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Starmer speaking during Prime Minister's Questions in the House of Commons yesterday. PA/Alamy

Labour sees biggest first-year poll drop for UK governing party since 1990s

The last government to experience a double-digit fall in the 12 months after an election was John Major’s Conservatives.

LABOUR HAS SEEN a double-digit drop in support in opinion polls since the general election a year ago – the first fall of its kind since John Major’s Conservative government of the 1990s.

Keir Starmer’s party has averaged 24% in polls in the past month, down 10 points from 34% in the weeks following the 2024 election.

It is common for political parties to experience a slide in the polls after taking power – it has happened to every UK government bar one in the past 40 years – but a drop of this size is unusual.

The last time it was in double digits was 1992-93, when the Tory administration led by Major saw its poll numbers fall 12 points, from an average of 43% in the weeks after the April 1992 election to 31% a year later.

The findings have been compiled by the PA news agency, using its own archive of national poll data combined with figures published in the long-running British General Election academic studies.

Polls measuring voting intention do not always appear in the immediate aftermath of an election – for instance, the first polls of this parliament were not carried out until the start of August 2024, one month after Labour’s victory on 4 July.

To compare Labour’s poll performance fairly with that of previous governments, the average poll numbers in the weeks after a general election have been compared with those for the month leading up to the first anniversary of that election.

Almost every government in the past four decades has seen their poll standings slip over this period, but mostly by single digits – and often from a much higher starting point than Labour’s 34% in 2024.

For example, the Labour government led by Tony Blair saw its vote share in the polls drop by an average of six points during its first year in office in 1997-98, though from the lofty heights of 59% to 53%, still well ahead of all other parties.

Labour’s second term under Blair saw a larger poll drop of seven points, but from 49% to 42% – again, comfortably ahead of its rivals.

The Conservative government led by Boris Johnson elected in 2019 saw its first-year poll ratings also slip by seven points, but from 46% to 39%.

There were smaller drops at the start of Labour’s third term in 2005-06 (down five points in 12 months) and at the start of Conservative leader David Cameron’s first term as PM in 2010 (down three points), though Cameron’s second win in 2015 was followed by a larger six-point fall.

The one recent exception to this trend was the Conservative minority government led by Theresa May that was elected in 2017, with Tory support in the polls increasing by two points over 12 months, from 40% to 42%.

labour-party-leader-keir-starmer-shakes-hands-with-his-supporters-at-the-tate-modern-in-london-friday-july-5-2024-labour-party-starmer-says-voters-have-spoken-and-they-are-ready-for-change-as-an Labour Party leader Keir Starmer shakes hands with his supporters at the Tate Modern in London, Friday, 5 July, 2024, as exit polls pointed to his party's landslide win. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo

A first-year drop in the polls for a governing party is typically accompanied by a rise in support for the main opposition in Parliament.

But the past 12 months have seen something different and new in UK politics: a simultaneous and large fall in support for both the government and the opposition, with the Conservatives slipping from an average of 25% in the aftermath of the 2024 election to 18% over the past month.

And while Labour and the Tories have both slid in the polls, smaller parties have risen – notably Reform, which has climbed from third place on 17% to first place on 29%.

The Liberal Democrats have also edged up, from 12% to 14%, while the Greens have increased from 6% to 9%.

Opinion polls are snapshots of the prevailing public mood, not projections or forecasts – and they do not predict what could happen at the next general election.

But the amount of movement in recent polls, in particular the fall in support for both Labour and the Conservatives, points to an unsettled mood among voters and a volatile political landscape.

Starmer’s personal approval ratings make similarly challenging reading for the Prime Minister.

Polling company Ipsos has measured public satisfaction with prime ministers since the late 1970s.

Its data tracks the proportion of adults in Britain who say they are either satisfied or dissatisfied with how the PM is doing their job.

The difference between these two numbers represents the approval score.

The most recent Ipsos survey, completed in early June – not quite a full year since the general election – suggests 19% of adults are satisfied with Starmer’s performance and 73% are dissatisfied, giving him a net approval score of minus 54.

This is lower than any other score recorded by Ipsos for a prime minister roughly 12 months after taking office.

The next lowest score is minus 48, for Labour’s Gordon Brown in June 2008, and minus 37 for the Conservatives’ Rishi Sunak in October 2023.

The highest approval ratings were for Blair in May 1998 (a plus score of 44) and Major in November 1991 (plus 15).

The other scores are minus 3 for Cameron (May 2011); minus 7 for Conservative PM Margaret Thatcher (June 1980) and minus 25 for May (July 2017), while Johnson had a net approval rating of zero a year into office in July 2020, with the same proportion of people saying they were satisfied and dissatisfied.

Starmer’s current score of minus 54 is not quite the worst ever approval rating for a prime minister reported by Ipsos, however.

Thatcher dropped as low as minus 56 in March 1990, while both Major and Sunak sank as far as minus 59, in August 1994 and April 2024 respectively.

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    Mute Jos
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 8:07 AM

    Never thought I’d see the day that a Republican or Nationalist would lead in the North. Especially since it was a very cold place for Catholics when I was a kid.

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    Mute brian o'leary
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 8:17 AM

    @Jos: a bog state for a bog people:)

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    Mute brian madden
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 8:54 AM

    @Ratko Mladic: are you talking to yourself again. I see another new profile yoday mr green

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    Mute brian o'leary
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 9:17 AM

    @brian madden: it’s the cancel culture……lol

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    Mute ItWasLikeThatWhenIGotHere
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 10:22 AM

    @John H Green: As regards meaningful power – yes.

    As regards changing attitudes and perceptions, it is perhaps the most important institution there is.

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    Mute Sean Sean
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 5:12 PM

    @brian o’leary: Shame on you.

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    Mute Pat Barry
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 8:11 PM

    @John H Green: Same as Scotland and Wales, bills have to be run by the King first.

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    Mute Tim Oconnell
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    Feb 3rd 2024, 5:43 AM

    @John H Green: knuckle draggers not agreeing on anything “ that sums up politics worldwide, look at the US now there’s knuckle dragging

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    Mute Big D
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 7:55 AM

    Great to see at long last. But how long before the DUP get the hump again and dissolve parliament? Less than a year be me my guess.

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    Mute brian o'leary
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 8:16 AM

    @Big D: I guess with the way it’s set up that’ll be an option for both sides. Maybe link pay and pensions to a working parliament?

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    Mute Muriel Ryan
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 8:24 AM

    @Big D: They already have the hump by the looks of it

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    Mute chris gaffney
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 8:51 AM

    @Big D: No. Its the shinners turn to fold it this time!

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    Mute Anthony Curran
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 9:24 AM

    Comments section should be renamed Troll section. Gone to the dogs.

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    Mute ItWasLikeThatWhenIGotHere
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 10:25 AM

    @Anthony Curran: It only takes one or two with multiple accounts.

    It’s best just to ignore them.

    Trolls, and toddlers, thrive on attention.

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    Mute Max Cooper
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 9:02 AM

    Hopefully they just all get on with it now. Try putting the public first rather than their individual brand of politics or religion.
    Deal with the reality of everyday lives for the entire community.
    Hopefully both sides have learned at this stage that their ridiculous squabbles are pointless and unnecessary and unhelpful

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    Mute mark duggan
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 11:18 AM

    About time little kids there like carrying on up there in beautiful northern Ireland, that little thing under Ur nose guys is for speaking get in wit it..

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    Mute Brendan O'Brien
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 9:24 AM

    The problem is that neither side is committed to making the Assembly work and actually running NI. SF won’t even say ‘Northern Ireland’, and can’t wait for it to end (there’s a large dose of wishful thinking there, as in McDonald’s ‘touching distance’ comment the other day). The DUP just want NI to be an ‘ordinary’ part of the UK. Both are bored by the Assembly, basically, and don’t see the point of it. So they have no compunction about collapsing it on a whim.

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    Mute Alan
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 1:27 PM

    If all the United ireland guff was removed they could just get on with building a half decent country for everyone who lives there. Don’t focus on britain or Ireland all the time. Think more about cost of living, standard of living. Sf and dup are a real impediment to any genuine progress.

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    Mute Alan
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 2:34 PM

    @Mr Inbetween: I think the tone of your comment answers your own question

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    Mute Alan
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 2:55 PM

    @Mr Inbetween: I think the way forward involves ditching this obsession with republicanism and unionism (as if there is no alternative

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    Mute Kevin O Brien
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 5:30 PM

    Well done Sinn Fein

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    Mute Hotirish
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 5:13 PM

    Can somebody tell Mary loo to stop sticking her beak in at every opportunity and just let them get on with it.

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    Mute M Bowe
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 9:42 PM

    @Hotirish: you do realise that Mary Lou is the leader of the largest party in assembly?????

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    Mute Coc Caled
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 8:16 AM

    Norn Iron is a great wee country. GSTK! GSDAR

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    Mute Sean O'Dhubhghaill
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 12:06 PM

    @Coc Caled: GSDAR????

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    Mute Derek O Gorman
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 3:29 PM

    Hopefully make some impact to build bridges and increase peace and harmony.
    But time will tell I have my doubts

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    Mute Antony Stack
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    Feb 2nd 2024, 6:59 PM

    Imagine what combining NI and ROI would be like!
    Big Brother (aka UK) doing the hand holding and throwing in a few billion after every spat to sweeten the deal.

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    Mute kkjLtYn1
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    Feb 3rd 2024, 12:23 AM

    Welcome to the Mercs and perks…

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