John Curtice

It gets worse and worse for Rishi Sunak

Credit: Getty Images

Sixteen months ago Rishi Sunak was installed as Conservative leader and prime minister in the hope that he would be able to turn his party’s fortunes around in the wake of the damage inflicted on the party’s popularity by Liz Truss’ ‘fiscal event’.

However, Thursday’s by-elections confirm the message of the polls that Mr Sunak has made little or no progress in bringing that hope to fruition.

True, at 21 points the fall in Conservative support in Kingswood since 2019 was less than the drops in the three by-elections the party lost to Labour last year in Mid-Bedfordshire, Selby and Tamworth. But it was still no better than the drop implied by the party’s current standing in the polls, which, at 26 per cent, is up just one point on the position Mr Sunak inherited in the autumn of 2022, and is as much as 19 points down on its vote in 2019.

But the outcome was much worse in Wellingborough.

Written by
John Curtice

John Curtice is Professor of Politics, Strathclyde University, and Senior Research Fellow at NatCen Social Research and ‘The UK in a Changing Europe’.

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