Sir Keir Starmer's party has increased its lead in the polls over the Conservatives in Red Wall locations. Photo: Stéphane Rousseau/PA
The Labor Party widened its lead over the Tories in key Red Wall seats to 27 points, dashing Rishi Sunak's hopes of repeating the Conservative Party's success in the 2019 general election.
Poll. conducted by Redfield & According to Wilton Strategies on June 25, Labor received 53% of the vote in the Red Wall, while the Tories got 26%.
Labour support is up three points from the previous poll on June 11, while Tory is down two points . This is Labor's biggest seat gap since February 19, when it stood at 28 per cent.
Redfield & Wilton Strategies said Labor's lead would be «enough to win back all 40 seats» in the next general election.
2,906 Labor on the rise
Red Wall polled as 40 seats, predominantly northern, traditionally voting the Labor Party that the Tories won in the 2019 general election, or in a subsequent by-election in the case of Hartlepool.
The results will suggest that the prime minister faces the destruction of the Red Wall in the next national vote, and the key marginal seats won by Boris Johnson in the last election will again go into the hands of Labor.
The poll showed that the vast majority of those from The Red Walls who voted Labor in the last general election will do so again.
But less than half of those who voted Conservative in traditional Labor centers in 2019 said they would continue to support the Tories in the vote.< /p>
Mr. Sunak's Red Wall approval rating remains at -16%. , according to the poll, this is his joint lowest result since March 19.
Only 29% of voters who voted for the Red Wall, including 43% of those who supported the Tories in 2019, said they approved of the Prime Minister's actions.
In contrast, Labor leader Sir Keir Starmer has a net approval rating of +11% in these seats, his highest result since March . 5 or five points higher than in the previous opinion poll.
Four out of 10 approve of his performance since he became Labor leader, compared with nearly a third who disapprove.
When two leaders are pitted against each other, 41 percent of Red Wall voters think Sir Keir would be a better prime minister, while 32 percent prefer Mr. Sunak — Sir Keir's combined biggest margin over his rival by these places from 7 February. .
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