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UK general election held June 1987. Margaret Thatcher won a third consecutive majority over Neil Kinnock's Labour, cementing the longest continuous Conservative government since the Napoleonic Wars.
UK 1987 General Election is one of the tracked elections shaping power in United Kingdom.
Year
1987
Country
United Kingdom
Contested
House of Commons
Winner
Margaret Thatcher
Candidates
2
Outcome in context
Thatcher won a third consecutive majority with 376 seats. Kinnock had begun modernizing Labour but could not yet challenge Conservative dominance. The SDP-Liberal Alliance again split the centre-left vote.
Thatcher won a third consecutive majority with 376 seats. Kinnock had begun modernizing Labour but could not yet challenge Conservative dominance. The SDP-Liberal Alliance again split the centre-left vote.
The UK 1987 General Election took place in 1987 in United Kingdom. The election determined who would hold the office of House of Commons.
Margaret Thatcher won the election. Voter turnout was reported at 75.3%, giving a sense of how many people took part in the contest. 2 candidates contested the election: Margaret Thatcher and Neil Kinnock.
Details
election year
1987
office contested
House of Commons
Country context
This election is connected to United Kingdom. Use the country page to follow broader institutions, offices, and election history.
Government type
Unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy
Capital
London
Legislature
UK Parliament
Executive
Prime minister and cabinet drawn from Parliament under the Crown, with government dependent on House of Commons confidence
First female Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (1925–2013) who served from 1979 to 1990 and reshaped British politics through privatization, union reform, and ideological commitment to free-market economics. Thatcherism became a global export, influencing centre-right parties worldwide.