Nigel
Farage will need to be 22 times more efficient to win the next general election
The
leader of Reform UK would require a political earthquake to achieve a national
success. Luckily for him, volatile voters keep delivering seismic results.
Analysis
May 9,
2026 4:00 am CET
By Tim
Ross
https://www.politico.eu/article/nigel-farage-reform-uk-win-next-general-election/
LONDON —
Judged on his own record, Nigel Farage is one of the most prolific political
failures in modern British history.
In three
of the five elections he has fought over the past 20 years under various party
banners, none of his side’s candidates won a single seat — and he finally
entered Westminster in 2024 only after failing in seven previous attempts.
But local
elections across England, as well as parliamentary votes in Wales and Scotland,
this week confirmed that Farage’s Reform UK party is now an undeniably powerful
electoral force.
The
question is whether he can convert these successes into winning a general
election and achieving a national majority in Westminster. POLITICO analysis
suggests he has an enormous task ahead in his quest to become prime minister —
but not an impossible one.
“There is
an historic shift in British politics that is taking place,” Farage told
reporters in reaction to early results on Friday. “I think the best is yet to
come.”
Key to
Farage’s prospects for winning national power is the fact that British politics
is now more fragmented than it has ever been, with high levels of volatility as
voters switch parties from one election to another. That makes results much
less predictable than they used to be.
The
latest local council elections in England confirmed the trend for big swings
spread across multiple parties. Reform UK held only two council seats of the
more than 5,000 up for grabs the last time elections were held in these areas
four years ago.
By Friday
evening, with results still coming in, Farage’s party had gained more than
1,200 local council seats. The old establishment parties — Labour and the
Conservatives, which have dominated British politics for the past century — had
lost more than 1,500 between them.
And what
used to be a two-horse race is now a five-way contest across England between
Labour, the Tories, Reform UK, the Liberal Democrats, and the Green Party
heading into the next general election. In Scotland the Scottish National Party
and Plaid Cymru in Wales add more options to the menu.
Fragmentation
nation
This
fragmentation changes the way election campaigns unfold.
When
British politics was a straight head-to-head between Labour and the Tories,
party bosses could afford the luxury of running campaigns that were not always
ruthlessly efficient. It didn’t matter so much if they piled up tens of
thousands of votes in “safe” seats.
At recent
elections, campaign strategists have focused their expertise and technological
capabilities on precisely targeting key segments of the electorate in around
100 marginal seats that can sway the outcome of an entire contest.
When five
or six parties are all vying for support, the efficiency of these election
machines is critical to success.
Such
campaigns are made up of strategists, staff, volunteers — and data. The best
are well-resourced in financial terms and in volunteers’ time. They include
comprehensive campaign plans; effective social media operations; accurate
voter-targeting data; tracker polls before and during the short campaign; and
thousands of volunteers who will deliver leaflets and talk to voters in key
constituencies before and on polling day.
Ground
army
Alongside
a newly expanded army of English councillors, Reform UK now have newly elected
Welsh and Scottish lawmakers and their aides, as well as a rapidly growing
party membership. The party counts more than 270,000 members — more than
Labour, which reportedly has seen its membership slump to below 250,000 in
recent months. Many of these people can be mobilized to help spread the party’s
messages in a national campaign, pounding the pavements when it matters most.
Well-financed
and professional election operations helped deliver David Cameron’s
Conservatives a surprise majority in 2015, against all predictions, and gave
Keir Starmer’s Labour the most efficient landslide victory on record — winning
two-thirds of the seats in Westminster with just one-third of the votes cast in
2024.
By
comparison, Farage’s performances have been dismal.
In 2015,
Farage’s UKIP operation ranked among the least efficient in history. While
Cameron’s Conservatives achieved a highly efficient ratio of 34,200 votes for
every Westminster seat, UKIP piled up 3.9 million votes across the country and
saw just one MP elected.
In 2024 —
Farage’s breakthrough year — Reform won 4.1 million votes but won only five
seats. It was another disorganized campaign, cobbled together at the last
minute, that delivered an inefficient ratio of 823,500 votes for every seat.
Labour, meanwhile, won 411 seats on a ratio of 23,600 votes each.
No party
has won a majority in parliament with a higher vote-to-seat ratio than 38,300
this century. Reform will need to be 22 times more efficient than it was in
2024 to meet this bar.
If he is
to win power in 2029, or whenever the next election comes, Farage must build an
entirely new national campaign machine.
Turning
pro
But
Farage is aware of this point. He has vowed to professionalize his party, and
in the past two years has attracted the biggest single donation in British
political history, and smartened up messaging and events.
On
Friday, he claimed the election results proved these efforts were working. “It
all goes to show that over the course of the last two years, since we made that
breakthrough in the general election, we have professionalized the party,”
Farage said. “We’ve done it at a very, very rapid rate.”
But even
local election results aren’t necessarily a good guide to a general election
still likely to be years away. And opinion polling is less reliable still.
At the
last general election, pollsters made serious errors, inflating Labour’s vote
share and understating the Conservatives’ support. Several also overstated
Reform UK’s position, according to analysis collected by the British Polling
Council.
A YouGov
survey in September showed that even though Britons generally thought Farage
was doing well at setting the agenda, they did not think he would do a good job
running the country. Only 24 percent said Reform would govern well, compared to
49 percent who thought the opposite.
Trusted
with the economy?
Digging
into the details of more recent surveys, Farage also struggles on two key
questions that have proven to be reliable guides to how voters choose
Westminster governments: Who is the best leader, and which party is most
trusted to run the economy?
Although
the U.K. does not elect a president, it has for decades been true that many
voters base their decisions on who they want in No. 10 Downing Street (or who
they really want to keep away from that famous black door). Here, Farage is
not, apparently, a runaway success.
According
to YouGov’s most recent survey, on May 4-5, the Reform UK leader’s net
favorability score is -39 percent, only a little better than Starmer’s score of
-47 percent. Of the leaders and potential leaders polled, only Labour’s
Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham has a net positive rating, of 4 percent.
On the
economy, too, Reform’s reputation leaves room for doubters. On May 4, YouGov
found only 11 percent of voters thought Farage’s party would be the best at
handling the economy, compared to 15 percent for Labour and 19 percent for the
Conservatives.
Despite
these caveats, politics is changing. As Farage has already shown, what held
sway in the past is not necessarily a guide to what will happen next.
A big
80-seat win for Boris Johnson’s Tories in 2019 gave way to a Labour landslide
majority of 174 seats in 2024. And now for the second year in a row, Reform UK
has stormed the board in England’s local elections — meaning that millions of
voters have turned out and put their crosses in a box next to one of Farage’s
candidates.
They were
not voting to make him PM, but they were choosing his side. Having done so once
at a local or regional election, it may feel easier to do so again when the
Westminster government is at stake.
.jpeg)

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário