General election 2017: Voters to go to the polls
Millions of people will be casting their vote in the UK general election later.
Polls
open at 07:00 BST at more than 40,000 polling stations across the
country, with counting starting once voting ends at 22:00 BST.
A total of 650 Westminster MPs will be elected, with about 46.9 million people registered to vote.
That is up from the last general election, in 2015, when there were 46.4 million registered voters.
- Guide: How to vote
- Find your constituency and candidates
- What CAN'T you do in a polling station?
- Manifesto guide on where the parties stand
Some votes have already been cast, through postal voting, which
accounted for 16.4% of the total electorate at the 2015 general
election.
Overall turnout in 2015, when the Conservatives won 331 out of 650 seats, was 66.4%, up from 2010.
Most polling stations are in schools, community centres and parish
halls, but pubs, a launderette and a school bus have been used in the
past.
A handful of seats are expected to be declared by midnight, with the final results expected on Friday afternoon.
Unusually,
no local elections are taking place at the same time, so results might
come through earlier than in recent general elections.
In 2015 the first seat to declare was Houghton and Sunderland South, at 22:48 BST.
To
form a majority in the House of Commons one party must win 326 seats -
in 2015 a Conservative majority was not confirmed until 13:34 BST.
Coverage
The
weather forecast is for some rain in south-west England, Northern
Ireland, Scotland and Wales on Thursday, with south-east England
remaining cloudy and dry.
Polls close at 22:00 BST, but officials say anyone in a polling station queue at this time should be able to cast their vote.
The BBC's main election programme, fronted by David Dimbleby, starts at 21:55 BST, with live coverage from scores of counts.
Dimbleby, fronting his 10th election night broadcast, will be joined by Mishal Husain, Emily Maitlis, Jeremy Vine.
Wales,
Scotland and Northern Ireland will have their own overnight programmes
but will join Huw Edwards from 07:00 BST on 9 June.
On the radio, an overnight broadcast by BBC Radio 4 will be hosted by Jim Naughtie and Carolyn Quinn.
On BBC Radio 5 live, the overnight show will be hosted by Stephen Nolan and Emma Barnett.
Full
coverage of the results as they come in will be on the BBC politics
online live page and front page scorecard, with all the big breaking
stories from around the country and analysis by correspondents.
BBC NEWS
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