This English Naval City is a Bellwether Seat. How Do Voters Feel?
Voters streamed into a polling station in Portsmouth, a city nestled along England’s southern coast that is known for its naval base and historic dockyard, on Thursday morning as ballot workers greeted them warmly.
Older couples walked hand in hand into the local church, which had been temporarily fitted out with ballot boxes, alongside parents with children in strollers, and young adults rushing in on the way to work.
One by one, they weighed in on the future of the nation in a vote that polls suggested could end 14 years of Conservative-led government.
“I just want to see change,” said Sam Argha, 36, who was outside the polling station on Thursday morning. “I just really want to see us do something differently.”
Many people in the city expressed a similar desire for a new start at a moment of intense national uncertainty. Polls have predicted that the election could be a major turning point, with the center-left Labour Party expected to unseat the right-wing Conservative Party, possibly with a crushing landslide.
The city of Portsmouth is split into two constituencies, and the Portsmouth North seat is considered a bellwether — the area has voted for the winning political party in every general election since 1974.