Now, Farage is not Starmer feeding the public's appetite for change | Nigel Farage

There was a time when any election campaign that featured the name Nigel Farage would feature the term “Brexit.”

However, Brexit is not voter speech in this week’s local elections, nearly a decade after Farage orchestrated the great EU separatist incident in Britain, as reform leaders become a greater political threat than ever.

This is even more surprising given the many votes that have occurred in the working-class environment, in which voters feel the adverse effects of the forest economy, which some say is hampered by the UK's trading situation outside the EU.

But if Farage doesn’t have the destructive effect of Brexit as an election millstone around his neck, it may be because, according to a poll, labor voters who violated the reform don’t seem to blame him for it. In fact, they are more likely to blame his political opponents.

The Good Growth Foundation’s discovery is an IQ connected to labor leadership and provides some insight. Its polls show that among a key swing voter, Farage managed to change the responsibility for his life's accomplishments.

The findings are based on a poll conducted in mid-March of 2,200 voters on JL partners, including 222 voters who supported Labour in the general election, but now say they support reforms.

Of these Labour-Reform switchers, 39% said they think Brexit made the country worse - but overall, they didn't blame Farage for it. Instead, 30% blame the Conservatives, while 29% blame Boris Johnson. Only 11% say it's Farage's fault.

Farage's net revenue is 46% in the Labour-Reform switcher, which is significantly higher than its national net approval rate approved -2%. Admirers say they think he defends British values, "tell it like it" and speaks to the common people.

A woman in Rochdale transformed her support from workforce to reform this year, saying: “Some of what he said resonates with people, while many others know that Congressmen and things () are very mushy about things.”

Local election results show that Farage successfully tapped public interest in change, and less than a year ago, Keir Starmer won his slide.

Labor strategists now view reform as their main threat. Jonathan Ashworth, former labor front desk class, said the results show that the country is moving towards a bipartisan system between labor and reform.

In the coming weeks and months, the workforce figures will involve such research to improve the drivers of the surge in reform, but MPs divide in terms of best forward. Some want ministers to focus on lowering laws and illegal immigration, while others say voters in Lencohen and Hullsby have won huge victories, most often citing the government’s controversial welfare cuts.

Keir Starmer said this weekend he "gets" showing his willingness to take responsibility for policy decisions that some MPs believe lose party support in northern towns and cities.

For Farage, a man who spent most of his career influencing policy seems slow to blame for his greatest political achievements.