Sunak ally Stride: Labour on course for ‘extraordinary landslide’
Rishi Sunak’s loyal lieutenant Mel Stride appeared resigned to a heavy Tory defeat but warned voters not to give Labour ‘untrammelled’ power.
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Your support makes all the difference.One of Rishi Sunak’s most loyal Cabinet allies has said Labour is likely to win “the largest majority any party has ever achieved”.
Work and Pensions Secretary Mel Stride said it is “highly unlikely” that polls suggesting a victory for Sir Keir Starmer’s party are wrong.
But he said people will “regret” it if Labour wins the kind of landslide that means it has “untrammelled” power without an effective Tory opposition.
Mr Stride, who helped run Mr Sunak’s campaign for the Conservative leadership and has made regular appearances on the TV and radio during the election campaign as the Tories’ spokesman, appeared resigned to a heavy defeat.
He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “I have accepted that where the polls are at the moment – and it seems highly unlikely that they are very, very wrong, because they’ve been consistently in the same place for some time – that we are therefore tomorrow highly likely to be in a situation where we have the largest majority that any party has ever achieved.”
Voter intention surveys have suggested a Labour lead of around 20 points, while massive multilevel regression and poststratification (MRP) studies, which forecast constituency level results, have consistently indicated a Labour landslide.
Mr Stride told GB News: “If you look at the polls, it is pretty clear that Labour at this stage are heading for an extraordinary landslide on a scale that has probably never, ever been seen in this country before.”
But he said that if about 130,000 people in around 100 marginal seats who might be considering voting Reform or Liberal Democrat instead give their vote to the Tories, it would help to give Parliament a more robust opposition.
“I’m really worried about an untrammelled Labour Party in power, and that really needs to be checked, and people will regret it if we don’t have that, I think,” Mr Stride told LBC.
Mr Sunak and Sir Keir are embarking on their final day of campaigning ahead of Thursday’s vote.
Former prime minister Boris Johnson made a surprise appearance at a Tory rally on Tuesday night in an effort to give the Conservative campaign a late boost.
But ex-home secretary Suella Braverman, a potential contender for the Tory leadership if Mr Sunak quits, wrote in the Telegraph: “One needs to read the writing on the wall: it’s over, and we need to prepare for the reality and frustration of opposition.”
At his first event of the day on a whistlestop tour of Wales, Scotland and England, Sir Keir told activists in Carmarthenshire: “I’ve been saying throughout this campaign that if they are returned on Friday for five more years of the Tories we won’t get anything different, it will be the same.
“They’ve evidenced it in the campaign because Rishi Sunak started by campaigning with David Cameron.
“Then he borrowed Liz Truss’s programme and put it in his manifesto of unfunded tax cuts.
“And last night they wheeled out Boris Johnson.”
Sir Keir said he was “not in the slightest” rattled by the intervention from the former prime minister when asked by broadcasters if he had concerns about Mr Johnson’s enduring appeal among some voters, describing him as the “architect of chaos and division”.
He said Tory warnings of Labour winning an unprecedented majority amounted to “voter suppression.”
“It’s trying to get people to stay at home rather than to go out and vote,” he said.
“I say, if you want change, you have to vote for it. I want people to be part of the change.”
A Survation MRP study suggested Labour is on course to win more seats than it did in Tony Blair’s landslide.
The survey of 34,558 and constituency-level modelling suggested it is “99% certain” Labour will secure more than the 418 seats won in 1997.
The MRP poll data suggests prominent Tories could lose their seats to Labour, including Commons Leader Penny Mordaunt in Portsmouth North, Defence Secretary Grant Shapps in Welwyn Hatfield, Hertfordshire, and party chairman Richard Holden in Basildon and Billericay, Essex.
Chancellor Jeremy Hunt is set to lose the Godalming and Ash seat in Surrey, and Education Secretary Gillian Keegan her Chichester, Sussex, seat to the Liberal Democrats.
“The Conservative Party is virtually certain to win a lower share of the vote than at any past general election,” Survation said.
A Techne UK survey of 5,503 voters for The Independent, also unveiled overnight, gave Labour (40%) a 19-point lead over the Tories (21%).