Reform would win most seats if general election took place now, new poll reveals

Reform Britain, if a general election is held tomorrow, the British will be the largest party of the UK, a new survey showing Nigel Farage to become Prime Minister.
The rebellious right -wing party would jump from only five deputies to 271, and Mr. Farage would be ready to form a minority government.
Labor would collapse only 178 from holding 403 chairs, and Sir Keir has fallen since the general elections due to the popularity of Starmer, a series of disasters and chaotic urights.

With a warning that will put the alarm bells in the government, the Yougov questionnaire, cabin ministers Angela Rayner, Yette Cooper, Bridget Phillipson, Jonathan Reynolds, Lisa Nandy, John Healy and Pat McFadden found their seats.
And while Mr. Farage continues to rise in surveys, reform will be the largest party in East Midlands, England, North East, South East, Wales, West Midlands and Yorkshire and Humber.
Since the general election, Megapoll, which has been called the first MRP or megapoll of the interviewer. In addition to demonstrating the rise of the reform and the collapse of labor, he points out that the conservatives fell further after the worst election performances in the record.
Kemi Badenoch’s party would only win 46 seats in the general election and fall from 120 to 120, and left the party fourth behind the liberal democrats.
The questionnaire showed that the reform would win 26 percent of the votes, that Labour will be in the second place in 23 percent, and that conservatives will take 18 percent and Lib DEMS by 15 percent.

The greens would earn 11 percent of the votes and would buy a handful of new seats to keep seven.
To the north of the border, the SNP would return to sovereignty and win 29 seats in general to win 38.
Yougov said that Reform was the greatest beneficiary of Labour’s collapse with 194 seats where Sir Keir’s party returned to Mr. Farage.
The questionnaire said that if the decline is reflected in a general election, it would be “surprising ve and that Labour’s 2024 majority were so big and that many of them expect to carry them with at least two election cycles”.
The Damn Survey comes in the middle of a major rebellion among the workers’ Backbencher’s Backbencher, which is not deep popular in reducing £ 5 billion from Sir Keir’s Useful Invoice.
The Prime Minister is preparing to present privileges of rebellious workers in prosperity deductions, while the second major policy is reversed within weeks.
This month, Sir Keir comes with the government’s decision to reduce winter fuel payments for millions of retirees, which was accused of heavy losses in the local elections of the party.