Will voting Reform put Labour in power? Check your postcode

will voting reform put labour in power? check your postcode

Is a vote for Reform a vote for Labour?

“A vote for Reform is a vote for Labour.”

This phrase has become a centrepiece of the Conservative Party’s campaign, as it grapples with the surge in support that Nigel Farage’s party has received – seemingly at its expense.

Using constituency-level polling, our new tool looks at how Reform is currently polling in your constituency, and explores three possible scenarios which highlight whether a vote for Reform really is blocking the Tories from taking your seat.

The nature of the UK’s political system means that, although Reform is polling at around 15 per cent, it is likely to pick up just a handful of seats.

One constituency-level poll, from Survation, estimates it will secure just seven seats. Another, from YouGov, suggests it is unlikely to gain any, although this was conducted shortly before the hugely-popular Mr Farage reentered the fray.

This means that, if the Conservatives are correct, hundreds of thousands of votes cast for Reform will translate to very little electoral success.

One of the key assumptions behind the Tories’s attack line is that, if Reform was not standing, the vast majority of its voters would move to the Conservatives.

This is unlikely.

In fact, just 36 per cent of Reform voters would support the Conservatives, according to a recent poll from YouGov. The rest would support the Lib Dems or Labour (both on six per cent), the Greens (on four per cent) and one in 10 would support other parties.

A third of its voters would either not vote or are undecided, the poll suggests.

However, despite the far from united second-party choices of Reform voters, it is clear that in some seats, Reform could be having an impact on the Conservative’s fortunes.

In the scenario where 36 per cent of their votes go to the Conservatives, there are 34 seats across Great Britain where this would be enough to push them ahead of the first party.

Most of these, 24 in total, would see them overtake Labour. Nine would come from the Liberal Democrats, and one – Gordon and Buchan – would be from the SNP.

Across all these seats, the Conservatives are estimated to be within at least five points of the leading party.

In Sittingbourne and Sheppey, Labour is projected to get 35.5 per cent of the vote to the Conservatives’ 35.4 per cent. With Reform averaging on 16.2 per cent, just a tiny defection from the party could help the Conservatives hold the seat.

Other seats where Reform could help steal the seat include Witney, currently held by Solicitor General Robert Courts, who is polling just one point behind the Liberal Democrats, whilst Reform enjoy 8.1 per cent of the vote.

In Suffolk Coastal, Thérèse Coffey, the former health secretary, is at risk of losing her seat by two points, where Reform enjoys the support of one in eight constituents. Victoria Prentis, the Attorney General, is also in a seat, Banbury, where a third of Reform voters moving to the Conservatives could see her keep the seat.

Another scenario, more favourable to the Conservatives, would see those saying they won’t vote or “don’t know” who they’ll vote for removed from the equation.

If they voted in a similar way to those who are already decided, it would mean just over half (56pc) of the Reform vote would go to the Tories.

This situation would see 64 seats kept by the Tories, with Labour prevented from winning in 48 of them.

In this scenario, MPs who would keep their seats include “Minister for Common Sense” Esther McVey and Mel Stride, the Work & Pensions Secretary.

Is Reform costing the Conservatives the election?

In both scenarios, the impact of winning over Reform voters is unlikely to have any substantive impact on the general outcome of the election.

Across the two constituency-level polls, the Conservatives are predicted to win just 115 seats. Labour could win 434 seats, a working majority of well over a hundred.

In our first scenario, Labour would see its seat numbers decline to 403. In our third scenario, they would drop to 380 seats – a majority higher than Boris Johnson secured in 2019.

What it would do is firmly secure the Conservatives as the main opposition party, ahead of the Liberal Democrats by 160 seats.

In current polls, they are projected to be just 63 seats ahead of the third party.

Does Reform have a chance anywhere?

Despite the premise that Reform voters are stealing votes from the Conservatives, the party is now firmly in contention in its own right in some parts of the country.

Across 17 seats, an average of the YouGov and Survation polls suggest that Reform could be within 15 points of the lead party.

In Ashfield, where Lee Anderson, a former Conservative, is representing the party, they are just six points behind Labour. Figures are similarly close in North West Norfolk, Great Yarmouth and Exmouth and Exeter East.

Looking solely at the Survation poll, Reform is actually ahead in these four, as well as three others, including Mr Farage’s seat in Clacton.

However, a large surge in seats for Reform will prove difficult. In the vast amount of seats where they are standing, they have consistent support in the mid-teens, far below the threshold generally needed to become the largest party.

In fewer than one in 20 seats do they manage to surpass 20 per cent of the vote, current polling suggests.

Last week, Mr Farage suggested that, given his party’s surge in the polls, a vote for the Conservatives is, in fact, the vote for Labour.

A clever retort to the Tory attack line, but so far there is only truth in this in a handful of places.

Play The Telegraph’s brilliant range of Puzzles - and feel brighter every day. Train your brain and boost your mood with PlusWord, the Mini Crossword, the fearsome Killer Sudoku and even the classic Cryptic Crossword.

OTHER NEWS

20 minutes ago

This Jersey Shore Destination Is an Affordable Dupe for The Hamptons — and It's Less Than 2 Hours From NYC

20 minutes ago

Leyton Orient fixtures for League One 2024-25 season

20 minutes ago

New York transit agency votes to indefinitely halt Manhattan congestion pricing

20 minutes ago

Supreme Court analyst on possible reason SCOTUS pulled abortion document

20 minutes ago

Ravens' Roquan Smith breaks down why he's 'extremely proud' of DC Zach Orr

20 minutes ago

Meet Sonny, the 2024 Gerber Baby who will be this year's face of the brand

20 minutes ago

Texas hiring Texas A&M baseball coach Jim Schlossnagle to replace David Pierce

20 minutes ago

The stars of Colin from Accounts: ‘As I tapped Ewan McGregor’s shoulder, I knew I’d made the wrong decision’

20 minutes ago

US new home sales slump; supply at more than 16-year high

20 minutes ago

LIV Golf releases first official Spotify playlist, gives new meaning to 'golf but louder'

20 minutes ago

Will Cori Bush be ousted like Bowman? New poll shows her opponent leading by one point

20 minutes ago

Loneliness can dramatically increase risk of a stroke

20 minutes ago

Best eyebrow pens for full and feathery brows

20 minutes ago

Josh Heupel's staff keys latest Tennessee commitment from three-star CB

20 minutes ago

Slot must axe Liverpool sensation who Van Dijk thinks is "world-class"

20 minutes ago

Investigation uncovers secretive court system is paying billions of public dollars to oil corporations: 'The injustice is glaringly obvious'

20 minutes ago

Chelsea transfer news: Blues learn answer from Newcastle following British-record Isak approach

20 minutes ago

Titans star excited to trash talk Bears QB Caleb Williams: 'Painted nails. I can't wait to say that to him'

20 minutes ago

Emma Raducanu +33 in WTA Rankings after stunning career-best win

23 minutes ago

Harry Potter HBO TV series to be led by Succession veterans

24 minutes ago

Nicole Kidman and daughter Sunday Rose don matching looks at Paris Fashion Week

24 minutes ago

Amazon hits a stock market valuation of $2 trillion for the first time

24 minutes ago

Why NASA astronauts are delayed at the space station after Boeing Starliner launch

25 minutes ago

‘Inside Out 2’ Cracks Domestic Top 10 All-Time Animated Movies; Jumps To $800M Global Box Office 

25 minutes ago

Who’s happier, homeowners or renters? Data says it’s complicated

25 minutes ago

11-year-old boy drowns after falling off tube at B.C. Interior lake

25 minutes ago

An Ontario dog boarding business has been descended on by activists. Police demand peace

25 minutes ago

OpenAI's CTO says AI tools can ‘expand our intelligence,' but may cause some creative jobs to disappear

25 minutes ago

CTA, Metra and Pace approve new day pass, allowing riders to use all three systems

25 minutes ago

Indigenous tribes welcome rare white buffalo calf in Yellowstone ceremony

25 minutes ago

Criminal charges dropped against Austin officer who shot Michael Ramos

25 minutes ago

Buc-ee's confirms they're working toward opening 2 sites in Louisiana | Oklahoma is also on their radar

28 minutes ago

Video: Wish you were here? Madrid is lashed with storms, floods and hail while brutal gales hammer France and Switzerland amid wild weather extremes across Europe - as Britain basks in 30C heat

29 minutes ago

Amazon hits $2T in market value for the first time as AI fervor, rate cut bets drive gains

29 minutes ago

NYPD Chief Jeffrey Maddrey makes last-ditch bid to toss his abuse of authority case

29 minutes ago

Sunbather impaled by umbrella in freak beach accident

29 minutes ago

Profar responds to HBP with grand slam as Padres beat Nationals

30 minutes ago

'We sold our £400k Manchester semi and bought an entire village in France'

30 minutes ago

Radio 3 drivetime presenter Sean Rafferty leaves BBC after 25 years

30 minutes ago

Labour 'set for huge majority' despite Brits not liking either leader