Exit poll results: Ed Miliband faces being left with little chance of forming government, as SNP predicted to take all but one seat in Scotland

In Scotland, Labour's seat share would be cut to just one, according to the poll

James Rush
Friday 08 May 2015 09:00 BST
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Labour Party leader Ed Miliband and his wife Justine Thornton leave the polling station at Sutton Village Hall in Sutton
Labour Party leader Ed Miliband and his wife Justine Thornton leave the polling station at Sutton Village Hall in Sutton (Getty Images)

Labour faces being left with little chance of forming a government after a shock exit poll predicted a wipeout in Scotland, with the SNP winning all but one seat.

The exit poll of roughly 22,000 people predicted Labour would actually lose 19 seats nationwide, while the Conservatives would be on 316 seats – just ten short of an overall majority.

It would mean that even if Labour and the SNP did form a coalition, something which has been repeatedly played down by Labour members, it would still leave the two parties short of challenging the number of Conservative seats.

If the exit poll is correct, and Labour's seat share in Scotland was cut to just one, with the SNP winning 58 seats, it would mean Labour under Ed Miliband would have won 19 seats fewer nationwide than under Gordon Brown in 2010.

There have been a number of warnings however that the exit poll may not be entirely accurate.

Former Liberal Democrat leader Paddy Ashdown said he would 'eat my hat' if the exit poll, which left the Lib Dems with just ten seats, was correct, while SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon tweeted: “I'd treat the exit poll with HUGE caution. I'm hoping for a good night but I think 58 seats is unlikely!”

Shadow chancellor Ed Balls meanwhile pointed out that if the poll was correct, the coalition between the Tories and Lib Dems had also fallen.

He told the BBC: "Even if the exit poll is right, that means the Conservative/Liberal Democrat coalition majority has gone from 72 to zero - David Cameron's ability to hang on in Downing Street is on a knife-edge and he will have to reach out to get support from the Ulster unionists.

"If the exit poll is wrong just by 10 seats - and all the information is that there are very close fights between Labour and Conservatives in seats right across the country - then suddenly David Cameron won't be able to get a majority in the House of Commons and it will fall to Ed Miliband as leader of the Opposition to then put a Queen's Speech before Parliament."

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