European elections results MAPPED: How did your area vote in EU elections? REVEALED
NIGEL FARAGE’S Brexit Party are still celebrating this morning after they dominated the European elections in the UK.
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The Brexit Party won an incredible 31.6 percent of the votes, with the Liberal Democrats coming second with 20.3 percent. With Northern Ireland and Scotland yet to declare, the Brexit Party have so far topped polls in every country or region apart from London, which was won by the Liberal Democrats. The Conservative Party placed fifth with less than 10 percent of the vote. But how did you area vote in the European elections?
Voting took place across the country on Thursday to elect 73 Members of European Parliament.
The results are now all in and the Brexit Party is the clear winner with 29 MEPs elected across the country and topping nine of 12 regions in the UK.
The results for each region were as follows:
The East Midland elected five MEPs:
The Brexit Party: Annunziata Rees-Mogg
The Brexit Party: Jonathan Bullock
The Brexit Party: Matthew Patten
Liberal Democrat: William Newton Dunn
Labour: Rory Palmer
The East Midland's elected MEPs were previously made up of two Conservatives, two UKIP and one Labour candidate.
East of England elected seven MEPs:
The Brexit Party: Richard Tice
The Brexit Party: Michael Heaver
The Brexit Party: June Mummery
Liberal Democrat: Barbara Gibson
Liberal Democrat: Lucy Nethsingha
Green: Catherine Rowett
Conservative: Geoffrey Van Orden
The Brexit Party received 38 percent of the vote with 604,715. The Lib Dems, which secured two MEPs, took 22.6 percent and the Green Party - which won one seat - 12.7 percent.
The Tories' share was down 18.1 percent to 10.2 percent.
Labour was down 8.5 percent to 8.7 percent, placing the party in fifth place.
London elected 8 MEPs:
Liberal Democrats: Irina Von Wiese
Liberal Democrats: Dinesh Dhamija
Liberal Democrats: Luisa Porritt
Labour: Claude Moraes
Labour: Sebastian Dance
The Brexit Party: Benyamin Habib
The Brexit Party: Lance Forman
Green: Scott Ainslie
The Liberal Democrats were the main winners in the European elections in London, gaining three MEPs in the region.
Both the Brexit Party and Labour had two candidates elected, while the Green Party took the remaining seat.
The North East elected three MEPs
The Brexit Party: Brian Monteith
The Brexit Party: John Tennant
Labour: Jude Kirton-Darling
The Brexit Party has won two of the three seats in the North East constituency in the European elections.
Labour held on to one of its seats, but lost the other.
The regional turnout was 32.7 percent, with the highest rate in Newcastle at 38.8 percent and the lowest in Hartlepool with 25.5 percent.
The North West elected eight MEPs:
The Brexit Party: Claire Fox
The Brexit Party: Henrik Nielsen
The Brexit Party: David Bull
Labour: Theresa Griffin
Labour: Julie Ward
Liberal Democrat: Chris Davies
Liberal Democrat: Jane Brophy
Green: Gina Dowding
The Brexit Party has won three of the eight seats available in the North West region in the European elections.
Labour held on to two seats but lost one. The Lib Dems also won two, with the Green Party taking one seat.
The South East elected 10 MEPs.
The Brexit Party: Nigel Farage
The Brexit Party: Alexandra Phillips
The Brexit Party: Robert Rowland
The Brexit Party: Belinda De Camborne Lucy
Liberal Democrat: Catherine Bearder
Liberal Democrat: Antony Hook
Liberal Democrat: Judith Bunting
Green: Alexandra Phillips
Conservative: Daniel Hannan
Labour: John Howarth
The Brexit Party led by Nigel Farage has won four European parliamentary seats in the South East region.
The Liberal Democrats won three seats, while the Conservatives, Labour and Greens have one MEP each.
The Brexit Party got a 36.07% share of the votes, compared to the Lib Dems' 25.75%. The Greens came third.
The South West elected six MEPs:
The Brexit Party: Ann Widdecombe
The Brexit Party: James Glancy
The Brexit Party: Christina Jordan
Liberal Democrat: Caroline Voaden
Liberal Democrat:Martin Horwood
Green: Molly Scott Cato
The Brexit Party took 36.7% of the vote, while the Conservatives lost more than 20% of their support in the region.
Of the remain parties, the Lib Dems were up by more than 12% while the Greens were up by 7% - giving the two parties 41.2% of the vote.
Wales elected four MEPs:
The Brexit Party: Nathan Gill
The Brexit Party: James Wells
Plaid Cymru: Jill Evans
Labour: Jacqueline Jones
Nigel Farage's Brexit Party gained two Welsh MEPs after a sweeping victory in the European elections in Wales, winning in 19 of the 22 council areas.
The West Midlands elected seven MEPs:
The Brexit Party: Rupert Lowe
The Brexit Party: Martin Daubney
The Brexit Party: Andrew Kerr
Labour: Neena Gill
Liberal Democrat: Phil Bennion
Green: Ellie Chowns
Conservative: Anthea McIntyre
Yorkshire and the Humber elected six MEPS:
The Brexit Party: John Longworth
The Brexit Party: Lucy Harris
The Brexit Party: Jake Pugh
Labour: Richard Corbett
Liberal Democrat: Shaffaq Mohammed
Green: Magid Magid
Scotland elected six MEPs:
SNP: Alyn Smith
SNP: Christian Allard
SNP: Aileen McLeod
The Brexit Party: Louis Stedman-Bruce
Liberal Democrats: Sheila Ritchie
Conservatives: Baroness Nosheena Mobarik
With 31 of the 32 Scottish council areas having declared their results, the SNP has 37.9 percent of the votes - up from 29 percent in the last EU election.
Nigel Farage's Brexit Party has the second most votes and will have one MEP, as will the Lib Dems and Tories.
Labour is fifth with just 9.3 percent of the votes - down from 26 percent in 2014.
It means Labour will lose both of its MEPs in Scotland, including David Martin who was the UK's longest serving elected EU politician.
Northern Ireland elected three MEPs:
Alliance Party: Naomi Long
Democratic Unionist Party: Diane Dodds
Sinn Féin: Martina Anderson
Three women have been elected to represent Northern Ireland in the European Parliament.
The pro-Remain Alliance Party won a seat for the first time after hugely increasing its vote in the Northern Ireland poll.
Its leader Naomi Long collected 170,370 votes - 115,000 more than her party received in the 2014 European election.