elections

The Labour leader and prime minister will go head-to-head, one week before polling day.
Islamophobia and anti-Semitism have surfaced in nearly all the parties, alongside anti-immigrant rhetoric. But what does this really tell us about the political landscape?
Public who identify as “English” not “British” more likely to back Conservatives, YouGov survey suggests
The Lib Dem leader remains defiant in the face of a poll squeeze one week from election day.
Huge parts of this country are effectively competition-free zones leaving voters ignored, Electoral Reform Society's Dr Jess Garland writes.
The Unite leader reveals even many of his own members are undecided on who to vote for. Brexit and Jeremy Corbyn's leadership are "very real issues" in party heartlands, he says.
In Newcastle-Under-Lyme, voters weren’t convinced by Labour’s manifesto pledges, thinking that it was a “santa’s list” of freebies that would never materialise and were only said to win votes.
Former Labour leader accused of lying to Leave-backing voters in his Doncaster North seat.
HuffPost UK understands private polling shows party on course to lose seats, though position has tightened in recent weeks.
With the two leading parties in this election marred by allegations of anti-Semitism and Islamophobia, we take a look at the role that religion is playing in the 2019 General Election.