At 56, Indian-origin candidates in UK polls hit new high

Highlights
- 10 Indian-origin MPs made it to the House of Commons in the last UK general elections
- No nominee of Indian-origin has been fielded by the Scottish National Party
If a record number of 10 Indian-origin candidates were elected to the British Parliament in 2015, the 2017 snap polls have an impressive number of 56 Indian-origin candidates contesting.
Defending comfortable margins are the Indian-origin veterans, including Priti Patel, Alok Sharma, Keith Vaz, Virendra Sharma and Shailesh Vara, all well-known MPs with sizeable majorities. Though Vaz was embroiled in a prostitution and drugs scandal last year, he is expected to retain his seat with a large majority.
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Candidates to watch on the night are Paul Uppal, 49, Conservative nominee in Wolverhampton South West. He needs to overturn the 2015 majority of just 801 votes to return to the House of Commons as MP. It will be Labour candidate Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi's first time as MP if he manages to keep the Slough seat, held by Labour's Fiona Mactaggart since 1997. Another Sikh with chances of winning is Kuldip Singh Sahota, 66, a Labour local councillor contesting in Telford. A win in Birmingham Edgbaston will make Labour's Preet Kaur Gill the first Sikh woman MP in the House.
Rakib Ehsan at Royal Holloway University who specialises in ethnic minority political attitudes, says that for British Indians, it's a two-party race between Labour and Tories. “It'll take many more elections for the Lib Dems and Greens to be players in the Asian community.“ Ehsan notes that there “seems to be a huge transfer of votes from Labour,“ and that the Conservatives are likely to win a large chunk of the Indian communities' votes.
British Indians are able to swing the vote in many marginal seats, he says, a view echoed by Jasvir Singh, founding chair of City Sikhs. “The ethnic minority vote is greater than the majority's in 50 of the most marginal seats and could make all the difference,“ Singh said.
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