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Farage’s Reform Poised to Overtake Labour and Tories in Historic Political Shift

 

Nigel Farage’s Reform UK would emerge as Britain’s largest political party if a general election were held today, according to a landmark poll that underscores the dramatic collapse in support for Labour and the Conservatives. The YouGov MRP survey—its first since Labour’s landslide victory last year—suggests Reform is on track to send 271 MPs to Westminster, up from just five currently, making it the dominant force in a hung parliament.

 

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The findings reveal an extraordinary reversal in fortunes for Sir Keir Starmer, whose Labour Party would lose 233 of the 412 seats it won just one year ago. “Just a year since Labour’s election landslide, the party is on course to win fewer seats than it did in 2019,” said Patrick English, director of political analytics at YouGov. “That a clear majority would now vote for someone other than the two established main parties of British politics is a striking marker of just how far the fragmentation of the voting public has gone over the past decade.”

 

The Conservatives would fare even worse, losing 75 more seats and falling to just 46 MPs—leaving Kemi Badenoch’s party trailing Reform, Labour, and the Liberal Democrats. While Badenoch would retain her seat, senior Tories including former foreign secretary Sir James Cleverly and former chancellor Sir Jeremy Hunt would be swept out. Of the 119 current Tory MPs, 73 would lose their seats, with many falling to Reform and the Lib Dems.

 

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Labour’s front bench would also be gutted. According to the poll, home secretary Yvette Cooper, deputy prime minister Angela Rayner, and education secretary Bridget Phillipson would all be defeated by Reform challengers. Other projected Labour casualties include business secretary Jonathan Reynolds, culture secretary Lisa Nandy, defence secretary John Healey, and Cabinet Office minister Pat McFadden.

 

The Lib Dems, meanwhile, would continue their resurgence, climbing from 72 seats in 2024 to 81, their highest total in decades. The SNP is expected to bounce back from its previous losses, reclaiming most of the Scottish seats lost to Labour and securing a total of 38. Smaller parties would also benefit: both the Greens and Plaid Cymru are predicted to gain three seats each, bringing them to seven MPs apiece.

 

Despite its surge, Reform would fall short of an outright majority. A coalition with the Conservatives would still leave the right-leaning bloc nine seats shy. On the other side, Labour would be unable to form a majority even with support from the Lib Dems, SNP, Plaid Cymru, and Greens.

 

The MRP poll, based on over 11,000 interviews and considered one of the most reliable predictors of seat-level outcomes, paints a picture of a political order being upended. Labour and the Conservatives—dominant forces in British politics for over a century—are projected to win only 224 of the 650 seats between them, a mere 34 per cent of Parliament. Their combined vote share has dropped to just 41 per cent, down from 59 per cent at the last election.

 

Reform’s gains are widespread and geographically diverse. The party is projected to be the largest in the east Midlands, east of England, northeast, southeast, Wales, West Midlands, and Yorkshire and the Humber. It is even set to match Labour in the northwest, a region traditionally dominated by the left.

 

The political map shows that Reform would seize 194 seats from Labour alone. Starmer’s party would also lose 27 seats to the SNP in Scotland, six to the Tories in England, three to the Greens, three to Plaid, and one to the Lib Dems.

 

This unprecedented surge for Farage and collapse for the traditional parties is likely to trigger intense pressure on both Starmer and Badenoch. Labour faces internal rebellion, particularly from MPs concerned about the political costs of welfare cuts, while Badenoch may face a leadership challenge before the next election.

 

In a single year, British politics has been transformed. Reform UK, once a fringe movement, now stands on the brink of making Nigel Farage the next prime minister of the United Kingdom.

 

image.png  Adapted by ASEAN Now from The Times  2025-06-28

 

 

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Posted

Farage, the honourable MP for Clacton (🤭), spent a huge amount of time doing his thing supporting Trump during his campaign, now I wonder if he is embarrassed about it.....😂..... 😥

 

If Farage gets in, he will most likely sell the UK for Trump's 51st State to pay for his cock-ups and teeth replacement.........🤭

 

Farage is no more than a gift-of-the-gab, salesman, same as Trump.....😧

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Posted
4 hours ago, Chomper Higgot said:

The election isn’t due for another 4 years.

 

Time one would think for Reform to come up with some actual coatings for their basket of easy promises.

 

 

You mean like Labour did.

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Posted
4 hours ago, Chomper Higgot said:

The election isn’t due for another 4 years.

 

Time one would think for Reform to come up with some actual coatings for their basket of easy promises.

Time for the Tories to collapse further and stop splitting the right wing vote resulting in a massive loss for your commie mates in Islington. 

Posted
11 minutes ago, transam said:

Farage is no more than a gift-of-the-gab, salesman,

 

Then you best not read this

 

 

IMG_3784.webp.4195719dd4b87a652aaee0190cb2fed7.webp

 

I understand that some, not all, of our readers have genuine impediments to understanding written English. So this guy has provided commentary and broken it down into easily understandable English

 

 

 

Lying, deceitful, sad excuse for a human being. Only just beaten into 2nd place by a certain T Blair.

 

However as Chomper points out, there is still 4 years where he could potentially surpass T Blair and be so far in front, that he would be in a league of his own.

 

Or perhaps the howls of " When are you going to resign PM " will start ringing out from the likes of the BBC, Sky News etc, from Monday morning.

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Posted
4 minutes ago, The Cyclist said:

 

Then you best not read this

 

 

IMG_3784.webp.4195719dd4b87a652aaee0190cb2fed7.webp

 

I understand that some, not all, of our readers have genuine impediments to understanding written English. So this guy has provided commentary and broken it down into easily understandable English

 

 

 

Lying, deceitful, sad excuse for a human being. Only just beaten into 2nd place by a certain T Blair.

 

However as Chomper points out, there is still 4 years where he could potentially surpass T Blair and be so far in front, that he would be in a league of his own.

 

Or perhaps the howls of " When are you going to resign PM " will start ringing out from the likes of the BBC, Sky News etc, from Monday morning.

I like watching The BB Barristers stuff.......🤗

Posted
8 hours ago, brewsterbudgen said:

Plenty of time for Reform to implode, which they surely will!

But Labour and the Tories will still be the inept, back stabbing 5h1tes that we know them to be.

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