Nigel Farage’s far-right anti-immigrant reforms continue to grow in the UK, with polls suggesting that the senator’s plaid Cymru is now necked and necked.
Opinion survey The implementation of YouGov and ITV Wales found that the voting intentions of the senators, a Welsh parliament, have increased four points since the previous poll in April, with Keir Starmer’s workforce falling four points to 14%.
As for the other parties, conservatives are projected to make up 11% of the Senate vote, with Lib Dems and Greens each having 6%.
“Our polls also find that Reformed Britain took the lead for the first time with Westminster’s intention to vote,” Yougov said.
“The other parties maintain similar voting shares as they did five months ago, with plaid Cymru at 23% and 18% at work, Tory at 11%, Lib Dems at 9% and Green at 7%.”
Previous investigationwhich was implemented by YouGov in June and predicted that if there was an election at that time, reforms would rule and become Westminster’s biggest party.
The results of the YouGov study are set to estimates of what will happen, not stones, but merely, based on the current vote intentions of voters. The next general election in the UK is not expected to take place until 2029.
The sample size of the survey was 11,500, marking the data analytics company’s first multi-level regression and post-level regression (MRP) poll since last year’s general election in July 2024.
The results of the survey show that a year later, prioritized parties have not taken power, and instead Nigel Farage reforms will win 271 seats.
The right-wing populist party was founded as the Brexit Party in 2018 and has since changed its name and named itself due to its controversial anti-immigration and euroskeptic policies.
“If elections are held tomorrow, the central forecast from the MRP estimates that not only will Labour lose its majority and fall to 178 seats, but will become the second party at some distance in Parliament, where Reform Britain will become the biggest force.
“According to our data and models, Nigel Farage’s party came out of the election with 271 seats. This is a major improvement of five total in 2024, placing the party close to the government.”
The data also suggest that Lib Dems will remain the third largest party in Westminster and will earn some small profits to have 81 seats, but conservatives who were expelled by the labor in their last general election in electricity for 15 years will be reduced to just 46 seats.
In Scotland, the Scottish National Party (SNP) once again regained control, becoming the largest party north of the border, with green and plaid Simul making small profits.
According to the survey results, 26% of voters choose UK reforms, 23% of labor, 18% of conservatives, 15% of liberal Democrats, 11% of green, 3% of SNP, and 2% of other parties and independent candidates.
The English continued, saying that the “rise of meteors” of reform is driven by “impressive performances across the country, including Scotland.”
“In terms of seat totals, reform Britain will be the largest party in each East Midlands, tied with the Northwest workforce under the central estimates of the UK, Northeast, Southeast, Wales, West Midlands, Yorkshire and Humber,” he writes.
“It’s probably not surprising, but the new addition to the Reformed UK column is almost exclusively exclusive (by Professor Chris Hanletti) presumed to vote for a leave in the 2016 EU referendum.
He added, “Around 51% of those who have been voted in the current virtual elections that voted for leave in 2016 will support reform UK, the largest share of this segment of voters, by a considerable distance.”

The YouGov survey came because Channel 4 was set to air the title Dispatches Documentary Will Nigel Farage become prime minister? June 26th.
The documentary’s summary states that political journalist Fraser Nelson “exploring the rise of reform beyond headlines and assessing the impact Nigel Farage and his young party have on existing political infrastructure.”
“As reform builds momentum, Nelson examines the deeper forces behind its support, disillusionment, identity, hunger for chaos – and assesses whether Britain is on the political earthquake crisis.
“Is reform just the nation’s biggest protest vote to date, or is it the beginning of a surge to see Farage become prime minister?”
What is the reform stance on LGBTQ+ rights?
Reform certainly doesn’t have the highest record when it comes to LGBTQ+ rights.
Following the May venue election, reforms have announced that 10 councils that control across the UK (Durham, Kent, Lancashire, Staffordshire, Nottinghamshire, Derbyshire, Doncaster, Northamptonshire, West Northamptonshire, and Linkalshire) will be banned from raising flags of pride.
Then Chairman Zia Yusuf said:
A reform spokesman also said at the time: “Reformed Britain proudly flies Union Jack, St. George’s flags and county flags. Unlike labor, we are proud of our country and history.”
Earlier, a reform member named George Jones called on cameras to have a pride flag marked “f**king degenerated flag” on police cars.
“Are you seeing a degenerated flag on the front bonnet? Are the old bills promoting that crap? They should capture non-competence rather than promoting f****,” he said.
Party policy pledges have rights “Contract with you“The document states that it is not merely a “another manifesto,” but that it “sets the reforms that the UK needs in the first 100 days after the general election.”
In it, and as part of an introductory paragraph that attacks immigration, multiculturalism, and “divisible ‘ideology’,” reform states that “transgender indoctrination causes irreversible harm to children.”
It also reaffirms this transphobic attitude by vowing to ban so-called “transgender ideology.”
“There is no gender question, social transition, or pronoun exchange. Let parents know about life decisions for children under the age of 16. Schools need unity facilities.”
The pledge on the Space of Unity is repeated in the manifesto “Children and Family,” with the party saying unity facilities will be mandated in public toilets and in changing areas.
Regarding social media and the online safety bill that has since been passed and is now the law, the reform nation said:
The manifesto states that reforms will attack diversity, equality and inclusion, abolish all such related roles in the UK police and overhaul the Equality Act of 2010.
“Equality Act requires discrimination in the name of “positive behavior.” We will scrap the Diversity, Equality and Inclusion (DE&I) rules that have lowered standards and reduced economic productivity,” the party said.

Such promises in the reform policy document are not surprising given the views of voters. Two-thirds (69%) believe that gender should not be legally changed via the UK Gender Awareness Certificate (GRC).
However, despite this anti-trans belief, 65% of UK voter reforms believe that same-sex couples should be allowed to marry in the UK.
In 2013, when he was the UKIP leader, Farage said he would not banish members to express “old-fashioned” views on homosexuality, including those who described it as “nasty.”
The following year, he I said: “I don’t support same-sex marriage… we are under the auspices of the European Court of Human Rights. We can come out of Europe and have a wise debate about same-sex marriage and how to do it.”
Recently, in July of this year, Farage branded equal marriage as “wrong.”
“It’s a resolved problem. I didn’t support it. I thought it was wrong to introduce it to the public without putting it in a manifesto,” he said.
“I was very surprised that David Cameron did that, and I thought the civic partnership arrangement we had was actually working fairly and fairly.
“So I thought the work that was done was wrong, but looking, we moved.”
This followed in September, Farage attacked the same-sex unions again.
The reform leader, who was ironically married and separated from the two women, said “the most stable relationship tends to be between men and women.”
“One thing is for sure is that children with two stable parents tend to have better opportunities in life, and perhaps not my example, but the most stable relationship, the longest lasting thing, between men and women,” he said.
He continued: “I’m not absolute about this. I just happen to think that kids across the country don’t get the right start for them at home or at school.”
In other LGBTQ+ topics, Farage said in 2019 that people living with HIV should not be able to enter the UK, and that the country claims there is a country. “I don’t have the ability” Treating people with the virus for immigrants.
He also praised Margaret Thatcher as prime minister as an era of “real progress for the gays in society,” claiming that gays and lesbians “do not discriminate against anything previously made by almost all prime ministers.”
Recalling the abominable law, Section 28, implemented by Thatcher’s government, Farage said, “it was done because she was afraid of some of the very extreme left-wing elements within the education union.”
Source: PinkNews | Latest lesbian, gay, bi and trans news | LGBTQ+ news – www.thepinknews.com
