Reform set to win next election as bombshell poll shows Starmer’s Labour crumbling | Politics | News

The new voting reform put the Britain at the highest share of the vote to date and brought Nigel Farage to the polar position in the number 10 race. When the party’s popularity among voters fell in recent months since last year’s general elections, the Reform’s highest view survey fell in other places where the selective insertions hit. The findings based on the field study between 29 May and 4 June shared 34% of the vote and the Labor Party was nine points behind at 25% and conservatives were 15%.
Although the next general election will not be held until 2029, the new survey argues that if the voting occurs today, Farage’s party will get a comfortable majority. The reproduction of İPSOS’s findings in the context of the upcoming election can make more than 400 seat reforms, Telegram Labour’s grasping can only relax in 140 seats and conservatives may fall to an insufficient 10.
Farage showed the results that the results believe that we can now win the next election. “
The first political monitor, which has been published since the general elections in July, shows that Sir Keir Starmer has fallen into the popularity of the Labor Party since he entered the Downing Street almost a year ago.
The party’s share of votes is the lowest level in 2019, shortly before the defeat of the disaster under Jeremy Corbyn, and the Prime Minister’s personal ratings are among the lowest history and 73% say they are not satisfied with the business performance so far.
The terrible political position of the conservatives has been left naked, and the findings have shown that one of the three of the 2024 voters have been 12% of labor voters, 8% of liberal democrats and 5% of the Greens.
Nigel Farage completed the list of leading satisfaction ratings with 19% of Starmer’s 19% and Badenoch’s 11% of Badenoch, but all three have negative clear satisfaction in -15, -54 and -49 respectively.
The party leader also performs significantly better than its competitors, 90% of the reform fans were satisfied with the time spent at the rudder, while 59% of the workers’ voters are satisfied with the government and said that only 36% of Tories said the same parties.
IPSOS uses an online voter panel selected by using random probability sampling, and the participants are adjusted to adult population profile on factors such as age, gender, qualifications and ethnic origin.
Gideon Skinner, the senior director of the UK politics in IPSOS, said: “With our first voting intention since the election, it has been a long time in politics.
“Reform UK continued to improve its success with its support and especially enthusiasm among the working class voters, and by voting from conservatives with both labor and especially signs of recovery.”
“We know how difficult it is to shift on the cost of living, migration and public services of the established public pessimism, and so far the British do not think that the Labor Party has provided the concrete change they hoped for in 2024.”
“The worker hopes that the expenditure examination will begin to make the narrative a more positive renewal, but the difficulty they face is important.”