UK's George Galloway loses seat in British vote

George Galloway, the prominent pro Palestinian British politician and a vociferous critic of Israel has lost his seat in parliament in Thursday's UK general election.
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Gallway is known for his championing of pro-Palestinian issues [AFP]

British left-wing politician, George Galloway lost  his parliamentary seat in Britain's general election.  

A campaigner known for his championing of pro-Palestinian issues and criticism of Western military interventions in the Middle East, Galloway lost his seat to a candidate of the centre-left Labour party.  

Labour rival Naz Shah won by 19,977 votes to his 8,557 in the northern English constituency of Bradford West.  

Since 2012 Galloway had represented the constituency as the leader and only MP of the Respect party, which grew out of opposition to the Iraq War that began in 2003.  

On the same night, Galloway was reported to police because of a Tweet that allegedlly broke rules banning the publication of opinion polls while voting was ongoing.  

The BBC reported that police had been given a screen-grab showing Galloway had re-Tweeted a message indicating he was ahead in the contest before the polls had closed, forbidden under British law.  

"We have reported a tweet by George Galloway to the police who are dealing with the issue," said Suzan Hemingway, acting returning officer at the count centre.  

"It seems like a storm in a thimble," said a Respect Party spokesman, saying he had not been told about any police complaint.