Labour could win 470 seats in massive landslide election victory according to ... trends now Labour could win 470 seats in massive landslide election victory according to major new poll - but support for Keir Starmer is soft and could still fall away By David Wilcock, Deputy Political Editor For Mailonline Published: 11:58 BST, 7 June 2023 | Updated: 11:58 BST, 7 June 2023 1 Viewcomments Labour is on course for a massive landslide victory at the next election that would give Sir Keir Starmer a 140-seat majority. A shock super-poll of 10,000 people predicts that the opposition could win an astonishing 470 seats in the election expected next year, with the Tories left with a rump of just 129 MPs. However, the survey by Focaldata for Best for Britain warned that support for Sir Keir and his party is still 'soft', because voters are not hugely impressed with any party leader. Labour's vote share is now smaller - at 35 per cent - than it was last autumn when it had a 42 per cent share. Best for Britain chief executive Naomi Smith said Prime Minister Rishi Sunak appears to have won back some of the Tory voters disaffected by Liz Truss and Kwasi Kwarteng's disastrous mini-budget last year. She told a press briefing in Westminster: 'Labour's lead does look healthy but their margins are falling everywhere.' A shock super-poll of 10,000 people predicts that the opposition could win an astonishing 470 seats in the election expected next year, with the Tories left with a rump of just 129 MPs. Labour's vote share is now smaller - at 35 per cent - than it was last autumn when it had a 42 per cent share. The findings are based on a survey of 10,140 people by pollsters Focaldata carried out between April 20 and May 9. A worst-case scenario for Labour could see a hung Parliament where the party gets 316 seats and the Tories 286, according to new polling analysis. Modelling by Best for Britain, the anti-Brexit turned internationalist campaign group, suggests this could play out if right-wing party Reform UK stands aside for the Conservatives in marginal seats - as Ukip and the Brexit Party have done previously, and undecided voters break for the Tories. Focaldata asked 10,140 people between April 20 and May 9 which party they would vote for if a general election were held tomorrow. Share or comment on this article: All rights reserved for this news site (dailymail) and under his responsibility