
Angela Rayner and several senior Labour Cabinet members could be out of a job if a general election were held tomorrow, according to a jaw-dropping new mega poll. The survey by More in Common suggests that 10 of Sir Keir Starmer’s top team, including key figures like Yvette Cooper and Wes Streeting, are at serious risk of being voted out.
The polling, which surveyed over 16,000 people, claims Deputy Prime Minister Rayner, Home Secretary Cooper, Health Secretary Streeting, and Energy Secretary Ed Miliband are all set to lose their seats. Others on the chopping block include Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson, Defence Secretary John Healey, Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds, Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy, Cabinet Office boss Pat McFadden, and Chief Whip Alan Campbell, reported The Express.
Most of them, according to the data, would lose their seats to Nigel Farage’s Reform UK, which is making massive gains. The only exception appears to be Wes Streeting, whose Ilford North seat would reportedly flip to an independent.
The poll projects that Labour would lose a staggering 246 seats, dropping them to 165 MPS — the same as the Conservatives. But the real twist? Reform UK, which currently only has four MPS, would surge to 180, making it the largest party in Parliament. That’s a dramatic turnaround no one would’ve predicted a year ago.
Despite Reform’s rise, no party would have enough seats to form a majority, meaning another hung Parliament would be on the cards.
More in Common’s UK director, Luke Tryl, said the results show British politics has “fragmented to an unprecedented level.” He explained that the voter base that brought Labour to power has now split both left and right, with Reform UK reaping the benefits.
“Reform’s momentum is real,” Tryl said, adding that it’s still unclear whether the party’s current surge is a stepping stone to government or the peak of its appeal due to Farage’s divisive image.
As for Labour, he warned the party is being punished by an electorate that’s growing frustrated with the pace of change and early government blunders. The polling even points to Labour losing ground in former strongholds like South Yorkshire, the Welsh Valleys, and Greater Manchester.
If these numbers hold, Labour’s historic 2024 victory could be short-lived, and some of its biggest names could be heading for the exit.
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