Tory MPs outside of Number 10 Downing Street
Many familiar cabinet ministers have fallen victim to the Tory wipeout

The Tories are experiencing their worst General Election result in their 200-year history as senior cabinet ministers are losing seats left, right and centre.

Labour, meanwhile, is on track to achieve an unprecedented ‘supermajority’ rivalling that of Tony Blair in 1997.

Both Rishi Sunak and Jeremy Hunt, once the second most powerful politician in Britain as Chancellor, have narrowly been re-elected as MPs.

Sunak, who appeared exhausted and stern as he announced his concession in the early hours, officially resigned as prime minister after handing his notice to King Charles.

Follow Metro.co.uk’s blog for live updates on the General Election 2024

Which Conservative MPs lost their seats?

Several Tory ‘big beasts’, some of who spent years shaping the lives of the British public, have failed to see the other side of this election.

As the country enters a new political era, here are all the cabinet ministers and top officials so far who unknowingly went to Downing Street for the final time.

Alex Chalk

Justice Secretary Alex Chalk leaving no 10 Downing Street, London, following a Cabinet meeting. Picture date: Tuesday May 14, 2024. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Lucy North/PA Wire
Alex Chalk leaving no 10 Downing Street in May (Picture: Lucy North/PA Wire)

Alex Chalk, who served as the Justice Secretary from April last year, was the first to face his ‘Portillo’ moment. (That’s political-speak for a shock election loss.)

Chalk, a former barrister, had been an MP for Cheltenham since 2015 and was re-elected four years later with a majority of 1,421.

This time, however, it was his Lib Dem opponent Max Wilkison who was enjoying a majority – and an even bigger one. Wilkison, a former Gloucestershire Echo reporter, polled 25,076 ahead of Mr Chalk on 17,866.

Gillian Keegan

Gillian Keegan Conservative Party's Manifesto Launch, Silverstone Circuit, Towcester, Northamptonshire, UK
Gillian Keegan (Picture: Victoria Jones/Shutterstock)

From consular policy in Africa and mental health to education, Gillian Keegan has been around the cabinet block, to say the least.

But the ‘Blue Wall’ that she hoped would protect her Chichester seat was smashed to pieces by the Lib Dems in the early hours.

By losing to Jess Brown-Fuller, Keegan’s constituency turned a colour other than blue for the first time in a century.

Penny Mordaunt

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ben Stevens/Shutterstock (14571139w) Portsmouth South and Portsmouth North general election count at Portsmouth Guildhall, Hants, UK. Senior Conservative politician Penny Mordaunt (pictured) loses her seat to Labour candidate Amanda Martin. Portsmouth North Election count, The Guildhall, Portsmouth, Hampshire, UK - 04 Jul 2024
Penny Mordaunt (Picture: Ben Stevens/Shutterstock)

Penny Mordaunt, who once ran unsuccessfully to be the leader of the Conservative Party, has lost her seat in Portsmouth North.

The House of Commons Leader had a notional majority of 15,780 in 2019. She had long been considered a safe pair of hands for the Tories, a party plagued by turbulence.

All eyes had been on Portsmouth North, a seat that had long acted as a crystal ball for who would win the General Election. But in the end, Labour’s Amanda Martin captures it with a majority of 480.

Mordaunt appeared bleary-eyed, her voice strained, as she delivered her concession speech stressing that ‘democracy is never wrong’.

Jacob Rees-Mogg

BATH, ENGLAND - JULY 05: Jacob Rees-Mogg departs after losing the North East Somerset Constituency seat to Labour at the University of Bath campus, on July 05, 2024 in Bath, England. The incumbent MP for North East Somerset is the Conservative Jacob Rees-Mogg. In Boris Johnson's government, he held the position of Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy. (Photo by Finnbarr Webster/Getty Images)
Jacob Rees-Mogg departs after losing the North East Somerset Constituency seat to Labour Getty Images Europe

Jacob Rees-Mogg lost his North East Somerset and Hanham seat to Labour by more than 5,000 votes.

He arrived at the count carrying a bag of sandwiches with his son Peter, which he said included ‘ham and tongue’.

The arch Brexiteer ended his time as an MP by quoting Chitty Chitty Bang Bang: ‘From the ashes of disaster grow the roses of success.’

Mark Harper

The Transport Secretary’s bid to stay in power was derailed by Labour (Picture: Getty Images Europe)

Mark Harper has been Transport Secretary since 2022 and became an MP in 2005.

During his time in the transport post, Sunak scrapped the northern leg of the high-speed rail line HS2. Harper is also known for chairing the Covid Recovery Group, which opposed the December 2020 lockdown and voted against other Covid restrictions.

He lost his Forest of Dean seat to Labour challenger Matt Bishop – just. Harper lost by just 278 votes, finishing with 16,095.

Liz Truss

Former prime minister Liz Truss has lost her Norfolk South West seat to Labour at Alive Lynnsport in King's Lynn, Norfolk, during the count in the 2024 General Election.
Former prime minister Liz Truss (Picture: Jacob King/PA Wire)

As the crowd slowly clapped, the candidates for MP of  South West Norfolk may have noticed someone was missing on stage; their former MP.

Truss appeared mere moments before the results, standing only slightly awkwardly to the side of her political competitors. That included her the man who would become her successor, Labour’s Terry Jermy.

Truss’ vote share of 26,195 in 2019 had withered to just 11,217, paving the way for Jermy’s success.

For the politician who was PM for just 49 days in late 2022, her defeat was one of the biggest signs yet of how a fed-up electorate has rejected the party that has governed them for 14 years.

Jonathan Gullis

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak with Mark Meaney, Works Manager and Conservative parliamentary candidate Jonathan Gullis (right) during a visit to a pottery factory in Stoke On Trent, Staffordshire, while on the General Election campaign trail.
Rishi Sunak with Jonathan Gullis (right) (Picture: Aaron Chown/PA Wire)

Jonathan Gullis was among the most high-profile 2019 General Election MPs who smashed through the ‘Red Wall’, becoming Stoke-on-Trent North’s first-ever Conservative MP.

He proved himself to be among the most divisive politicians in the Commons, having spent the last few years raging against the ‘Wokerati’, called his constituents ‘scumbags’ and suggested asylum seekers should be housed in tents.

Today, Stoke-on-Trent North’s new MP is Labour’s David Williams (no, not the comedian). He won with 14,579 votes compared to deputy chairman of the Conservative Party, who received 9,497.

‘No idea,’ Gullis said when he was asked by the i newspaper in May what he would do if he lost his seat.

‘Because I’m quite outspoken, some would joke that I’m deeply unemployable.’

Johnny Mercer

Johnny Mercer arrives in Downing Street to attend the weekly Cabinet meeting in London, United Kingdom on May 22, 2024. (Photo by Wiktor Szymanowicz/Anadolu via Getty Images)
Johnny Mercer (Picture: Anadolu)

Adding to the list of big-name losses is Jonny Mercer, the former Minister for Veterans Affairs. He lost the Plymouth Moor View seat to Labour’s Fred Thomas.

This means that there won’t be a Tory MP to be found in Plymouth, capturing how powerful the anti-incumbent revolt was that swept the Conservatives out.

Lucy Frazer

Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Lucy Frazer leaves Downing Street after attending the weekly cabinet meeting in London, United Kingdom on April 16, 2024.
Outgoing Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Lucy Frazer (Picture: Anadolu)

In Ely & East Cambridgeshire, Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Lucy Frazer lost her seat to the Lib Dems.

Charlotte Cane received 17,127 votes to Frazer’s 16,632 – a razor-thin margin of 495.

Steve Baker

Northern Ireland Office minister Steve Baker, at Farmleigh House, Dublin for the British-Irish Intergovernmental Conference. Picture date: Tuesday November 28, 2023. PA Photo. See PA story POLITICS Conference. Photo credit should read: Niall Carson/PA Wire
Steve Baker will no longer be MP for Wycombe. (Picture: Niall Carson/PA Wire)

A long-standing member of the Eurosceptic wing of the Conservative Party and former RAF engineer, Steve Baker served as Member of Parliament for Wycombe in Buckinghamshire from 2010.

However, his 2019 majority of 24,766 would drop to 11,444, meaning that Labour’s Emma Reynolds would claim victory with 16,034 votes.

Full list of Tory MPs who survived Labour landslide

More than 100 Conservatives managed to hold their seats, including some major players in the last government.

Conservative MPs in parliament, including Kemi Badenoch – poised to be the next leader of the Conservatives – and Suella Braverman hung onto their seats.

The full list is below.

  1. West Aberdeenshire & Kincardine – Andrew Bowie
  2. Gordon & Buchan – Harriet Cross
  3. Berwickshire, Roxburgh & Selkirk – John Lamont
  4. Stockton West- Matt Vickers
  5. Fylde- Andrew Snowden
  6. Keighley & Ilkley – Robbie Moore
  7. Skipton & Ripon – Julian Smith
  8. Richmond & Northallerton – Rishi Sunak
  9. Thirsk & Malton – Kevin Hollinrake
  10. Wetherby & Easingwold – Alec Shelbrooke
  11. Bridlington & the Wolds – Charlie Dewhirst
  12. Beverley & Holderness – Graham Stuart
  13. Staffordshire Moorlands – Karen Bradley
  14. Tatton – Esther McVey
  15. Goole & Pocklington – David Davis
  16. Gainsborough – Edward Leigh
  17. Brigg & Immingham – Martin Vickers
  18. Daventry – Stuart Andrew
  19. Melton & Syston- Edward Argar
  20. Mid Leicestershire – Peter Bedford
  21. Newark – Robert Jenrick
  22. Aldridge-Brownhills – Wendy Morton
  23. Sutton Coldfield – Andrew Mitchell
  24. Leicester East – Shivani Raja
  25. Sleaford & North Hykeham – Caroline Johnson
  26. Louth & Horncastle – Victoria Atkins
  27. Chester South & Eddisbury – Aphra Brandreth
  28. Stone, Great Wyrley & Penkridge – Gavin Williamson
  29. Hinckley & Bosworth – Luke Evans
  30. South Leicestershire – Alberto Costa
  31. Harborough, Oadby & Wigston – Neil O’Brien
  32. Grantham & Bourne- Gareth Davies
  33. Meriden & Solihull East – Saqib Bhatti
  34. South Northamptonshire – Sarah Bool
  35. Mid Bedfordshire – Blake Stephenson
  36. North Bedfordshire – Richard Fuller
  37. Rutland & Stamford – Alicia Kearns
  38. South Holland & The Deepings – John Hayes
  39. The Wrekin – Mark Pritchard
  40. Solihull West & Shirley – Neil Shastri-Hurst
  41. Hertsmere – Oliver Dowden
  42. North West Norfolk – James Wild
  43. Kenilworth & Southam – Jeremy Wright
  44. Broxbourne- Lewis Cocking
  45. Huntingdon – Ben Obese-Jecty
  46. North East Cambridgeshire- Steve Barclay
  47. Mid Norfolk – George Freeman
  48. Broadland & Fakenham – Jerome Mayhew
  49. South Shropshire- Stuart Anderson
  50. Kingswinford & South Staffordshire – Mike Wood
  51. Bromsgrove – Bradley Thomas
  52. Harrow East – Bob Blackman
  53. Wyre Forest- Mark Garnier
  54. Ruislip, Northwood & Pinner – David Simmonds
  55. Chingford & Woodford Green – Iain Duncan Smith
  56. West Suffolk – Nick Timothy
  57. Central Suffolk & North Ipswich – Patrick Spencer
  58. Harwich & North Essex – Bernard Jenkin
  59. Hereford & South Herefordshire – Jesse Norman
  60. West Worcestershire – Harriett Baldwin
  61. Droitwich & Evesham – Nigel Huddleston
  62. South West Hertfordshire – Gagan Mohindra
  63. Epping Forest – Neil Hudson
  64. South Suffolk – James Cartlidge
  65. Mid Buckinghamshire – Greg Smith
  66. Romford – Andrew Rosindell
  67. Brentwood & Ongar- Alex Burghart
  68. North West Essex – Kemi Badenoch
  69. Braintree – James Cleverly
  70. Maldon- John Whittingdale
  71. Hornchurch & Upminster – Julia Lopez
  72. Basildon & Billericay – Richard Holden
  73. Rayleigh & Wickford – Mark Francois
  74. Witham- Priti Patel
  75. North Cotswolds- Geoffrey Clifton-Brown
  76. Beaconsfield – Joy Morrissey
  77. Castle Point – Rebecca Harris
  78. Spelthorne – Lincoln Jopp
  79. Old Bexley & Sidcup- Louie French
  80. Bridgwater – Ashley Fox
  81. Windsor – Alex Rankin
  82. East Hampshire – Damien Hinds
  83. Croydon South – Chris Philp
  84. Bromley & Biggin Hill – Peter Fortune
  85. Orpington – Gareth Bacon
  86. East Surrey – Claire Coutinho
  87. Sevenoaks – Laura Trott
  88. Tonbridge – Tom Tugendhat
  89. Faversham & Mid Kent – Helen Whately
  90. Herne Bay & Sandwich – Roger Gale
  91. East Wiltshire – Danny Kruger
  92. North West Hampshire – Kit Malthouse
  93. Hamble Valley – Paul Holmes
  94. Farnham & Bordon – Greg Stafford
  95. Runnymede & Weybridge – Ben Spencer
  96. Godalming & Ash – Jeremy Hunt
  97. Reigate – Rebecca Paul
  98. East Grinstead & Uckfield – Mims Davies
  99. Maidstone & Malling – Helen Grant
  100. Weald of Kent (Con hold) – Katie Lam
  101. South West Wiltshire – Andrew Murrison
  102. Salisbury – John Glen
  103. Romsey & Southampton North – Caroline Nokes
  104. Fareham & Waterlooville – Suella Braverman
  105. Gosport – Caroline Dinenage
  106. Havant – Alan Mak
  107. Bognor Regis & Littlehampton – Alison Griffiths
  108. Sussex Weald – Nus Ghani
  109. Bexhill & Battle – Kieran Mullan
  110. Torridge & Tavistock – Geoffrey Cox
  111. Central Devon – Mel Stride
  112. North Dorset – Simon Hoare
  113. Christchurch – Christopher Chope
  114. New Forest West – Desmond Swayne
  115. New Forest East – Julian Lewis
  116. Arundel & South Downs – Andrew Griffith
  117. South West Devon – Rebecca Smith
  118. Exmouth & Exeter East – David Reed
  119. Isle of Wight East – Joe Robertson

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at [email protected].

For more stories like this, check our news page.

MORE : Map shows how London voted in the General Election and became a sea of red

MORE : Nigel Farage heckled and called ‘racist’ in first speech as Reform UK MP

MORE : Richard Osman’s mum, 82, celebrating Tory defeat is the most heartwarming general election reaction