1 in 4 want Nigel Farage to be next Prime Minister as regretful Labour voters turn to Reform UK, new poll reveals
According to recent research, a quarter of British people want Nigel Farage to be the next prime minister.
According to a More In Common survey, 23% of people support the Reform head succeeding Sir Keir Starmer.
Large numbers of voters, meanwhile, express sorrow for supporting Sir Keir.
In the July general election, one in four British citizens who supported the prime minister now regret their decision.
Of them, 20% would choose the Liberal Democrats, while 28% are now in the Reform camp.
According to the polling done for LBC, Mr. Farage’s growing popularity is currently one of the main challenges facing Sir Keir in the next elections, including the May locals.
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According to a survey by More In Common, 62% of British people believe that Labour does not take immigration seriously enough.
Furthermore, just 19% are happy with the way ministers are handling the main problem.
One Labour insider who participated in the survey stated: “The Labour Government is moving on with implementing the Plan for Change.
Since the beginning, we have made it plain that doing so will require making the difficult choices required to reverse 14 years of Tory disarray and decline.
“While the opposition fight among themselves, the Labour Government is putting in the hard yards to deliver much-needed growth, create more jobs, make people better off by putting more money in people s pockets, rebuild Britain and get our NHS back on its feet.”
It comes as the prime minister is engaged in a verbal spar with tech billionaire Elon Musk and is under intense public pressure about the problem of child sexual exploitation.
In response to allegations that he become lenient toward Asian rapegangs, the prime minister finally launched a scathing attack on Tommy Robinson and Elon Musk yesterday.
When he announced amendments to the legislation that would make it illegal for councils or social workers to refuse to report child abuse, he accused the richest man in the world of facilitating fanatics and spreading poison.
However, Sir Keir caused a significant response when he implied that those advocating for a fresh look into the grooming crisis were following the far right’s lead.
Last night, victims and MPs denounced the remarks, calling Sir Keir’s remarks an egregious slander.
Maggie Oliver, a former police investigator and whistleblower about grooming gangs, expressed her intense anger at the PM’s remarks.
I am not an activist for the far right, she told GB News. As a woman who has devoted fifteen years of her life to law enforcement, safeguarding children is my first priority.
My acquaintances are all victims whose lives have been ruined.
It is really offensive to dismiss them as far right, and it further demonstrates how it is a smoke screen for the problem.
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It would be absurd to imply that they are the far-right.
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