British voters are heading to polling stations across the United Kingdom on Thursday for the 2024 general election, with opinion polls suggesting an opportunity to deselect the Conservative Party’s Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak and elect a new Prime Minister and Parliament.
With around 6.5 million Brits eligible to vote in the election, they are expected to cast their ballots in 650 separate constituencies across England, Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland.
The poll began at 7:00 am and is expected to stop at 10 pm local time, after which counting will occur throughout the night into Friday morning.
However, two parties out of 18 appear to be dominating: the centre-right Conservatives, of which Sunak is its Prime Minister and the Labour Party, with Keir Starmer as its running candidate.
Other significant players in the election include the centrist Liberal Democrats, the environmentalist Green Party, and the far-right Reform UK party. Each of these parties, led by Ed Davey, Carla Denyer, Adrian Ramsay, and Nigel Farage, respectively, adds to the diversity of the political landscape in the UK.
Also, the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), Reform UK, Workers Party of Britain, Alba Party, Count Binface, Scottish Greens, Green Party of Northern Ireland, Green Party of England and Wales, Alliance Party, Traditional Unionist Voice (TUC), Scottish National Party (SNP), Scottish Greens, Plaid Cymru Party of Wales, and Sinn Fein Party.
Meanwhile, Sunak, Starmer, Farage and the heads of all other major parties are expected to appear at their local polling stations throughout the day.
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