Of course they did.
Like a Tory won the local election where I live. Or that Labour won where you live.
Like the other 2 examples above, they're part of a union that means they toe the nations line.
Who will also continue to collect his salary as leader of the opposition.
No one party always votes for everything its party puts forward. Indeed, Corbyn was quite happy to vote against anything his party proposed in the main.
Millions also saw May as a credible actual Prime Minister.
So what's your point?
Scotland is their nation and they won the election so they'll toe their own line. Whilst they are dented it'll make little difference to their demand for another referendum. It may well strengthen it as they have seen the size of the unionist vote. Not in opinion polls but in an actual election where the question of independence was the most important consideration.
This election effectively buries Corbyn's past record. They chucked CND, the IRA, his voting record on anti-terrorist legislation at him yet he increased Labour's vote to 40%. Despite all that bile Labour is now 2% behind the Tories. I'd say that makes him a credible Prime Minister.
Millions saw May as a credible Prime Minister and voted Tory. After seeing the result how many still see her as a credible Prime Minister? I'd say the numbers have gone down considerably. The only thing saving her is there is no obvious alternative leader waiting in the wings.
After Labour's campaign the numbers thinking Corbyn could be a good Prime Minister has grown.
My point, May has to make some difficult choices about Brexit, social care, the NHS, tax, national insurance, immigration, Northern Ireland, the economy and the threat from terrorism. The choices she makes will undermine the Tory Party further.
Corbyn, on the other hand, will have a fairly united party, at least in the short term, and will continue to campaign outside parliament to broaden support for Labour's vision. That will put added pressure on the Tory backbenchers who are now looking over their shoulders. Labour backbenchers thinking that Corbyn would mean they would be unemployed in the short term have survived. They have already started reassessing their views on Corbyn.
The election settled nothing and tipped the scales towards Corbyn's vision of Britain. Maybe not enough but the momentum is with Corbyn.