British Prime Minister
Theresa May could lose overall majority in the upcoming general election
in the UK, according to a new poll.
YouGov’s first
constituency-by-constituency estimate of the election results predicts
that the Conservative Party could lose 20 seats and Labour could gain
almost 30 in next week’s election.
That means Tories could
ultimately win 310 seats at the election, falling short of an absolute
majority of 326 seats needed to form a government.
Such a result
on June 9 would be catastrophic for May, who called for the snap
election back in April, arguing the UK needed certainty, stability and
strong leadership in Brexit negotiations with the EU.
The prime
minister, however, said Monday that the government would "negotiate the
right deal" but "no deal is better than a bad deal. We have to be
prepared to walk out."
Andrew Hawkins, the chairman of ComRes, a market research consultancy, told The Times, “If
voters behave in the way they broadly did in 2015 then the
Conservatives remain on track for a 100-plus majority. This seems, on
present assumptions, the most likely outcome.”
However, May’s
popularity in polls has declined in recent weeks as she was forced into
an embarrassing U-turn over a proposed social care reform plan known as
the “dementia tax.”
Four opinion polls published on Saturday showed that May's lead narrowed by a range of two to six percentage points.
On
May 18, the Conservative Party launched its manifesto, "Forward,
Together: Our plan for a stronger Britain and a prosperous future."
Under
the manifesto, middle-class pensioners are set to lose benefits to fund
social care. It also introduced plans to begin means-testing winter
fuel payments and to charge more people who currently receive free care.
Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn (file photo)
The
opposition led by Labour Party Leader Jeremy Corbyn, has argued that
May’s policy plans would create "war between generations."
"Society
should not be setting the future of our young against security for the
old. We have the wealth to offer a decent, secure life for all," he
said.
Comments
Post a Comment