London [UK], July 2: Four opinion polls for Thursday's UK general election have been published in the last 24 hours, all showing Labour ahead of the Conservative by a large margin and Reform in third place.
A poll by Savanta, carried out online from June 26-28 among 2,092 UK adults, gives Labour a 17-percentage point lead over the Conservatives.
The figures are Labour 38 percent, Conservative 21 percent, Reform 14 percent, Liberal Democrats 11 percent, Greens 6 percent, SNP 2 percent, Plaid Cymru 1 percent and other parties 7 percent.
The latest poll by Opinium, carried out online from June 26-28 among 2,053 UK adults, has Labour with a 20-point lead. The figures are Labour 40 percent, Conservative 20 percent, Reform 17 percent, Lib Dems 13 percent, Green 6 percent, SNP 3 percent, Plaid Cymru 1 percent and other parties 1 percent.
A poll by More in Common, carried out online from June 26-28 among 3,361 adults in Britain, gives Labour a 15-point lead.
The figures are Labour 39 percent, Conservative 24 percent, Reform 13 percent, Lib Dems 13 percent, Green 5 percent, SNP 3 percent, Plaid Cymru 1 percent and other parties 2 percent.
Finally, a poll by Deltapoll, carried out online from June 27-29 among 1,645 adults in Britain, puts Labour 21 percentage points ahead of the Tories.
The figures are Labour 42 percent, Conservative 21 percent, Reform 16 percent, Lib Dems 11 percent, Green 4 percent, SNP 3 percent, Plaid Cymru 1 percent and other parties 2 percent.
An average of all polls with fieldwork completed during the seven days to July 1 puts Labour on 40 percent, 20 points ahead of the Conservatives on 20 percent, followed by Reform on 16 percent, the Lib Dems on 12 percent and the Greens on 6 percent.
The Lib Dems are up slightly on the figures for the previous week while Reform are down, with the averages for the seven days to June 24 being Labour 40 percent, Conservatives 20 percent, Reform 17 percent, Lib Dems 11 percent and Greens 6 percent.
On May 22, the day Prime Minister Rishi Sunak called the General Election, the seven-day averages stood at Labour 45 percent, Conservatives 23 percent, Reform 11 percent, Lib Dems 9 percent and Greens 6 percent.
Source: Qatar Tribune