A few short weeks ago Theresa May had announced the snap election, looking to bolster her Conservative majority a full three years short of the 2020 vote. She was forgivably confident having bested all comers in the knife-fight following David Cameron's evacuation of 10 Downing Street. And Labour, entirely preoccupied with it's internal revolt against Jeremy Corbyn, appeared headed for a historic drubbing.
Instead, Labour achieved an extraordinary reversal of fortune, building support at a rate of knots. May's campaign slogan 'strong and stable leadership' and a focus on future Brexit negotiations paled in comparison to Corbyn's community-driven message.
As the vote-counters tallied tirelessly throughout the night, a sense of dismay and incredulity spread across the United Kingdom. Commentators and diehards who had stayed up all night took note of the sizeable swings against the Tories in marginal seats. Several Tory ministers were ousted from their seats and Home Secretary Amber Rudd suffered an almighty scare when on first count she appeared to have lost Hastings and Rye, only to win on a recount, by less than 400 votes.
While they retained more than 30 seats, it was also a night to forget for the Scottish National Party. Their high-water mark of support after the first Scottish independence referendum is now a distant memory. As are the party's
Westminster leader Angus Robertson and former First Minister Alex Salmond. The loss of two leaders to the Tories will sting SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon, not least because she now faces a tougher climb to secure a second referendum.
The Liberal Democrats enjoyed a marginal improvement but in the process were slugged with the loss of former
deputy PM Nick Clegg. But the biggest loser of the evening was the far-right United Kingdom Independence Party. It suffered a wholesale collapse in support across the country and UKIP leader Paul Nuttall may well struggle to remain at the helm of the party after watching an average
negative swing of 11%.
The pound remains in a holding pattern after dropping sharply upon the release of the 10pm exit poll. Once again much of the world holds its breath as it wonders where to next for Britain. With the vacuum in leadership it will be near-on-impossible for Britain to negotiate confidently with the European Union. Indeed, Brexit Secretary David Davis has already signalled that concessions may have to be made.
In a ray of positive news, overall voter turnout was a smidge below 69%, the most Britain has seen in two decades.