Former lads mag editor elected MEPpublished at 08:58 British Summer Time 28 May 2019
The Brexit Party wins three seats, with one each for Labour, the Conservatives, Greens and Lib Dems.
Read MoreBrexit Party dominate on a disappointing night for Conservatives and Labour. Lib Dems also see surge in votes
In England, The Brexit Party won 26 seats, including seats for Nigel Farage, Ann Widdecombe and Annunziata Rees-Mogg
The Liberal Democrats won 15 seats, including wins for Irina Von Wiese and Catherine Bearder
Labour won nine seats, the Green Party seven and the Conservatives three
South East: Brexit Party took four seats. Lib Dems three, Tories, Labour and Greens one each
North East: Brexit Party gained two MEPs. Labour one
East of England: Brexit Party gained three MEPs. Two Lib Dem MEPs, one Green and one Conservative
London: Lib Dems gained three MEPs, Labour two, Brexit Party two and Green Party one
West Midlands: Brexit Party took three of the seven seats. Labour, Lib Dems, Greens and Tories one seat each
Yorkshire and the Humber: Brexit Party took three of the six seats. Labour, Lib Dems and Greens one seat each
South West: Brexit Party took three of the six seats. Lib Dems two and Greens one
East Midlands: Brexit Party took three of the five seats. Lib Dems and Labour one each
North West: Brexit Party took three seats. Labour and Lib Dems two each, Greens one
Results, reaction and updates from across England
Our live page coverage has now ended
Duncan Leatherdale
The Brexit Party wins three seats, with one each for Labour, the Conservatives, Greens and Lib Dems.
Read MoreThe Lib Dems also see a surge in support, while the Tories and Labour suffer heavy losses, as voters split along Leave and Remain lines.
Read MoreFind results for your area and follow the others as they come in.
Read MoreThe Conservatives and UKIP lost all of their seats with the Brexit Party top in the East Midlands.
Read MoreBrexit Party leader Nigel Farage says he is getting ready for a general election.
Read MoreThe Lib Dems and Green Party both also gained a seat each in the region.
Read MoreThe Conservatives and UKIP lose their London MEPs, but Labour, Brexit and Greens all take seats.
Read MoreFormer MP Ann Widdecombe wins one of three seats for the Brexit Party.
Read MoreThe Brexit Party wins three seats in the EU elections, with the Lib Dems and Greens overtaking Labour.
Read MoreDuncan Leatherdale
BBC News Online
That's all for our coverage of the EU election results across England.
Thanks so much for joining us.
In short, the Brexit Party had a good night winning almost half of the 60 seats.
Remain supporters say they also did well when you combine the votes for remain-supporting parties such as the Liberal Democrats and the Greens.
But it wasn't a good night for the Conservatives or Labour.
One thing I hope we can all agree on though - it's time for bed.
Labour holds on to one of its seats but loses the other.
Read More"This is our worst-ever result," says Daniel Hannan, who has been re-elected as a Conservative MEP.
"We need to make Brexit happen, but in a way that will carry the 48% with us," he says.
He adds that his party now needs "different, credible leadership" to ensure Brexit is delivered.
Labour and the Lib Dems won two seats each while the Green Party gained one.
Read MoreSupporters of a second referendum may well use the night's results to push their case, according to Georgia Roberts of BBC Westminster.
She said the leave parties such as the Brexit Party and UKIP got around 35% of the votes while remain parties like the Liberal Democrats and Greens got about 40%.
Ms Roberts said: "Based on that plenty of people around Westminster will be making the case for a second referendum."
But Dr Chris Fear said the results are "much more ambiguous" than the 2016 referendum and votes for the two main parties confuse the issue as they do not give clear indication either way.
He said: "What do you with do with all those votes for Labour and Conservatives? If you try to factor them in then I think people will see exactly what they want to see."
If you want an indicator of how difficult this election has been for Britain's two largest parties, look to the leadership.
Prime Minister Theresa May's Conservative Party came third in her own constituency - losing to the Brexit Party and Liberal Democrats.
And her opposite number, Jeremy Corbyn of the Labour Party, saw his party come second to to the Liberal Democrats - and it was his birthday on Sunday, too.
Laura Kuenssberg
BBC political editor
We shouldn't forget how appalling this night is for the Tories.
This is their worst performance as a party going back to 1832.
If this was a first-past-the-post election, they would not have taken a single seat.
James Vincent
Political Editor BBC Look North
This was an election. But many treated it as a referendum.
The numbers will be added up by parties on either side to determine whether "the Brexit vote" is as strong in Yorkshire and Humber as it was in 2016.
But what we do know is that the Brexit Party dominated. Labour had two MEPs, it now has one. The Conservatives lost both of theirs.
The Lib Dems and the Greens will look at their first MEPs here and say that it proves remainers don’t want the two main parties.
The Brexit Party will say exactly the same about leavers.
Labour and the Conservatives have big problems telling people in Yorkshire what their Brexit plan is.
In Sheffield Labour were beaten into 4th place and they weren’t even the top choice in Doncaster, where the party was born.
The declaration of results from the North West region in the European Elections.
Ann Widdecombe, who was elected for the Brexit party in the South West, said she heard the "howl of duty" to return to front-line politics after nine years out.
The former Conservative MP said the success of the Brexit Party, which won 26 seats six weeks after being formed, was down to them giving voters a "clear choice".
She said the Conservatives and Labour had "confused" people but the Brexit Party only had one item in the agenda - leaving the EU.
Ms Widdecombe said: "We've got one question so we can get one answer and boy haven't we got it.
"We never wanted these elections, they are a demonstration of the total farce that has taken over at Westminster.
"Given we have had them we will play our role in the EU parliament and we will set about delivering Brexit."
Dr Chris Fear said the Brexit Party should be seen as a "single-issue pressure group".
England's seats in the European Parliament are distributed according to the D'Hondt system, a type of proportional representation.
Parties vying for election submit a list of candidates to voters in each region.
A system devised by Victor D'Hondt, a Belgian lawyer and mathematician active in the 19th Century, dictates the results: