Jeremy Corbyn has been re-elected leader of the Labour Party, increasing the mandate which he first won a year ago.
Mr Corbyn saw off challenger Owen Smith with 61.8% of more than half a million votes cast in the contest.
His tally of 313,209 votes was more than 60,000 higher than the 251,417 (59.5%) he secured in 2015.
Mr Smith took 193,229 votes - 38.2% of the 506,438 votes cast out of a total electorate of 654,006.

The figures announced at the opening of the Labour conference today.

Supporters of Jeremy Corbyn hope that a rally planned for tonight will now turn into a party celebrating his leadership win.

Tonight an event was due to be held as a party to get more young people involved in politics, however organisers are hoping it will actually be a chance to celebrate.

Momentum Southampton will hold the second of its Rock the Vote nights at legendary Southampton venue the 1865.

Whilst Jeremy Corbyn’s rise from the shadows led to more than 170 front benchers resigning, it’s also responsible for a huge surge in labour party membership.

After three months of voting by labour party members - who had to pay £25 to join, even if they had already paid £3 in last year’s leadership election - Mr Corbyn has emerged the victor.

Organiser and lifetime labour supporter Perry McMillan has been organising the Southampton Corbynistas through the local branch of national Momentum campaign.

He said: “It’s not just people from Southampton, it’s Winchester, Eastleigh and the New Forest. Corbyn is bringing people together and swapping ideas. It’s not just people who have been involved in politics for a long time, it’s people in their twenties, and people in their 70s coming back into the fold.

“Certainly people like me got tired of Blair and Iraq. Now we’ve got young people with Corbyn t shirts who are tired of the same old suits sitting around bickering.

“Corbyn is offering a different way of doing politics. Something is definitely going on - there’s a different mood. People are starting to realise that capitalism isn’t suited to the majority of people. There’s those of us who have been involved in politics for a long time who realise that Jeremy Corbyn is a decent bloke. It’s the ideas of socialism - dedication to the NHS and renationalisation - until we give it a go we’ll never really know.”

While taxi company director Mr McMillan was barred from voting in the leadership campaign last year, he was allowed to re-enter after going to a panel.

A spokesman for the Labour party said that all votes were subject to robust validation, but ex labour councillor Andrew Pope, who was also barred last year from voting, said he was sent an email by the labour party inviting him to vote this week. He said: “Out of the blue, I received an email on Monday asking me to vote and giving me access via security codes. And as I thought I could do the most damage, I did vote. I didn't even have to make any declaration that I was a member, or any such declaration.

How many other people like me voted? I am Leader of a rival Party!”