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May’s snap election call set to backfire as exit poll predicts hung parliament

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Theresa May’s gamble on a snap election looks set to cost her overall control of the House of Commons, according to an exit poll released tonight.

A joint BBC/Sky/ITV survey suggests the UK is headed for a hung parliament, with Conservatives 12 seats short of the 326 needed for an absolute majority.

The poll puts the Tories on 314 seats, with Labour on 266, the SNP on 34, Liberal Democrats on 14, Plaid Cymru on three and Greens on one.

Exit poll for the 2017 general election.
Exit poll for the 2017 general election.

If borne out by the actual results, the poll figures would represent a humiliation for the Prime Minister, who went into the election with expectations she could return a majority of 100 seats or more.

And it would be seen as a personal triumph for Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, who was widely regarded as having run a successful campaign after being written off by many observers and some in his own party.

In Scotland, it would also represent a significant setback for the SNP’s Nicola Sturgeon, whose party won a historic 56 out of 59 seats just two years ago.

Just 11 days before the expected start of Brexit negotiations in Brussels, the poll suggests the Tories will lose 16 of their 330 seats, while Labour gains 37, the SNP loses 20 and the Liberal Democrats gain five.

The exit poll triggered instant speculation over the shape of any coalition if no party has an overall majority in the Commons.

Even with the support of Northern Ireland unionists, Conservatives would struggle to form a viable administration without reaching out to other parties.

Meanwhile, a so-called “progressive alliance” bringing together Labour, Liberal Democrats, the SNP, Plaid Cymru and Greens would fall short of an absolute majority and produce a total only a few seats larger than the Tories on their own.

How the exit poll compares with the 2015 general election result.
How the exit poll compares with the 2015 general election result.

The one combination which would creep over the crucial 326 mark would be a repeat of the 2010 Tory-Lib Dem coalition, which has been explicitly ruled out by Lib Dem leader Tim Farron.

Labour, Lib Dems and the SNP have ruled out a formal coalition, speaking instead about the possibility of a minority administration being propped up on a vote-by-vote basis.

A Labour spokesman said: “If this poll turns out to be anywhere near accurate, it would be an extraordinary result. Labour would have come from a long way back to dash the hopes of a Tory landslide.

“There’s never been such a turnaround in a course of a campaign. It looks like the Tories have been punished for taking the British people for granted.”

A Lib Dem source said it was “too early” to comment on the exit poll, but indicated the party did not have significant ambitions for gains: “In this election holding our own is a good night.”

Green co-leader Caroline Lucas said she could “hardly dare hope” that the exit poll was right, adding: “To be clear, Greens will never support a Tory government.”