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The 2019 European Parliament election for the election of the delegation from the United Kingdom was held on 23 May 2019. These were the last elections to the European Parliament to be held before Brexit.
Only constituencies in Great Britain used party-list proportional representation, as in Northern Ireland the single transferable vote system is used.
Brexit Party
The Brexit Party was newly founded for the 2019 European Parliament election.[1] On 8 February 2019, party leader Nigel Farage stated he would stand as a candidate for the party in any potential future European Parliament elections contested in the United Kingdom.[2][3] MEPs Steven Woolfe and Nathan Gill, also formerly of UKIP, stated that they would also stand for the party.[4][5]
East of England
The Brexit Party had a list of 7 candidates for the 7 seats available in the East of England.[6] The top three were elected.
# | Candidate | Occupation | Elected |
1 | | Richard Tice | Businessman and Brexit Party Party Chair[7] | Y |
2 | | Michael Heaver | Former chair of UKIP youth wing and press aide[8] | Y |
3 | | June Mummery | Businesswoman in the fishing industry[9] | Y |
4 | | Paul Hearn | | N |
5 | | Priscilla Huby | | N |
6 | | Sean Lever | | N |
7 | | Edmund Fordham | | N |
East Midlands
The Brexit Party had a list of 5 candidates for the 5 seats available in the East Midlands. The top three were elected.[10]
# | Candidate | Occupation | Elected |
1 | Annunziata Rees-Mogg | Journalist[11] | Y |
2 | Jonathan Bullock | Incumbent MEP since 2017[12] | Y |
3 | Matthew Patten | Councillor and charity executive[13] | Y |
4 | Tracy Knowles | Nominating officer of the Brexit Party[14] | N |
5 | Anna Bailey | Doctor[15] | N |
South East England
The Brexit Party had a list of 10 candidates for the 10 seats available in the South East of England.[6] The top four were elected.
South West England
Change UK
The party announced on 23 April that it would stand a full slate of candidates in Great Britain for the European Parliament elections, including Ashworth, writer Rachel Johnson (sister of Conservative MPs Jo and Boris Johnson); former BBC journalist Gavin Esler;[25] former Conservative MPs Stephen Dorrell and Neil Carmichael; former Labour MEP Carole Tongue; former Labour MPs Roger Casale and Jon Owen Jones; former Liberal Democrat MEP Diana Wallis;[26] and the former deputy Prime Minister of Poland Jacek Rostowski.[27] None of the Change UK candidates won any seats.
London
Ali Sadjady Naiery, a mixed martial arts fighter and former Conservative Party candidate for Ealing Borough Council, was originally placed sixth on Change UK's London list, but withdrew and was replaced after he was found to have made a tweet saying that Romanian pickpockets on the London Underground made him want Brexit.[28][29][30]
South East England
South West England
Scotland
# | Candidate[33] | Occupation | Elected |
1 | David Macdonald | Independent councillor on East Renfrewshire Council[34] | N |
2 | Kate Forman | | N |
3 | Peter Griffiths | | N |
4 | Heather Astbury | | N |
5 | Colin McFadyen | | N |
6 | Cathy Edgeworth | | N |
Conservative Party
South East England
South West England
Green Party of England and Wales
The Green Party of England and Wales fielded candidates in every constituency in England and Wales.[48]
East Midlands
# | Candidate | Notes | Elected |
1 | Kat Boettge | Green Party candidate for Broxtowe Borough Council in 2019. | N |
2 | Gerhard Lohmann-Bond | | N |
3 | Liam McClelland | | N |
4 | Daniel Wimberley | | N |
5 | Simon Tooke | | N |
East of England
London
North East England
North West England
South East England
# | Candidate | Notes | Elected |
1 | Alexandra Phillips | | Green candidate for Brighton Kemptown in 2019,[58] Green list candidate for South East England in 2014, candidate for GPEW deputy leader in 2012.[59] | Y |
2 | Elise Benjamin | | | N |
3 | Vix Lowthion | | | N |
4 | Leslie Groves Williams | | | N |
5 | Phelim Mac Cafferty | | | N |
6 | Jan Doerfel | | | N |
7 | Larry Sanders | | Former Health and Social Care Spokesperson of the Green Party of England and Wales. Older brother of Bernie Sanders. | N |
8 | Isabella Moir | | | N |
9 | Oliver Sykes | | | N |
10 | Jonathan Essex | | | N |
South West England
Wales
# | Candidate | Notes | Elected |
1 | Anthony Slaughter | Leader of the Wales Green Party. | N |
2 | Ian Chandler | | N |
3 | Ceri Davies | | N |
4 | Duncan Rees | Co-Deputy leader of the Wales Green Party. | N |
Labour Party
The Labour Party stood candidates in all constituencies in Great Britain.[61]
South East England
The Labour Party had a list of 10 candidates for the 10 seats available in the South East of England.
South West England
Scottish National Party
The Scottish National Party stood 6 candidates for all the seats in Scotland.[77]
UKIP
South West England
# | Candidate[22] | Occupation | Elected |
1 | Lawrence Webb | | | N |
2 | Carl Benjamin | | Anti-feminist YouTuber and political commentator | N |
3 | Tony McIntyre | | | N |
4 | Lester Taylor | | | N |
5 | Stephen Lee | | | N |
6 | Alison Sheridan | | | N |
Plaid Cymru
Plaid Cymru, the party of Wales, only contested the Wales constituency.
Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland has a different party system to Great Britain and used the single transferable vote rather than the party list system to elect 3 MEPs.[81] This meant the party list included one candidate per party for the three seats available.[82] There were 11 candidates:
References
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- "Brexit Party: Registration Details". Electoral Commission. Retrieved 16 February 2019.
- Jim Pickard (8 February 2019). "New 'Brexit Party' backed by Nigel Farage launches". Financial Times.
A new political party backed by Nigel Farage has been launched in an attempt to attract hardline Conservative activists unhappy with Theresa May's attempt to forge a compromise Brexit plan.
- ^ Bruce, Andy (8 February 2019). "Farage ready to be new 'Brexit Party' candidate if EU exit delayed". Reuters. Retrieved 8 February 2019.
A filing by the Electoral Commission showed the Brexit Party had been approved this week to field candidates across England, Scotland and Wales.
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- ^ a b c d e f "2019 European elections: List of candidates for the South West". BBC. 28 April 2019. Retrieved 14 August 2022.
- ^ Stilliard, Ed (2 May 2019). "Brexit Party coming to Gloucester on Saturday on campaign trail". GloucestershireLive. Retrieved 17 October 2022.
- ^ Johnston, Neil. "Nicola Darke and the Brexit Party teach Dad's Army the basics of winning election votes". The Times. ISSN 0140-0460. Retrieved 17 October 2022.
- ^ "Join the Remain alliance, urges Change UK at Euro election launch". BBC News. 23 April 2019. Archived from the original on 23 April 2019. Retrieved 23 April 2019.
- ^ "Brexit: No 10 accuses Labour of dragging its feet in talks on withdrawal agreement compromise – live news". The Guardian. 23 April 2019. Archived from the original on 23 April 2019. Retrieved 23 April 2019.
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- ^ Rebecca Speare-Cole (24 April 2019). "Change UK candidate Ali Sadjady 'embarrassed' over Romanian pickpockets remark". The Independent. Retrieved 18 August 2022.
- ^ "Change UK candidate Ali Sadjady quits after pro-Brexit, anti-Romanian tweet unearthed". Sky News. 23 April 2019. Retrieved 18 August 2022.
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- ^ a b c Jo Wadsworth (23 April 2019). "Former council leader Warren Morgan to stand as Change UK candidate in EU elections". Brighton and Hove News. Retrieved 18 August 2022.
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See also
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Legislation | |
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Elections | |
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Members | |
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Constituencies (1999–2020) | - East Midlands
- East of England
- London
- North East England
- Northern Ireland
- North West England
- Scotland
- South East England
- South West England (including Gibraltar)
- West Midlands
- Yorkshire and the Humber
- Wales
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Voting systems | |
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Repealing legislation | - European Union (Withdrawal) Act 2018
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Other | |
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