15 British Pakistanis elected as MPs in UK

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https://dailytimes.com.pk/519639/15-british-pakistanis-elected-as-mps-in-uk-daily-times/

Fifteen British-Pakistanis have been elected as the members of parliament (MPs) in the UK general election held on Thursday, the record number of Pakistani-origin candidates elected in the history of the UK.

The Conservative Party also known as Tories has clinched a historic general election victory, winning 364 seats, including five by British Pakistan, securing a clear majority to bring back Boris Jonson as the Prime Minister of the country. The main opposition –

Labour Party – won 203 seat, including 10 by the British-Pakistanis.

Area-wise, 6 candidates of Pakistani origin have been elected from the Midlands area of the UK. Those elected include Labour’s Khalid Mahmood from Perry Bar Birmingham (elected 6 times) , Shabana Mahmood from Ladywood Birmingham (elected 4 times), Tahir Ali from Hall Green Birmingham and Zara Sultana from Coventry South. Similarly, current Chancellor of Exchequer Sajid Javid as a Tory candidate has retained his Bromsgrove seat, a town near Birmingham. Conservative’s British born Pakistani Saqib Bhatti has won the seat of Meridian near Birmingham. The 34-year-old has the distinction of becoming the youngest and first Muslim president in the 205 history of the Greater Birmingham Chamber of Commerce (GBCC).

In London, Labour Party’s Dr Rosena Allin-Khan retained her tooting constituency of London. This seat was previously held by current Mayor of London Sadiq Khan since 2015. From Bedford, Labour’s Muhammad Yasin has been re-elected as an MP, while Muhammad Afzal Khan was also re-elected with a huge majority from the Manchester Gorton constituency, a safe Labour seat. Yasmin Qurashi of Labour managed to hold her Bolton South East Seat which she has held since 2010.

From Bradford East and Bradford West, Labour’s Imran Hussain and Naz Shah were re-elected as MPs. Imran Ahmed Khan, a Conservative Party candidate whose family belongs to Nowshera district in KP, was elected as an MP from the Wakefield constituency, a seat held by the Labour Party for 87 years since 1932. Khan is the only Tory elected MP of Pakistan origin from the Yorkshire and North of the UK .Tories MPs Nusrat Ghani and Rehman Chishti were also able to hold their East Success and Gillingham seats – both are Conservative safe seats.


However, Labour’s Faisal Rasheed lost his Warrington South seat, a town near Manchester. Rasheed was elected as an MP in 2017 elections, however this time he could not win, the only incumbent MP of Pakistani origin who could not win his seat.

Jemima Khan’s brother Zac Goldsmith lost his Richmond Park seat. Richmond Park is one of the rich and posh areas of London. Zac was defeated by the Liberal Democrats candidate Sarah Jones Olney by a majority of more than 8,000 votes.
 
Not sure why any Brit Pakistani would run for the Tory party, unless of course they are coconuts like Sajid Javed.
 
I like keith vaz, he was good to asians and muslims in particular!
Hope he overcomes his personal problems and can enjoy the rest of his live in peace.
 
General election: 2019 heralds the most diverse parliament for gender and ethnicity

There are now more women and BAME members of parliament than ever before, according to Sky News analysis.

Parliament has come a long way since 1918 when Constance Markievicz became the first woman elected to the Commons (although as a member of Sinn Fein she did not take up her seat).

Now a century on, the intake of 2019 has seen gender representation rise to 220 among the 650 MPs in the House.

Labour is still the party with highest number of women, and the most balanced among the four main parties. It has more women MPs than men - 104 to 98 (excluding Labour's Lindsay Hoyle, who has the special role of Speaker).

While more than half of Labour's MPs are women, the Conservative Party has three men for every woman.

In the SNP, that ratio is one woman to every two men.

Meanwhile, seven women and four men make up the Liberal Democrats' 11 MPs.

In another entry for the history books, Conservative member Selaine Saxby has become North Devon's first female MP.

Among the female members is Theresa May, who as a former prime minister bucked the trend of stepping away from politics after leaving her position as leader of the country.

She was re-elected with 5,098 fewer votes than in 2017. The last ex-PM to be re-elected as an MP was James Callaghan, who stopped leading the country in 1979.

Parliament also now has a record number of BAME (black, Asian and minority ethnic) members.

The first non-white MP is thought to have been David Ochterlony Dyce Sombre in 1841, who was of mixed Indian and European descent, followed by Dadabhai Naoroji in 1892.

Next came Mancherjee Bhownaggree in 1895 and, after a further 27 years, Shapurji Saklatvala in 1922.

Despite these early pioneers, it took until 1987 for the next MPs of colour to gain seats.

That year's historic election resulted in the first ever black MPs - Diane Abbott, Paul Boateng and Bernie Grant - and saw Keith Vaz become the first MP of Indian descent for nearly 60 years.

Now, more than three decades on, there are 63 BAME members - up from 52 in the 2017 vote.

Non-white* MPs now make up 9.5% of parliament, compared with the 19.5% of the UK population who recorded as BAME.

Despite their election losses, the Labour Party has welcomed seven new members, boosting its number of BAME MPs from 32 to 39.

The Conservatives have 22 BAME MPs, while the Liberal Democrats have two.

Around 20% of MPs will be new to parliament, meaning 139 will be walking into the Commons for the first time.

Most of the fresh faces are Conservatives, with 96 new members, while 26 of Labour's cohort are new.

That means one in every four Conservative MPs are new, compared with one in five for the SNP, and one in 10 for Labour.

Another area which has seen a slight increase is the number of MPs from the LGBT community, with at least one more identifying than the 45 from the 2017 intake.
https://news.sky.com/story/general-...-parliament-for-gender-and-ethnicity-11885529
 
Not sure why any Brit Pakistani would run for the Tory party, unless of course they are coconuts like Sajid Javed.

British Pakistanis are conservatives so they went with conseravtives. I don't see how Brit-Pakistanis alligning with LGBTQ+ friendly party like the Labour party.
 
Congrats to Brit-Pakistanis and no BJP Bakths here. So much for "Indians taking over the world".
 
British Pakistanis are conservatives so they went with conseravtives. I don't see how Brit-Pakistanis alligning with LGBTQ+ friendly party like the Labour party.

10 out of these 15 MPs are from Labour and 5 from Conservatives
 
Congrats to Brit-Pakistanis and no BJP Bakths here. So much for "Indians taking over the world".

15 British Indians are also elected in parliament. Its just that we dont want to boast about it as there is nothing to boast.

https://www.google.com/amp/s/m.time...ew-uk-parliament/amp_articleshow/72550708.cms

As far as BJP is concerned, their only aim was Labour shouldnt win due to their anti India agenda. Overseas BJP in UK spread this awareness amongst Indian contingent, campaigned for Conservatives and the result is landslide victory for cons. Typical BJP you can say, whichever election they touch...that party wins in a landslide. Being the biggest political party in the world with huge number of active workers on the ground working 24/7 also helps. Next on BJPs agenda is Trump winning 2020 :)
 
British Pakistanis are conservatives so they went with conseravtives. I don't see how Brit-Pakistanis alligning with LGBTQ+ friendly party like the Labour party.

Twice as many British Pakistanis elected for Labour though.............
 
15 British Indians are also elected in parliament. Its just that we dont want to boast about it as there is nothing to boast.

https://www.google.com/amp/s/m.time...ew-uk-parliament/amp_articleshow/72550708.cms

As far as BJP is concerned, their only aim was Labour shouldnt win due to their anti India agenda. Overseas BJP in UK spread this awareness amongst Indian contingent, campaigned for Conservatives and the result is landslide victory for cons. Typical BJP you can say, whichever election they touch...that party wins in a landslide. Being the biggest political party in the world with huge number of active workers on the ground working 24/7 also helps. Next on BJPs agenda is Trump winning 2020 :)

Not boasting....posts an article in the times of India :maqsood
 
British Pakistanis are conservatives so they went with conseravtives. I don't see how Brit-Pakistanis alligning with LGBTQ+ friendly party like the Labour party.

Are you Indian?

The Conservative party isn't conservative, it's just their name now :)))
 
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