Scale of Sunak’s UK election challenge laid bare by disastrous polling

Nigel Farage’s Reform UK, blamed by many Tories for siphoning off right-wing votes, was forecast to win seven.

Britain’s Labour Party leader Keir Starmer. Photo: PA via AP

Sunak, who has been in office for less than 20 months, insists that he’s still fighting to win.

The UK’s first Hindu prime minister told The Sunday Times that he was guided by the concept of dharma, which he said roughly translates as “doing your duty and not having a focus on the outcomes of it”.

“Work as hard as you can, do what you believe is right, and try, and what will be will be,” he said.

In a sign of concern among senior Conservatives, Transport Secretary Mark Harper on Sunday told BBC TV that defecting voters risked giving Starmer an unassailable majority.

“It’s very clear if you’re somebody who voted for us in 2019 and you want lower taxes and you want to control migration, if you vote for anybody else other than the Conservatives you’re going to get a Labour government with a large majority and a blank cheque,” Harper said.

Robert Jenrick, a former Tory minister and one-time close ally of Sunak, wrote in the Sunday Telegraph that the UK risks “sleepwalking into a very dangerous future”, before pulling apart his own party’s record in government and saying he understood why Conservatives are being drawn to Reform.

“Not only do I understand their frustrations, I share many of them,” Jenrick wrote. “The tax burden is too high, criminal justice system too soft and public services too inefficient. My disagreements with the government on immigration policy meant I resigned from the Cabinet.”

Savanta’s poll put Reform UK on 13 per cent, its highest rating yet by the pollster, while Opinium put the party up two percentage points on 14 per cent, also a record.

Leader of Reform UK Nigel Farage. Photo: AFP

Bloomberg’s poll of polls on Friday also had Reform at an all-time high – after a YouGov survey last week put the insurgent party ahead of the Tories for the first time, prompting Farage to declare Reform “the opposition to Labour”.

Reform on Monday was expected to publish its election manifesto, which it’s calling a “contract with the people”. And while Farage said last week that the Conservative Party brand is “done,” he’s also gunning for Labour, as shown by his choice of Merthyr Tydfil in Wales – a Labour seat – for the manifesto launch.

“If you want a picture of what the whole country will be like with a Starmer government and a feeble Conservative opposition, come to Wales,” Farage said in a statement on Sunday.

“Schools are worse than in England, NHS waiting lists are longer than in England, Covid restrictions were even tighter than in England and now Welsh motorists are being soaked by literally hundreds of speed cameras,” he said.

The Scottish National Party is also set to publish its electoral promises this week. Its new leader, John Swinney, sought in a statement late on Sunday to portray Labour as joining the Tories in “offering only cuts, austerity and stagnation”.

Survation’s so-called Multilevel Regression and Post-stratification poll put Labour on 456 seats, the Liberal Democrats on 56, and the SNP on 37, a drop from 48 in 2019. The modeling is based on more than 42,000 interviews conducted between the May 31 and June 13.

Savanta gave Labour a 25-point advantage and said potential “electoral extinction” awaited the Tories. Opinium has Labour leading by 17 points.

Additional reporting by Associated Press

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