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Counting staff sort ballot papers at a vote counting centre in Margate, southeast England, on May 7, 2015 during the UK general election. Prime Minister David Cameron's Conservatives are on course to be the biggest party in the next British parliament, according to an exit poll from the general election on Thursday showing them winning far more seats than had been expected. The projected result of 316 seats would beat centre-left Labour on 239 seats, upsetting analyst predictions of a neck-and-neck contest between Cameron and Labour challenger Ed Miliband. AFP PHOTO / NIKLAS HALLE'N (Photo credit should read NIKLAS HALLE'N/AFP/Getty Images)

Counting staff sort ballot papers at a vote counting centre in Margate, southeast England, on May 7, 2015 during the UK general election. Prime Minister David Cameron's Conservatives are on course to be the biggest party in the next British parliament, according to an exit poll from the general election on Thursday showing them winning far more seats than had been expected. The projected result of 316 seats would beat centre-left Labour on 239 seats, upsetting analyst predictions of a neck-and-neck contest between Cameron and Labour challenger Ed Miliband. AFP PHOTO / NIKLAS HALLE'N        (Photo credit should read NIKLAS HALLE'N/AFP/Getty Images)