UK PM Sunak could cease to be a lawmaker in landslide election defeat, new poll shows
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak could become the country's first sitting prime minister to lose their seat at a general election, according to the findings of a shock new poll.
The main opposition left-of-center Labour Party is on course to win a whopping 516 seats at the July 4 election, according to analysis published Wednesday by market research company Savanta, which was conducted in partnership with Electoral Calculus and the Telegraph.
If correct, the upcoming vote would deliver Labour a supermajority of 382, comfortably more than former Prime Minister Tony Blair's historic 1997 victory.
The forecast says the ruling center-right Conservative Party is on track to win 53 seats, down from 365 in the 2019 election, with the centrist Liberal Democrats expected to run the Tories close in becoming the official opposition party in the next Parliament.
The analysis showed that left-leaning Scottish National Party is set to win 8 seats, while Wales' pro-independence political party Plaid Cymru is expected to win 4. Britain's right-wing Reform U.K. and the environmentalist Greens are seen failing to pick up any seats.
Of the 632 seats being contested in two weeks' time, Savanta said that 175 seats were currently "too close to call."
These include a raft of senior Conservative seats, including Sunak's seat in Richmond and Northallerton in North Yorkshire, Interior Minister James Cleverly's seat in Braintree in Essex and Finance Minister Jeremy Hunt's seat in Godalming and Ash in Surrey.
Savanta said it interviewed 17,812 respondents aged 18 and over online between June 7-18. The poll used multiple regression and post stratification modelling, sometimes referred to as MRP, to provide estimates of voting intentions nationwide.
MRP