Today: 8 February 2025
8 June 2023
1 min read

‘Labour on course for landslide win in next polls’

The general election poses a headache to pollsters and campaign strategists, as constituency boundaries are being redrawn for the first time in several election cycles…reports Asian Lite News

Keir Starmer is on course to clinch a landslide majority of 140 for Labour at the next UK general election, the first modelling based on a mega poll of new constituency boundaries suggests.

With the Conservatives still suffering from a large polling deficit, Labour’s support was found to be at about 35 per cent to 12 per cent ahead of Rishi Sunak’s party.

The results were revealed in an analysis of polling known as multi-level regression and post-stratification (MRP), and will boost Starmer’s hopes of victory as the long campaign in the run-up to the next election progresses.

John Curtice, a political commentator, said that since the sleaze scandals that engulfed Boris Johnson and Liz Truss’s mini-budget, there had been a “very substantial” drop in support for the Tories. Though Sunak had sought to steady the party, Curtice said there had been only “a bit of a narrowing” of Labour’s lead.

The general election poses a headache to pollsters and campaign strategists, as constituency boundaries are being redrawn for the first time in several election cycles.

In the first MRP based on the new boundaries, conducted by FocalData and presented by the Best For Britain campaign group, Labour’s potential success was said to be under varying degrees of risk, The Guardian reported.

If the Reform party – the reincarnation of the Brexit party – repeats the tactic used in 2019, of standing aside in Tory marginals, Labour’s seats would still be at a healthy 401, leaving the Conservatives on 202.

Another scenario has Labour winning 370 seats to the Tories’ 232, based on redistributing undecided voters by their education profile.

If both were combined, under what was billed as Labour’s “worst-case scenario”, the model predicts a hung parliament – with the party about a dozen seats short of a majority, with 316, leaving the Tories at 286.

The poll of 10,140 voters was undertaken between April 20 and May 9.

ALSO READ-Asylum system completely broken, says Labour

Previous Story

Historical Baggage Impedes Bangladesh-US Reconciliation

Next Story

Erdogan discusses Ukrainian crisis with Putin

Latest from -Top News

‘Ozoum’ shines light on social change 

A groundbreaking Saudi television series is offering an unprecedented glimpse into the Kingdom’s social transformation, captivating domestic audiences and challenging long-standing perceptions, writes Pedro Carvalho  A groundbreaking television series is offering unprecedented

KCF Festival Unites Karnataka Talent in UAE 

Enthusiastic participants displayed Karnataka’s cultural legacy through various artistic performances, making the event a grand celebration of talent.   The 6th edition of the KCF UAE National Level Talent Festival, Prathibhotsava 25, was

SME growth in focus at UAE-South Africa talks 

Bin Salem highlighted that SMEs constitute over 75-80 percent of total enterprises globally…reports Asian Lite News   Humaid Mohammed bin Salem, Secretary-General of the Federation of UAE Chambers of Commerce and Industry

UAE unveils Green IP roadmap to boost innovation 

This three-month initiative seeks to enhance the country’s IP competitiveness while supporting its transition to a circular economy. ..reports Asian Lite News The UAE Ministry of Economy has introduced a new “Green Intellectual
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Sadiq promises 40,000 new London council homes  

The target is double that Khan set himself between 2018

London spikes Labour dreams

Rishi Sunak has avoided a clean sweep of by-election defeats