Long queues in Britain as voting begins
Voting in Britain began in the cities of London, Manchester, Leicester and Edinburgh. The British Electoral Coordination, which supports the Green Left Party, called on everyone to go to the polls.
Voting in Britain began in the cities of London, Manchester, Leicester and Edinburgh. The British Electoral Coordination, which supports the Green Left Party, called on everyone to go to the polls.
In the British cities of London, Manchester, Leicester and Scotland's Edinburgh, tens of thousands of voters from Kurdistan and Turkey went to the polls to cast their vote.
Ballot boxes were set up at London 1 Old Billingsgate Walk. A large crowd waited in a queue to vote since 9 am on Saturday morning.
Voting is possible in 14 places in London.
The turnout in the 2018 elections in Britain was very low, as was the case in the rest of Europe. Only 42.6 percent of the total eligible voters participated in the elections. Within this participation rate, HDP succeeded to emerge as the first party in Britain with 49.2 percent in 2018. In the same elections, the CHP received 24.5 percent and the AKP 18.5 percent.
Thanks to the intensive work of the British Election Coordination and new voter registration, the number of Kurdistan and Turkish voters in the country reached 127,281.
The Green Left Party will win with over 50 percent of the votes'
"This year we want the Green Left Party to win with over 50 percent of the vote," said the British Election Coordination. More than 300 people will take part in the British elections as observers and hall attendants. At the same time, 10 people will be sent from Britain to Ankara on behalf of the Labor and Freedom Alliance as observers.