Nigel Farage’s party strengthened, the British turned away from the Labor Party due to mass migration

The number of mandates for Nigel Farage’s Reform UK party would increase to 120 if the UK elections were held today. The party sent only five representatives to parliament in the general elections in July. The left-wing British Labor Party would fall from 411 seats to 278 seats, the conservatives and according to the surveys, they would win 157 seats.

The change is clearly caused by voters’ concerns about immigration and migration problems.

According to the survey, 55 percent of voters who supported the Labor Party in last year’s elections, but now support the Reform Party, indicated immigration as their main concern, followed by health care at 47 percent, the cost of living at 46 percent, and energy prices at 32 percent.

Commenting on his party’s growing support, Reform UK chairman Zia Yusuf said:

This shows that Reform is making history and will win the next general election.

Evaluating the results of the survey, he stated:

Reform won five seats in July. After six months, this survey shows that we can win 120 mandates. Imagine where we will be in one year and four years from now. The century-long stranglehold of the two old parties is finally being broken.

According to the company conducting the research, the Labor Party’s support is shallow, and the party won a majority in the parliament with only 34 percent of the vote nationwide.

It must therefore prove to the public that it is willing and able to deal with mass migration.

One of the managers of Stonehaven emphasized in connection with the survey:

Immigration is the key issue turning voters away from Labour. Labor should start by focusing on where these voters are, not where the party wants them to be. The change they voted for in the last election cannot happen in their eyes unless immigration is part of the government’s narrative at the next election

he added.

Seventy percent of Britons believe the level of immigration is too high, the highest figure since a polling firm began tracking such data in 2019.

In contrast, only 15 per cent said they thought the level of immigration to the UK was about right.



Source: magyarnemzet.hu