In a recent More in Common survey on voting intentions, 29% of respondents said they would support Labour, while 28% said they would support the Conservatives.
There was an 11% difference between the two parties when the election was held in July. Throughout the three months that Labour has been in power, it has gradually decreased.
In September, the difference shrank to 4%, and the Tories and Labour are currently separated by just 1%.
The fact that people 65 and older are leading Labour’s decline in popularity suggests that the party is reacting to the 10 million pensioners’ winter fuel subsidy decrease.
According to the More in Common poll conducted from October 5–7, Keir Starmer’s approval rating has slowly declined to -33 from a high of +11 following his election victory.
“sleazy.For the first time since January, it is currently lower than Rishi Sunak’s, who is at -32.
Six in ten (59%) respondents to a YouGov survey published on Monday said they now consider the Labour government to be “sleazy”.