Oman Daily Observer

Poll projection of losing majority hits British PM’s election battle

SETBACK: The opposition Labour party has nibbled away at the Conservati­ve lead in polls

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LONDON: British Prime Minister Theresa May was fighting to shore up her general election campaign on Wednesday after a shock projection suggested she could lose her parliament­ary majority, leaving the pound wobbling.

The landslide victory May hoped to seal by calling a snap election for June 8 seemed much less likely with eight days to go, with the polls narrowing and her Conservati­ve party’s manifesto coming under scrutiny.

The opposition Labour party, led by veteran socialist Jeremy Corbyn, has gradually nibbled away at the Conservati­ve lead in the polls, with the campaign back in full swing after the Manchester terror attack.

But May insisted she had the best plan for taking Britain into negotiatio­ns over its exit from the European Union, which start 11 days after the election.

“The only poll that matters is the one that’s going to take place on June 8,” she said on a campaign visit to Plymouth in southwest England.

“Then people will have a choice as to who they want to see as leader, who they want to see as prime minister taking this country forward in the future: me or Jeremy Corbyn.

“I have the plan for the Brexit negotiatio­ns but I’ve also got a plan to build a stronger and more prosperous Britain and I’m confident we can do that.

May called the election three years early in a bid to strengthen her slender majority in parliament going into the Brexit talks.

But the 20-point opinion poll lead of the time is now into single figures.

“The movement in the polls over this campaign is bigger than in any election I’ve covered since 1945,” veteran poll watcher David Butler said on Twitter.

The Daily Telegraph newspaper’s rolling average of the last eight polls now puts the Conservati­ves on 44 per cent, Labour on 36 per cent, the centrist Liberal Democrats on eight per cent and the anti-EU UK Independen­ce Party (UKIP)” on five per cent.

But a shock new projection in The Times newspaper forecast that the Conservati­ves could lose their majority in Commons.

Using the new 650-seat House of constituen­cy-by- constituen­cy modelling, the projection by pollsters YouGov said the party could lose 20 seats to end up with 310.

However, the model — based on 50,000 interviews over one week — has a very wide margin of error, saying the Conservati­ves could get anywhere between 274 and 345 seats, meaning they could also increase their majority.

Sensing the momentum, Corbyn made a last-minute decision to attend a live television debate on Wednesday with other party leaders — and challenged May to join him.

May had ruled out any face-toface debates during the campaign and Corbyn had followed suit, before changing his stance.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Jeremy Corbyn, leader of opposition Labour Party, signs placards at a campaign event in Reading on Wednesday.
— Reuters Jeremy Corbyn, leader of opposition Labour Party, signs placards at a campaign event in Reading on Wednesday.

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