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UK Conservatives are about to lose big. Here鈥檚 how the Reform party is making it happen.

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Vadim Ghirda/AP
A woman carries electoral leaflets for Nigel Farage's Reform UK party in Clacton-on-Sea, England, July 2, 2024.

Keiron McGill delivered pizza to earn extra income during the pandemic; five years later he鈥檚 self-funding a run for Parliament as a Reform UK candidate.

Scrappy and persistent, and armed with a dozen volunteers and thousands of leaflets, the printing accounts manager and his party are now projected to take as much as a quarter of the vote in a district that had been a stronghold of the ruling Conservative Party.

It鈥檚 a dynamic that鈥檚 repeating itself all over England as the United Kingdom approaches Thursday鈥檚 general elections. 鈥淭here鈥檚 been a sea change of attitude of people thinking, not only does the current Conservative government not work for them, but the opposition [Labour Party] doesn鈥檛 either,鈥 says Mr. McGill. 鈥淭hey want a real change away from the two-party system.鈥

Why We Wrote This

After 14 years in power, the Conservatives are set for an epic fall from power in British elections Thursday. The Reform UK party is making it that much bigger a drop.

His Reform campaign in Castle Point 鈥 a largely well-to-do coastal district an hour east of London 鈥 had been relatively quiet until last month, when charismatic, anti-immigration populist Nigel Farage announced his reentry onto the British political scene. Mr. Farage declared that he had taken control of the Reform Party 鈥 which arose from the remnants of Mr. Farage鈥檚 own Brexit Party 鈥 and would run for Parliament under its banner.

That鈥檚 having spillover effects across Britain.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been a rocket under our campaign,鈥 says Mr. McGill. 鈥淧eople could not be happier that Reform has got a real sort of outspoken leader, who gets the column inches. Nigel Farage seems to have that X factor.鈥

Lenora Chu
Keiron McGill is the Reform UK candidate for the Castle Point constituency, which has been a Conservative stronghold up until just this election cycle. Mr. McGill is polling in the mid-20s.

Across the nation, Reform is expected to siphon roughly a quarter of those who voted Conservative in 2019. Meanwhile, the Labour Party is thumping Conservatives from the left, and is expected to win 聽鈥 more than double its current share.

Barring an earthquake of a surprise, 14 years of Tory rule will end Thursday. The only uncertainty is how big Conservative losses will be.

鈥淲hat Reform does is potentially change the scale of the defeat,鈥 says Paula Surridge, a political sociologist at the University of Bristol and frequent media commentator. 鈥淵et none of this is possible for Reform without the Conservatives having imploded over a long period.鈥

鈥淪leaze and distrust鈥

Mr. McGill was managing accounts for a printing and photocopier company full time while running a sporting events business on the side when the pandemic hit four years ago. Then the Conservative government shut everything down. 鈥淚 saw big losses overnight,鈥 he says.

That鈥檚 when he began to question his long-held Tory loyalty. Checking out the Reform Party鈥檚 website, he saw 鈥渘o vaccine mandates, no further lockdowns,鈥 Mr. McGill says. 鈥淚 saw a party actually not afraid to speak.鈥

Political scientist John Curtice says the Tories have never been in this much trouble, with two crucial events cementing their downward slide.

Phil Noble/AP
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak speaks to reporters at a Conservative general election campaign event in Banbury, England, July 2, 2024.

鈥淣o. 1 is [former Prime Minister] Boris Johnson and 鈥楶artygate鈥欌 鈥 the flouting of COVID-19 regulations by the Conservative-led government, says Professor Curtice. 鈥淧roblem No. 2 is [Mr. Johnson鈥檚] successor Liz Truss鈥 49 days in office tried to go for growth鈥 with a tax-cut plan that prompted economic chaos and a tanking of the pound.

That鈥檚 led to the loss of one set of voters on 鈥渟leaze and distrust,鈥 says Dr. Surridge, and 鈥渁nother whole raft on 鈥榃e might have forgiven that, but you haven鈥檛 even managed the economy well.鈥 The Conservatives have done that to themselves.鈥

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, brought in by the Tories to stamp out fires set by Ms. Truss, created some of his own challenges with a series of missteps and a perceived lack of enthusiasm for the job. Recently, he skipped out early on a D-Day celebration in France that had convened veterans and world leaders, irking the public, and a few people close to him were discovered to be placing election-related bets.

The residual effects of the pandemic, runaway inflation, a cost-of-living crisis, monthslong National Health Service waiting lists, and a failure to stem the flow of immigration are among the criticisms being hung on Conservatives. Immigration is the top issue that is pushing Conservative voters toward Reform, says Dr. Surridge.

Reform UK proposes raising the income tax threshold to 拢20,000 (roughly $25,500), in order to give a boost to people鈥檚 personal pocketbooks, and also supports a policy they call 鈥渘et zero鈥 immigration. It鈥檚 resonating with Conservatives.

So is the entry of Mr. Farage, who is 鈥渃harismatic in a campaign that is short on charisma,鈥 says Professor Curtice. 鈥淗is arrival gives [Reform] credibility, gives it visibility, gives it volubility, and just ensures that even more Tory voters will switch to that direction.鈥

Hollie Adams/Reuters
Reform UK Party leader Nigel Farage gives a thumbs-up after a rally at the National Exhibition Centre in Birmingham, England, June 30, 2024.

A fighting chance

Back in Castle Point, Mark Maguire is another candidate who may very well benefit from a Tory implosion.

A longtime Labour Party member, he worked his way up to local chair and is now Labour鈥檚 candidate for Parliament in Castle Point. The party has come from having 鈥渘o chance in four years, to having a fighting chance,鈥 he says.

Part of that is due to Reform鈥檚 presence, says Mr. Maguire. 鈥淭he Conservatives are too busy worrying about losing to the far right that they鈥檝e moved themselves a lot rightward, so we comfortably sit in the center ground.鈥

Still, Mr. Maguire acknowledges that it鈥檚 difficult to break longtime Conservative strongholds.聽鈥淭here鈥檚 an idea that voters would like local change, but whether that will pan out, I don鈥檛 know,鈥 he says.

Yet the numbers say anything can happen. The Conservative incumbent Rebecca Harris took a whopping 76% of the vote in 2019, but approaching Thursday鈥檚 elections, Conservatives are , with Labour and Reform each polling around the upper 20s.

Susan Gardner is a longtime Tory voter who is thinking about Reform for the first time. 鈥淚鈥檝e got to weigh it up,鈥 she says, 鈥渂ut Partygate, the mistakes. I鈥檓 also not happy with Rishi.鈥

But Tracy Cole will stay with the Tories because of their experience balancing budgets. 鈥淩eform is too new; they need to establish themselves first,鈥 she says.

Courtesy of Mark Maguire
"The Conservatives have shot themselves in the foot over quite a lot," says Mark Maguire, the Labour Party candidate for Parliament in Castle Point.

What are Reform voters getting?

Certainly, the Reform party has experienced a few setbacks in the past week. It came to light that a handful of candidates made comments in the past looking kindly upon Hitler. (In the aftermath, Reform leaders stated that the company the party hired to vet candidates didn鈥檛 do its job.) Mr. Farage also recently said the West had provoked Russian President Vladimir Putin to invade Ukraine, a wildly unpopular position in the U.K.

Much of Reform鈥檚 platform looks like the Conservatives鈥. A few Reform candidates have recently withdrawn after realizing that their presence in the race might boost the chances of a Labour member of Parliament.

Analysts expect Mr. Farage to win his Clacton constituency but that his party will take few, if any, others. But however many seats Reform wins, the party will have an outsize impact due to the votes it will siphon. It may also lay the groundwork for the future. Mr. Farage has said these elections are the first step in a long-term strategy聽for disrupting the two-party system and prompting 鈥渁 dramatic realignment of the center-right of British politics.鈥

For his part, Mr. McGill, the Reform candidate, is energized during the last hours of his campaign in Castle Point. He doesn鈥檛 agree with assessments that Reform is a spoiler that will usher Labour into government.

鈥淭he two parties [Tory and Labour] are so close together that doesn鈥檛 really make much of a difference,鈥 says Mr. McGill. 鈥淚f you vote Tory, you get Labour anyway. But if you vote Reform, you actually get those radical policies we spoke about. A vote for Reform is very much a vote for Reform 鈥 not a vote for Labour.鈥

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