IT is a truth universally acknowledged that a political leader with an election to fight must be in want of campaign advice. As Rishi Sunak embarks on the most challenging re-election campaign of any British prime minister in living memory, there is no shortage of pitches about the best spells to cast when on a quest for an electoral miracle.
“Tories facing 1997-style wipeout” was the unwelcome front-page message as the Daily Telegraph gave much profile to a mammoth seat-by-seat YouGov MRP poll.
The headline was partly a statement of the bleeding obvious. The Conservatives are averaging 25 per cent in the polls – a lower level of public support heading into a general election year than any previous British governing party. John Major was polling 30 per cent at a similar stage ahead of his crushing 1997 defeat.
The Tories have not got 30 per cent in a single poll for three months now. But this seat by seat poll added granular local colour from the ghost of elections still to come that could still capture the Westminster imagination.
“Stick to the plan” is now Sunak’s key message, now largely back as the continuity candidate warning against the risks of Labour. But which plan to stick to remains intensely debated both within Downing Street itself – and much more so across an unhappy party. Is the key issue economic credibility – or being even tougher on immigration? Are Labour or Reform the bigger threat? Is this election best fought from the centre or the right?

This high profile YouGov poll was a hostile campaign to force Sunak to change course – organised by former Brexit negotiator and former minister David Frost with funding from a group of party donors. They have a simple answer: move right on everything: get truly tough on immigration, cut taxes and spending, pull out of international agreements to assert sovereignty, slow down further on net zero. Some even fantasise about changing the leader a third time – though most MPs think that would be madness. Ironically, this populist package is broadly on the unpopular of public opinion when it comes to spending and the net zero policy.

Even on immigration, where the Conservatives are in trouble with their own supporters, the data had to be tortured and spun because the poll respondents proved reluctant to give the desired answers. Former immigration minister Robert Jenrick declared it showed how the country “spoke unambiguously with one voice” for a tougher policy on Rwanda. The actual poll showed 42 per cent support and 42 per cent opposition to Jenrick’s proposal of removals without the right to an appeal. But splitting opponents into two groups – those who oppose removals outright, or who defend the right to appeal first – allowed the Telegraph to project an imaginary landslide from those split opinions.
Six out of 10 respondents doubted the current Rwanda plan would reduce Channel crossings. A separate YouGov poll for The Times finds that 40 per cent would now scrap the troubled Rwanda policy and just 34 per cent keep it.
Downing Street now hopes to pass the Rwanda bill that is splitting the party this week to return to a relentless focus on the economy. This may prove wishful thinking given the political and legal battles to come over the policy.

How should a governing party compete with a populist party like Reform that can always outflank it, rhetorically? On asylum, Reform’s simple slogan is to just take the boats back to France. A party with no MPs is unconstrained by whether what it says is lawful or practical. The government has set out plans to bring immigration numbers down. Having briefly tripled net migration to 750,000, new policies may halve it again towards 350,000. But Reform say net migration should be “net zero”. The party even plans to campaign on the slogan “one in, one out”. Some Conservatives wonder if they should adopt the Reform slogan – but risk simply raising the salience of an issue on which its record is most unpopular across all shades of opinion.
Sunak’s problem is that so-called “realignment” of the 2019 general election has splintered in all directions. The Conservatives had 14 million votes in 2019. But more than a million older voters have died, while the party’s struggles with first-time voters bring in few 18-24 year olds to replace them.
Losing a million votes to Labour is enough on its own to put Keir Starmer in Downing Street, since those direct switchers count double in marginal seats, though not necessarily with a majority. Those voters prioritise the cost of living and the NHS.
Losing a million or two million votes to Reform at the same time would guarantee a heavier defeat – but it is not clear that copying the Nigel Farage message could bring them back now.
Commentators and MPs like to talk about which of these political problems their own political preferences might target. Sunak’s route back to Downing Street would depend on solving all of them at once.






The couple during their visit to the Taj Mahal in Agra earlier this yearxx





SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - OCTOBER 28: Vinod Khosla, Founder, Khosla Ventures, speaks onstage during day two of TechCrunch Disrupt 2025 at Moscone Center on October 28, 2025 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Kimberly White/Getty Images for TechCrunch)Getty Images
SAN FRANCISCO, CA - SEPTEMBER 18: AngelList Co-Founder and CEO Naval Ravikant speaks onstage during TechCrunch Disrupt SF 2017 at Pier 48 on September 18, 2017 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Steve Jennings/Getty Images for TechCrunch)Getty Images
SAN FRANCISCO, CA - SEPTEMBER 14: Managing Director of General Catalyst Hemant Taneja speaks onstage during TechCrunch Disrupt SF 2016 at Pier 48 on September 14, 2016 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Steve Jennings/Getty Images for TechCrunch)Getty Images
CEO of Micron Technology Sanjay Mehrotra, listens to US President Joe Biden speak about manufacturing, at the SRC Arena and Events Center of Onondaga Community College in Syracuse, New York on October 27, 2022. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN / AFP) (Photo by MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images)Getty Images
Google CEO Sundar Pichai looks on during the AI Impact Summit in New Delhi on February 19, 2026. (Photo by Ludovic MARIN / AFP via Getty Images)Getty Images
Indian born Abhijit Banerjee, laureate of Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 2019, speaks during a press conference with the Nobel physics, chemistry and economics laureates at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, on December 7, 2019 in Stockholm, Sweden. (Photo by Jonathan NACKSTRAND / AFP) (Photo by JONATHAN NACKSTRAND/AFP via Getty Images)Getty Images
NEW YORK, NEW YORK - FEBRUARY 12: Padma Lakshmi attends Gold House's Lunar New Year Gold Celebration at Chinese Tuxedo on February 12, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Noam Galai/Getty Images for Gold House)Getty Images
SAN FRANCISCO, CA - SEPTEMBER 10: Sanjit Biswas attends Day 2 of TechCrunch Disrupt SF 2013 at San Francisco Design Center on September 10, 2013 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Steve Jennings/Getty Images for TechCrunch) Getty Images
Neerja Sethi (Photo credits: iMDB)
Jay Chaudhry(Photo credits:
Romesh T Wadhwani(Photo credits: www.csis.org)

