Sir Keir Starmer has seen his party lose more than a third of its pre-election support in under a year
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Labour has fallen to a record-low third place in a crushing new poll.
Data from pollsters at More In Common has revealed that just 21 per cent of Britons would vote for Keir Starmer's party - behind both first-placed Reform UK and the Conservatives in second.
Nearly 34 per cent of voters opted for Labour at the General Election.
Some 2,032 voters were polled between June 13-16 for the data, with More In Common's Luke Tryl revealing: "For reference, the last time Labour's vote share was this low was at the end of March - after the Spring Statement.
"It seems Labour are not enjoying the traditional Budget bounce these events bring - though the dips seem to reverse quickly."
PICTURED: More In Common's June polling - which has placed Labour in third place, behind both Reform UK and the Tories
MORE IN COMMON
Sir Keir Starmer has seen his party lose more than a third of its pre-election support in under a year
DOWNING STREET
After the Spring Statement, Labour fell to 21 per cent, the party's lowest ebb since the election - but rose back to 25 per cent in May.
Then, following the local elections, the party has slowly tumbled further and further - finally slipping behind the Tories this week.
Both parties have polled consistently behind Nigel Farage's Reform UK since late April, and today, the party's deputy leader Richard Tice hailed the figures as "another great poll for Reform".
And if this week's vote shares were repeated at a General Election, it could pave the way for a wafer-thin majority for Farage.
After the Spring Statement, Labour fell to a prospective 21 per cent vote share, the party's lowest ebb since the election
MORE IN COMMON
When run through Electoral Calculus's mapping function, the More In Common figures would see Reform gain just a two-seat majority in the Commons.
However, Labour would see its seat count reduced from 411 last summer to 129.
Swathes of the Cabinet would lose their seats if this week's polling rang true - including Rachel Reeves, Angela Rayner, Yvette Cooper and Ed Miliband.
All four of those "big beasts" would lose to Reform UK candidates, the data suggests.
Labour's apparent slump and Reform's rise in various polls appear to have informed the Prime Minister's recent campaigning.
The PM devoted a day in late May to attacking Farage and Reform on a visit to Glass Futures in St Helens
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Starmer devoted a day in late May to attacking Farage and Reform on a visit to Glass Futures in St Helens.
The Prime Minister said Farage's plans to spend "billions upon billions upon billions, tens of billions of pounds, in an unfunded way" was an "exact repeat of what Liz Truss did".
Following Starmer's trip, then-Reform chairman Zia Yusuf spat: "What an extraordinary press conference. It's obviously panic stations at Labour.
"Keir Starmer is panicking because his awful Government is now trailing Reform by a staggering eight points in the latest YouGov poll."