Reform on brink of outright majority at next election, major new poll says

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Nigel Farage is on track to become Britain’s next prime minister, with a major new poll showing the party is close to having enough support to form a majority government if an election were held today.

The seat-by-seat YouGov poll, the second such poll since the election, indicates the party has extended its lead over Labour, significantly increasing Mr Farage’s chances of entering Downing Street in 2029.

The poll suggests Reform would increase its MPs from just five to 311, making it the largest party in a hung parliament and just 15 seats short of the 326 needed for an outright majority.

Reform UK Leader Nigel Farage

Reform UK Leader Nigel Farage (PA Wire)

In June, the last time YouGov conducted a seat-by-seat poll, it put Reform on track to have 271 MPs.

The multi-level regression and post-stratification poll (MRP) showed Labour would lose 267 of the seats it won in 2024, putting the party on just 144 MPs. This is down from the 178 MPs YouGov predicted they would win in their last MRP poll.

The Tories would also face a disaster scenario, being left with just 45 MPs, the poll showed – putting them behind Reform UK, Labour and the Liberal Democrats, which the poll put on 78 MPs. This is a marginal improvement from the 72 seats they won at the general election.

Meanwhile, the SNP would win 37 seats, the Greens would win seven and Plaid Cymru would win six.

The disastrous polling for Labour comes amid growing questions over Sir Keir Starmer’s leadership of the party, with voters increasingly feeling that Labour has so far failed to get a grip on the problems facing the country.

There are now an increasing number of Labour MPs looking to Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham as a possible successor to the prime minister.

This week, Mr Burnham said Labour MPs are privately urging him to challenge for the Labour leadership, accusing Downing Street of creating a “climate of fear” and said “wholesale change” was needed to see off the “existential” threat of Nigel Farage’s Reform UK.

It came as Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar, who has been an outspoken ally of Sir Keir since he took over as leader, refused to say he has full confidence in the prime minister.

Sir Keir Starmer argued that it is possible to be concerned about immigration while rejecting Reform UK’s ‘toxic’ approach (PA)

Sir Keir Starmer argued that it is possible to be concerned about immigration while rejecting Reform UK’s ‘toxic’ approach (PA) (PA Wire)

But speaking to regional media, Sir Keir insisted he would lead Labour into the next election, saying he has been “very clear that this is a project of national renewal”.

“I’m very clear that that is a ten year project. I led from the front into the last election. I’ll lead from the front into the next election”, he told ITV Meridian.

If the latest YouGov polling materialised at an election, it would leave Reform able to form a majority government with the Conservatives. But Labour would be unable to form a majority even if it were to agree a pact with the Liberal Democrats, the SNP, Plaid Cymru and the Greens.

The MRP poll, which surveys political support at a constituency level, was based on a survey of more than 11,000 people.