A new poll shows Nigel Farage’s right-wing Reform UK surpassing Labour as Britain’s most popular party, highlighting growing public discontent with PM Keir Starmer less than seven months into his term [Getty]
Nigel Farage’s right-wing Reform UK party is now the most popular political party in Britain, beating the governing Labour Party to take the lead for the first time in an opinion poll published on Monday.
The poll, conducted by YouGov for the Times newspaper, showed that if a general election were held tomorrow 25% of British voters would choose Reform, 24% would pick Labour, and 21% would vote for the Conservatives.
Reform’s one-point lead over Labour in the poll – which surveyed 2,465 people over February 2-3 – is within the margin of error, YouGov said.
Labour, which won the national election in July last year by a landslide, dropped three points when compared to the last survey conducted on January 26-27, while Reform gained two points.
Starmer, who led Labour into a landslide win in last year’s election and ended 14 years of Conservative rule, has suffered a number of early setbacks, most notably the fallout of a tax-raising budget.
A sluggish economy has also plagued the new government.
On the other hand, Farage’s populist views have helped his party gain ground over Britain’s two major political parties.
Farage, a friend of US President Donald Trump, was one of the leading campaigners for Britain to leave the European Union in 2016, and supports reduced immigration and lower taxes.
Britain’s ‘first past the post’ electoral system meant Reform won just five out of the 650 parliamentary seats in last year’s national election, despite a 14.3% overall vote share. Labour’s landslide 63.2% seat share came on a vote share of 33.7%.
“Britain wants Reform,” Farage said on social media platform X on Monday, posting the latest poll.
The Conservatives – one of the world’s oldest political parties – fell further behind under leader Kemi Badenoch, losing one point in the poll.
In July, they recorded their worst ever election performance under former Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.