
Fifth of voters could back Corbyn's hard-Left party
Twenty per cent of voters said they could see themselves supporting the hard-Left outfit founded by Mr Corbyn, the former Labour leader, and his fellow ex-Labour MP.
The findings will come as a further blow to Sir Keir Starmer and his chances of staying in power at the election, expected to take place in 2029.
Sir Keir has prompted anger among Left-wing Labour voters and MPs over his policies on the two-child benefit cap, cuts to disability benefits and the war in Gaza.
His party is also losing voters to Reform UK amid record numbers of Channel migrant crossings, tax hikes of £40bn and criticisms of his record on free speech.
A poll conducted by Ipsos found 20 per cent of all voters were 'very likely' or 'fairly likely' to back Mr Corbyn and Ms Sultana's new party, which has the temporary name Your Party.
The survey of 2,296 British adults also found one in three Labour voters (33 per cent) were very or fairly likely to support the new party, set up to challenge Sir Keir nationally. This rose to 43 per cent among those who backed the Green Party at the last general election.
Thirty-eight per cent of all adults were very or fairly likely to back Reform, with 33 per cent saying the same of Labour and 29 per cent of both the Tories and the Liberal Democrats.
Responding to the polling, Ms Sultana said: 'This is just the start. We're not here to beg for crumbs. We're coming for the lot.'
The MP for Coventry South, suspended by Labour last year before quitting the party last month, has said the new party is aiming for at least a quarter of the popular vote.
Kieran Pedley, director of politics at Ipsos, added that the polling showed that the new party 'has the potential to shake up British politics'.
Speaking to the New Statesman, which first reported the figures, he said: 'A significant number of younger people are at least prepared to consider voting for it. A majority of those aged under 35 say they would consider voting for some kind of alliance between the new party and the Greens.
'Clear policies around change, the NHS, poverty and wealth taxes could be popular.'
Mr Corbyn and Ms Sultana launched their new party on July 24, saying it was 'time for a new kind of political party'.
They have already promised they would impose heavy taxes on the wealthiest Britons, lift the two-child benefit cap – which Sir Keir has kept in place – and end arms sales to Israel.
Labour has dismissed the prospect of its new rival, with a source saying the electorate had 'twice given its verdict' on Mr Corbyn when he led Labour to defeat at the 2017 and 2019 elections.
But the poll published on Wednesday suggests the hard-Left bloc could peel support away from Sir Keir in a similar way to how Reform has hurt the Tories on the Right.
Mr Corbyn and Ms Sultana are expected to confirm the name of the new party and other key details at a founding conference set to take place in November.
Last weekend, Ms Sultana claimed Mr Corbyn ' capitulated ' over the definition of anti-Semitism during his time as Labour leader. She said her co-founder had been wrong to adopt the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition of anti-Semitism in response to pressure from his old party.
Her remarks prompted the Board of Deputies of British Jews to accuse her of a 'grave insult' to the Jewish community and questioned her 'wider commitment' to anti-racism.
Ms Sultana, who also claimed Israel was a 'genocidal apartheid state', would later double down in response to the criticism. 'The smears won't work this time,' she said. 'I say it loudly and proudly: I'm an anti-Zionist. Print that.'
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