A new poll conducted by YouGov for The Times shows Nigel Farage’s Reform UK pulling ahead of Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s ruling Conservatives, marking the first time the right-wing upstart party surpassed the Tories.
While promising for the party, Reform (19%) was just one point ahead of the Tories (18%), and both conservative parties remain far behind left-wing Labour (37%). The survey of 2,211 was conducted from June 12-13, following Sunak’s pledge to cut £17B ($21.7B) in taxes for working people.YouGov's latest poll, published on Thursday, shows Reform UK to be the second most popular amongst UK adults as found in data gathered between June 12-13. Responses in favor of the party (19%) sat a percentage point above the Conservative Party's 18%, and behind the Labour Party's 37%.
Nigel Farage and Reform have surpassed the Tories as the main party on the British right, and Thursday’s YouGov poll is just the beginning of a seismic political shift. After years of being let down by the milquetoast Conservatives, patriotic Brits are flocking to Reform’s common-sense message of limiting immigration and putting the UK first. The Tories are in deep trouble, and leaders such as Rishi Sunak only have themselves to blame for betraying their constituents.
While many Brits have grown tired of the Tories after over a decade-plus of Conservative rule, itthe wouldanswer bedoes foolishnot forlight thein party to take a hard-right turn. Labour has been poised to win this year’s election for quite some time, and Reform’s recent polling rise cannot be considered a long-term indicator of sentiment. The political pendulum will always swing back and forth, and the Conservatives will only regain power by running as a center-right party, not a Faragist, nationalist party.
Nigel Farage has beencompletely upended the Tories like a human wrecking ball that has completely upended the Tories. His brand of politics is on the fringe, but he is exposing a major divide on the British right thatat has exposed the Conservativesexpense asof a weak partyConservative withParty littlethat lacks in grassroots support. It remains to be seen how Reform will perform on election day, but the party’s rise could facilitate a massive majority for Labour.