Rishi Sunak is tearing through Labour lead and could push election into hung parliament, poll reveals
RISHI Sunak is tearing chunks out of Labour’s polling lead and could push the next election into a hung parliament, according to a new poll.
The survey by Best for Britain found if a general election was held today, Sir Keir Starmer's party would win a 470 seat landslide.
But the Labour chief's support is fading “everywhere” as the PM wins back voters who deserted the Tories under predecessor Liz Truss.
The poll of 10,140 voters is the first to take into account new constituency boundaries, which will be used for the first time at next year's general election.
If undecided voters break for the Tories and the right-wing Reform party stands down candidates in marginal seats, then Westminster is on course for a hung parliament.
Labour would win 316 seats, with the Tories on 286.
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In Scotland swathes of voters are moving from the SNP to undecided, paving the way for Labour to pick up 31 seats.
New constituencies mean new battlegrounds have been drawn.
A mega 206 of 632 seats in Britain are marginals.
Of those, Labour is currently placing first or second in 197.
Best for Britain CEO Naomi Smith said: "That Labour lead is significant, but smaller than the last time.
"Labour's lead has shrunk and that's largely from our read of our data because Mr Sunak has managed to win back some of those Tory voters distracted by the Truss-Kwarteng disaster budget.
"Labour's margins are falling everywhere."
Luke Tryl, UK Director of the More In Common think tank, said the word Brits associate with Starmer is “meh”.
“His voice grates with a lot of people,” Mr Tryl added.
He also said that Boris Johnson's allegation that Sir Keir failed to prosecute the disgraced dead paedophile Jimmy Saville "has stuck with the electorate”.
The major poll comes as Mr Sunak is in Washington DC for talks with US President Joe Biden.
The pair - who have already met three times since the PM got to No10 - are set to discuss a new economic alliance, global regulation of AI, and the ongoing war in Ukraine.
Tory MPs demand return to low taxes at secret meeting
EXCLUSIVE by JACK ELSOM
A FACTION of Tory MPs last night demanded a return to low taxes and traditional policies.
Roughly 20 backbenchers in the New Conservatives group aired their grievances to party chairman Greg Hands.
Over crisps and wine in the office of former party leader Sir Iain Duncah Smith, they lobbied for a change of direction.
An insider said tax cuts were on the agenda, with MPs also getting Brits skilled in industries in need of staff.
They said: "Despite being from a leafy London seat, Greg was very amiable and clearly in listening mode."