The 2019 UK general Election, a contest fought in the midst of the UK-EU negotiations over the British Exit from the European Union (BREXIT) saw one of the original Brexitears — Boris Johnson — lead the conservative party to a stonkin' victory over Jeremy Corbyn's Labour party.
This, contrasting with Johnson's message of "Getting BREXIT done" and ending with the political debate that had consumed the UK since 2015 made Johnson's Conservative party all the more attractive to UK Voters
In effect, Corbyn not adressing the central issue during the campaign, while Johnson tackled it forthright allowed for the newly minted Conservative leader to get a "great big stonkin' majority" in Parliament,
gaining significant ground in Pro-BREXIT areas compared to 2017 PM Elizabeth May's showing — penetrating the Labour Heartland in Johnson's quest for a full term to finish BREXIT.
Johnson would later squander the term following BREXIT due to scandals — such as hosting parties in downing street during the COVID-19 Lockdown, lying to Parliament, having his cabinet ministers lie to parliament and the public, and a host of other scandals
The 2019 UK General Election on the 2024 Election maps. Follwing the 2023 Boundary Review, these served as the partisan baseline for future elections in the United Kingdom
The results for the 2019 election, a landslide for the Tories fought on the premise of "Getting BREXIT Done" in terms of seats were as follows:
Tories: 373
Labour: 200
SNP: 48
LibDems: 8
DUP: 8
Sinn Fein: 7
Playd Cymru: 2
SDLP: 2
Green: 1
Alliance: 1
Other: 1
A hypothetical larger majority than the 'stonkin majority' Boris Johnson actually got, a disastrous term for the Tories plagued with Scandal, Letus-Laden political instability, and economic decay turned this large Majority, into a near Labour Supermajority come 2024.