The Press

Corbyn bound for No 10, polls show

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Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn is on course to sweep into No 10 after Theresa May failed to deliver on her promise to take the UK out of the EU by March 29, a major polling analysis reveals.

The Conservati­ves would lose 59 seats in the event of a general election, making Labour the largest party in the Commons, according to an exclusive poll of polls for The Sunday Telegraph.

Iain Duncan Smith, the former Conservati­ve leader, and Amber Rudd, the Work and Pensions Secretary, would be at ‘‘high risk’’ of being voted out.

Experts said the dramatic fall in support was down to anger among Tory voters ‘‘at the Government’s failure to deliver Brexit’’.

Professor Sir John Curtice, president of the British Polling Council, said Leave supporters had been ‘‘drawn back to either Ukip or Nigel Farage’s newly launched Brexit party’’.

Separately, amid growing calls for May to resign, Conservati­ve Party lawyers potentiall­y opened the door for MPs to formally oust the prime minister within months, with officials advising the influentia­l 1922 Committee that the panel could rewrite the rules currently preventing MPs from mounting more than one attempt to oust a leader per year.

The extraordin­ary move emerged as two past chairmen of the backbench committee declare, in an article for The Sunday Telegraph, that the panel could alter the rules that prevent backbenche­rs from triggering another vote of no confidence in May until December, after she won a previous vote last year by 200 to 117.

Yesterday, Sir Graham Brady confirmed: ‘‘It is my understand­ing that the rules could in future be changed by the agreement of the 1922 executive.’’ He added that it was ‘‘less certain that it would be possible to change the rules during the current period of grace which was initiated with the triggering of a confidence vote on December 12 last year.’’

An Electoral Calculus poll of polls of 8561 people surveyed between April 2 and 11 – after May’s intended exit date – found that following an immediate general election, Labour would become the largest party in the Commons.

It would win 296 seats against 259 for the Tories. Corbyn could then lead a government propped up by the SNP. Other Tories who face losing their seats include Zac Goldsmith, Justine Greening and Stephen Crabb.

Martin Baxter, the Electoral Calculus founder, said: ‘‘Theresa May is discoverin­g why David Cameron really held the referendum. It wasn’t to placate his own Euroscepti­c MPs, instead it was to stop Conservati­ve voters defecting to pro-Brexit parties. That process seems to have restarted and the Conservati­ves are beginning to suffer.’’

Writing in The Telegraph, Curtice states: ‘‘Much of this drop reflects disappoint­ment among Leave voters.’’

May told MPs last month that should would stand down once she had secured the UK’s exit from the EU. Now she faces mounting calls by MPs and senior grassroots figures to name a date for her departure as it appeared that the UK would have to participat­e in

elections to the European Parliament. Dozens of local Conservati­ve chairmen are also now joining a strike against campaignin­g in the elections.

– Telegraph Group

 ?? AP ?? Labour and opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn would become prime minister after the next British election, according to analysis of polls in the UK.
AP Labour and opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn would become prime minister after the next British election, according to analysis of polls in the UK.

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