Nigel Farage’s Reform Party leads a new voting intention poll in the United Kingdom, increasing its share of support by one point to 27 percent. The Find Out Now survey, conducted on January 29, found the ruling, far-left Labour Party has also increased its support by one point since a previous poll on January 22 but trails Reform by four points, at 23 percent. Meanwhile, the formerly governing Conservative Party, or Tories, had dropped two points to 22 percent.
The poll provides further evidence that Reform is replacing the Conservatives, who governed from 2010 to July 2024, on the British right, despite its new leadership under Nigeria-raised Olukemi “Kemi” Olufunto Adegoke Badenoch. While notionally a right-wing party, the Conservatives governed largely from the left, particularly under former Prime Minister Boris Johnson—who was heavily influenced by his liberal, much younger wife, Carrie Symonds.
Campaigning on a platform of securing cheaper energy and “taking back control” of Britain’s borders, Johnson oversaw a fracking ban and implemented immigration changes that saw the number of non-European migrants increase fivefold. The Conservatives also failed to control illegal immigration, particularly via small boats crossing the English Channel from France.
The Conservatives continue to defend their mass migration policies, with Shadow Foreign Secretary Priti Patel—the Cabinet minister responsible for immigration under Johnson—claiming falsely that the influx of mostly low-skilled foreign workers and dependents was comprised of “the brightest and the best.”
Speaking to Farage in 2023, President Donald J. Trump said the Conservatives’ lurch to the left “never made sense.”
“[T]hey really weren’t staying conservative… they were literally going far left,” he said.
Find Out Now voting intention:
🟦 Reform UK: 27% (+1)
🔴 Labour: 23% (+1)
🔵 Conservatives: 21% (-2)
🟠 Lib Dems: 11% (-1)
🟢 Greens: 10% (-)Changes from 22nd January
[Find Out Now, 29th January, N=2,487] pic.twitter.com/AH4JDoIKh7— Find Out Now (@FindoutnowUK) January 30, 2025
Image by Inc.Monocle.