❓WHAT HAPPENED: A new poll shows Reform Party leader Nigel Farage surpassing Labour Party leader Sir Keir Starmer in public preference for British prime minister.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Nigel Farage, Prime Minister Starmer, Ipsos polling firm, and British voters.
📍WHEN & WHERE: The Ipsos survey was conducted this week in the United Kingdom.
💬KEY QUOTE: “I am humbled by these figures and promise not to let people down.” – Nigel Farage
🎯IMPACT: Farage’s Reform Party is gaining ground, with the governing Labour Party losing support to the far-left Greens, Reform, and the globalist Liberal Democrats.
Reform Party leader Nigel Farage has Labour Party leader Sir Keir Starmer as the public’s preferred choice for Prime Minister of the United Kingdom for the first time, according to a new Ipsos survey. The poll found that 33 percent of respondents believe Farage would make the best national leader, compared with 30 percent for Prime Minister Starmer, a sharp reversal from July, when the Labour leader held an eight-point advantage.
The results come amid a slump in support for the leftist Labour Party and a growing shift towards outsider parties such as Farage’s populist-right Reform Party and the far-left Greens. Ipsos also reported that the public now favours Reform’s policies on immigration, taxation, public services, and the economy over those of Labour or other major parties.
Reacting to the figures, Farage said: “I am humbled by these figures and promise not to let people down.” Keiran Pedley, Director of Politics at Ipsos UK, said, “Our data also shows a growing public confidence in Reform’s proposed plans for the economy and immigration, which Britons consistently rank at the top of the issues that they see as most important to them.”
The findings mark a significant setback for Labour, which a separate YouGov poll puts at just 17 percent support, its lowest level in years. That places Labour ten points behind Reform and only a single point ahead of the Greens, who, under socialist leader Zach Polanski, are drawing increasing numbers of disillusioned Labour voters.
Farage’s rise follows a series of developments that have propelled Reform, formerly the Brexit Party, to a serious electoral contender. A September poll projected that Reform could win as many as 311 seats in the House of Commons, placing it within reach of an outright majority. The party has also attracted numerous defections from the formerly governing Conservatives, including 20 local politicians who switched allegiance during the Tory conference earlier this month.
Reports have emerged that the Starmer government is now considering delaying local elections for a second time amid fears of sweeping Reform gains, a move Farage denounced as “completely outrageous.”
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