The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

New poll puts Labour and Tories neck-and-neck

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Labour is running neckand-neck with the Tories in Scotland, with both parties attracting around 25% of the vote, a new opinion poll has indicated.

While the latest Ipsos Mori findings for STV put the SNP out in front with backing from 43% of Scots certain to vote – down from its 2015 result of 50% – Scottish Labour and the Scottish Conservati­ves are tied on 25% each.

With just one Westminste­r seat each in Scotland, both parties are targeting gains from the SNP, which secured 56 of the 59 constituen­cies north of the border in the last general election.

The poll is a boost for Labour, with previous surveys suggesting its vote share could drop from the 24.3% it secured in Scotland in 2015 to as low as 13%.

It comes as UK-wide polling indicates Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn is closing the gap with Prime Minister Theresa May ahead of the June 8 ballot.

While the Tories’ Scottish vote share is up on its 2015 result of 14%, it is down on recent polls which puts support for the party as high as 33%.

The Lib Dems were backed by 5% of those certain to vote, with 2% going to other candidates.

Ipsos Mori questioned 1,016 people between May 22 and 27.

Approval ratings for leaders indicate Mrs May is more unpopular in Scotland than Mr Corbyn, with the former scoring a satisfacti­on rating of -27 and the latter -13.

Voters were split on which of the leaders would make the “most capable Prime Minister”, with 42% backing Mrs May and 40% opting for Mr Corbyn.

Among the Scottish leaders, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon’s satisfacti­on rating was -4, with 46% stating they are satisfied with the way she is doing her job and 50% saying they are dissatisfi­ed.

Scottish Conservati­ve leader Ruth Davidson received a higher satisfacti­on rating of 5, while Scottish Labour’s Kezia Dugdale was -2.

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