coalition)

2001-20xx Kim Beazley (Labor Majority)

2001: Kim Beazley-Labor [125],*John Howard-Liberal/National [21],various Independents [4]

I misread this and thought Japan had a Greek Prime Minister for a sec,
 
A Curious Stalemate

2016-2019 Theresa May (Conservative Majority,Conservative Minority)

June 2017: Theresa May-Conservative (307),Jeremy Corbyn-Labour (267),Nicola Sturgeon-SNP (36),Tim Farron-Liberal Democrat (14),Leanne Wood-Plaid Cymru (5),Caroline Lucas/Jonathan Bartley-Green (1),Paul Nuttall-UKIP (1)
October 2017: Theresa May-Conservative (307),Jeremy Corbyn-Labour (266),Nicola Sturgeon-SNP (46),*Tim Farron-Liberal Democrat (11),Leanne Wood-Plaid Cymru (5),Caroline Lucas/Jonathan Bartley-Green (1),Paul Nuttall-UKIP (1)


2019-2020 Dominic Raab (Conservative Minority)
2020: Dominic Raab-Conservative (273),John McDonnell-Labour (273),Nicola Sturgeon-SNP (52),Jo Swindon-Liberal Democrat (20),Nigel Farage-Reform (6),Adam Price-Plaid Cymru (6),Jonathan Bartley/Siân Berry-Green (1),Jason Zadrozny-Ashfield Independents (1)

2020-20xx John McDonnell (Labour Minority with Liberal Democrat and SNP support and confidence)
 
1989-1997 George H W Bush/Dan Quayle (Republican)
1988 def: Michael Dukakis/Lloyd Bentsen (Democratic)
1992 def: Bill Clinton/Al Gore (Democratic)


1997-2001 Bill Weld/John Kasich (Republican)
1996 def: Bill Nelson/Gary Condit (Democratic)

2001-2005 Dick Gephardt/Nancy Pelosi (Democratic)
2000: Jim Folsom Jr/David Minge (Democratic),Bill Weld/John Kasich (Republican),Jesse Ventura/Lowell Weicker (Change)-HUNG COLLEGE

2005-2009 John Kasich/John Danforth (Republican)
2004: John Kasich/John Danforth (Republican),Jim Folsom Jr/John McCain (Democratic)-HUNG COLLEGE

2009-2017 Fernando Ferrer/John Kerry (Democratic)
2008 def: John Kasich/John Danforth (Republican)
2012 def: John Danforth/Kristi Noem (Republican)

2017-2021 Herman Cain/Ben Carson (Republican)
2016 def: Kathleen Brown/Doug Jones (Democratic)

2021-present day Cory Booker/Tom Steyer (Democratic)
2020 def: Herman Cain/Ben Carson (Republican)
 
Going On and On Just Because

2005-2005 John Prescott (Labour Majority)

2005: John Prescott (replacing Tony Blair)-Labour [408],Michael Howard-Conservative [138],Charles Kennedy-Liberal Democrat [73],Alec Salmond-SNP [4],Ieuan Wyin Jones-Plaid Cymru [2],Richard Taylor-Health Concern [1]

2005-2015 Gordon Brown (Labour Majority,Labour Minority)
2010: Gordon Brown-Labour [339],Malcolm Rifkind-Conservative [160],Nick Clegg-Liberal Democrat [116],Alec Salmond-SNP [8],Ieuan Wyin Jones-Plaid Cymru [5],Caroline Lucas-Green [1] ,Richard Taylor-Health Concern [1],Bob Spink-Independent Save Our Green Belt
2015: Nick Clegg-Liberal Democrat [218],Gordon Brown-Labour [195],George Osborne-Conservative [187],Alec Salmond-SNP [24],Bob Spink-UKIP [8],Leanne Wood-Plaid Cymru [6],Natalie Bennett-Green [2]


2015-present day Nick Clegg (Liberal-Labour Coalition,Progressive Alliance Majority)
2016 AV+ Referendum: 57,03% Yes
2020: Nick Clegg/Alan Johnson/Sîan Berry/Naomi Long/Colum Eastwood-Progressive Alliance [349],Michael Gove/Nadine Dorries/Arlene Foster-Patriots Alliance [249],Nicola Sturgeon/Leanne Wood/Mary McDonald-Celtic Alliance [34],Andrew Bridgen/Maajid Nawaz-Freedom Alliance [12]
 
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