Angela Rayner, Rachel Reeves and Ed Miliband all facing humiliating defeats | Politics | News

Rachel Reeves, Ed Miliband and Yvette Cooper will lose their seats at the next election as support for the Greens grows, according to a new poll.
Nigel Farage’s Reform UK will be the largest party with 324 MPs.
But new study by More in Common has revealed that Zack Polanski’s hard-left party will win 22 seats, plunging Keir Starmer’s party into a new crisis as it faces attacks from the Left and Right of British politics.
The MRP poll found Chancellor Ms Reeves, Energy Secretary Mr Miliband, Foreign Secretary Ms Cooper, Defense Secretary John Healey and Chief Whip Jonathan Reynolds would be defeated by UK Reform candidates.
The Prime Minister’s Principal Secretary Darren Jones, Business Secretary Peter Kyle and Northern Ireland Minister Hilary Benn will lose to the Greens.
More in Common’s Luke Tryl said Labor heavyweight Angela Rayner would also lose to Reform.
Sir Keir’s party will lose 310 seats, leaving just 101 seats remaining.
Kemi Badenoch’s Conservative Party will also lose 40 votes, resulting in the Conservatives receiving 81 votes in Parliament.
Reform will win 324 seats, while the Greens will win 22 seats.
The Liberal Democrats will lose 10 seats, leaving 62 seats.
UK Reform Leader Mr Farage said a ballot box “humiliation” of the Prime Minister would make it “almost impossible for him to endure much longer”.
And Mr Farage announced he would face Labor in the party’s strongholds in the North West and North East England.
The leader, who is ahead in opinion polls, is urging voters to see the May 7 local elections as a referendum on the Prime Minister, branding him the “most unpopular” in history.
Mr Farage, who introduced Reform’s new slogan for local elections as “Vote Reform, get Starmer out”, told the Daily Express: “Basically, if Labor suffers humiliation in England, Wales and Scotland, it will be almost impossible for it to last until the end of May.”
Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch, Shadow Chancellor Mel Stride and Shadow Housing Secretary Sir James Cleverly will also lose their seats.




