These choices may spell the end for Labour. According to a Telegraph study, the Prime Minister’s parliamentary majority would be cut.
In half if only one-third of the OAPs who supported Labour cast their ballots elsewhere, with no change in the votes cast by any other age group.
On July 5, Sir Keir won 411 seats, giving him a 172-member simple majority, a record-breaking advantage over all other parties in the Commons. However, the margin would drop to 88 if.
The 23 percent of retirees who backed Labour decreased by a third to 15.3, and the other parties took those votes in line with the preferences of non-Labour voters.
Under this scenario, the Government would have 369 MPs, 42 less than it had five years ago under Boris Johnson, which is just nine more.
Penny Mordaunt’s Portsmouth North and Mr. Johnson’s old seat of Uxbridge and South Ruislip, which was Tory from its inception in 2010 until 2024,