Angela Rayner, Rachel Reeves and Ed Miliband all facing humiliating defeats | Politics | News
Rachel Reeves, Ed Miliband and Yvette Cooper will all lose their seats at the next election as support for the Greens surges, according to a new poll.
Nigel Farageโs Reform UK will become the largest party, with 324 MPs.
But the new study, by More in Common, revealed Zack Polanskiโs hard left party will win 22 seats, plunging Keir Starmerโs party into a fresh crisis as it faces attacks from the Left and Right of British politics.
The Chancellor, Ms Reeves, Energy Secretary Mr Miliband, Foreign Secretary Ms Cooper, Defence Secretary John Healey and Chief Whip Jonathan Reynolds will all be defeated by Reform UK candidates, the MRP poll revealed.
Chief Secretary to the Prime Minister, Darren Jones, Business Secretary Peter Kyle and Northern Ireland Secretary Hilary Benn will all lose to the Greens.
Labour heavyweight Angela Rayner would also lose to Reform, Luke Tryl, from More in Common, said.
Sir Keirโs party would lose 310 seats, leaving them with just 101.
Kemi Badenochโs Conservative Party would also lose 40, resulting with the Tories having 81 in Parliament.
Reform will win 324 seats, while the Greens will win 22.
The Lib Dems will lose 10 seats, leaving them with 62.
Reform UK leader Mr Farage said a ballot box โhumiliationโ for the Prime Minister will make it โvirtually impossible for him to hang onโ any longer.
And Mr Farage revealed the party is going toe-to-toe with Labour in the partyโs strongholds in North West and North East England.
The frontrunner in the opinion polls is urging voters to treat May 7โs local elections as a referendum on the Prime Minister, branding him the โmost unpopularโ in history.
Unveiling Reformโs new slogan for the local elections, โVote Reform, get Starmer outโ, Mr Farage told the Daily Express: โBasically, if Labour suffer a humiliation in England, Wales and Scotland, itโll be virtually impossible for him to hang on until the end of May.โ
Tory leader Kemi Badenoch, Shadow Chancellor Mel Stride and Shadow Housing Secretary Sir James Cleverly would also lose their seats.
