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Polls say UK conservatives head for election wipeout

Survation predicts Labour will win 262-seat majority, with Conservatives cut to 72 seats



The figures illustrate how Sunak’s weak position going into the campaign has deteriorated since he called the surprise vote three weeks ago.
Image Credit: AFP

London: UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s Conservative Party is headed for a historic wipeout in the July 4 general election, according to three new polls published in Sunday newspapers.

An MRP poll by Survation published in the Times predicts the Labour opposition will win a 262-seat majority in Parliament, with the Conservatives cut to just 72 seats.

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Opinium’s survey for the Observer showed Labour with a 17-point lead, and Savanta predicted “electoral extinction” for Sunak’s party in a poll for the Sunday Telegraph.

The figures illustrate how Sunak’s weak position going into the campaign has deteriorated since he called the surprise vote three weeks ago.

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They suggest the Conservatives headed for their worst defeat since the party was formed two centuries ago, with fewer than half the seats they had after a rout in 1906.

“Our research suggests that this election could be nothing short of electoral extinction for the Conservative Party,” said Chris Hopkins, political research director at Savanta.

Conservatives have started to warn about the risks of handing Labour such a commanding majority.

Former Cabinet minister Robert Jenrick told the Telegraph that the UK may end up as an “elective dictatorship that will be equally unrestrained on raising taxes.”

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Labour, for their part, are warning voters not to be complacent about the polls.

“This election is not settled yet,” Shadow Health Secretary Wes Streeting told Sky News on Sunday.

“I do not want people to wake up to a nightmare on Downing Street on the fifth of July.”

The Independent said voters’ trust in the Conservatives on tax issues has collapsed. A survey by Techne UK for the newspaper found 36 per cent trust Labour leader Keir Starmer on tax compared with 16 per cent for Sunak.

In an interview with the Sunday Times, Sunak acknowleged the economic backdrop is a challenge for the Conservatives but that the nation has turned a corner.

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“We have had a tough time,” Sunak told the Times in an interview published Sunday.

“That’s not someone’s fault that we had a pandemic and then a war in Ukraine, and that is a big source of the frustration and insecurity that people feel and all the damage that it’s done to our living standards over the past few years.”

42,000 interviews

“But I really think that after a lot of hard work and resilience from everybody, we’ve got through the worst of that and we’ve turned a corner. The economy is growing faster than all our major competitors. Inflation is back to normal, wages are rising, energy bills are falling, so people can, I hope, start to feel more confident about the future.”

Survation’s MRP work used 42,000 interviews from May 31 to June 13 and was the most detailed. It showed:

Savanta’s research suggested Labour has a 25-point lead, the biggest since Liz Truss’ brief term as prime minister in 2022.

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It had Labour on 46 per cent of the vote, the Conservatives with 21 per cent and Reform at 13 per cent.

Liberal Democrats were in fourth place with 11 per cent. That survey of 2,045 adults was done June 12-14.

“There’s a real sense that things could still get worse for the Conservatives,” Hopkins said,

“Time is already close to running out for Rishi Sunak.”

Opinium said the two main parties are on track for their lowest share of the vote since 1945, with voters drifting to other groups like Reform and the Liberal Democrats.

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It found smaller parties had gained ground during the campaign. That bucked the pattern seen in 2019 where voters increasingly opted for the main parties as the campaign went on.

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