Support for Reform grows as voters lose faith in UK institutions | Politics | News


Voters are flocking to Reform UK because they have lost faith in the UKโ€™s institutions. Support for Nigel Farageโ€™s party is driven by a breakdown in trust for bodies such as the police, the courts and NHS, a study by think tank Onward found. The survey found 47% of Conservative voters and 63% of Labour voters have faith in the criminal justice system, but just 31% of those who said they will support Reform at the next election. And the BBC is trusted by 50% of Conservative voters as well as 71% of Labour voters, but just 23% of those backing Reform.

The findings are a stark warning for other parties according to Reform director Sir Simon Clarke, a former Conservative cabinet minister. He said: โ€œVoters up and down the country are turning to Reform. And I donโ€™t blame them.โ€ But he insisted: โ€œWhen trust in institutions collapses, it creates a vacuum – and into that vacuum rush movements like Reform. They are the latest in a long line of protest parties that surge on discontent but will inevitably stumble in power.โ€

A majority of Reform voters, 56%, have faith in the monarchy but this is still lower than the 72% of Tories and 61% of Labour supporters who said the same.

Nicholas Stephenson, Co-Author of the Report, said: โ€œThe data shows a profound divergence in how different groups of voters view institutions that are meant to be shared and unifying.

โ€œThe NHS and the military still command broad support, but other institutions โ€“ particularly the Criminal Justice System and the BBC โ€“ face serious trust deficits. Rebuilding confidence will be vital to political stability.โ€

A separate study found Reform UK may be on the brink of its greatest electoral breakthrough yet with the largest study of its kind finding support for Nigel Farageโ€™s party could top 40%.

Sir Keir Starmer was able to deliver Labourโ€™s landslide victory with the support of just 33.7% of voters last year – but new research has found 42% of Britons who are likely to vote would consider backing Reform in a general election.

It now leads โ€œamong pub garden enthusiasts, Wimbledon watchers and Britons who like fish and chipsโ€, pollsters said.

The findings come as Mr Farage and his supporters converge in Birmingham for the biggest Reform conference yet.

A study by More in Common and UK in a Changing Europe shows how Reform UK is now commanding โ€œmainstreamโ€ support. Researchers polled 3,000 Reform supporters and a further 2,000 people who would consider backing the party, as well as holding focus groups. They found Reform supporters โ€œincreasingly look like the average Britonโ€ and are โ€œroughly as likely as the wider public to support gay marriage and access to abortionโ€.

The gender gap in Reformโ€™s support has also narrowed. At the election โ€œaround 1.4 men voted Reform for every womanโ€. This has shrunk to 1.2 men for every woman.

And while fewer than one in 10 of the countryโ€™s 18 to 24-year-olds support the Conservatives, โ€œReformโ€™s vote share remains above 20% among every age groupโ€.

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