Starmer sweeps, Sunak slumps: Five major takeaways from UK elections

In a rain-soaked day in late May, PM Rishi Sunak announced elections for July 4. The Conservatives suffered a major defeat, securing less than a fifth of the seats. The Labour Party, revitalized under Sir Keir Starmer, won 412 seats. This marks a shift in British politics post-Brexit and economic challenges.

Five major takeaways from UK elections

 It was a rain-soaked day in late May when PM Rishi Sunak came out of his 10 Downing Street residence to announce elections on July 4, and it was another rainy day on Friday when he came out to concede defeat, with his Conservatives suffering a major hammering to slump to a new parliamentary low - at less than a fifth of the total seats.

The crushing defeat for the Conservative Party follows 14 eventful years in power in which they not only led the country out of the European Union, weathered the Covid pandemic, and sought to fashion a new position for the country in the world beyond continental ties, but also suffered a string of controversies, frequent leadership changes - 5 PMs in a decade and a half! - and major internal divisions.