Jeremy Corbyn 'Most Likely To Damage' Labour's Chances At The Next Election, New Polls Finds

Latest Jeremy Corbyn Poll Will Leave You Scratching Your Head
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Jeremy Corbyn is the Labour leadership candidate most likely to damage the party's chances at the next election, a poll has found.

But in a sign of the polarising effect the left-winger has, the poll also found he was the contender rated as having the best chance of improving Labour's fortunes.

Some 21% of those surveyed by ComRes thought Mr Corbyn would improve Labour's chances at the next election, putting him ahead of Andy Burnham on 19%, Yvette Cooper on 15% and Liz Kendall on 11%.

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A new poll shows Jeremy Corbyn is the most likely Labour leadership candidate to damage the party's chances at the next election while at the same time he was rated as having the best chances of improving its fortunes

The poll came as a Survation poll on Friday showed that voters would more likely back Labour in an election under Mr Corbyn than any of his leadership rivals. The Islington MP was seven points of his nearest rival, Mr Burnham, on 32%.

The latest poll, for the Independent on Sunday and Sunday Mirror, found 31% of those polled thought Mr Corbyn would worsen Labour's prospects of electoral success - with Ms Cooper on 18%, Ms Kendall on 17% and Mr Burnham on 14%.

The figures gave Mr Burnham a net rating of +5, with Ms Cooper on -3, Ms Kendall on -6 and Mr Corbyn on -10.

None of the candidates performed as well as former foreign secretary David Miliband, defeated by his brother Ed at the last Labour leadership contest - who scored a net rating of +11.

Among Labour voters, some 33% thought Mr Corbyn would improve the party's chances of success at the next election, with 21% saying he would worsen them.

Mr Corbyn, the frontrunner in the contest, would make the state of the British economy worse according to 36% of those surveyed, with just 14% saying it would improve if he was in charge.

Britain's standing around the world would suffer according to 37%, with just 11% thinking it would improve with Mr Corbyn in Number 10.

There was some comfort for Mr Corbyn, who has vowed to take the railways back into public ownership - with 23% believing that the quality of train services would improve compared with 22% who thought they would get worse.

In an indication of the task facing whoever emerges as the winner of the leadership race on September 12, the ComRes study found the Opposition trailing the Tories by 11 points, with David Cameron's party on 40% and Labour on 29%.

Amid growing concern from Labour MPs that Mr Corbyn is on the brink of unlikely victory, former prime minister Gordon Brown is expected to intervene in a speech on Sunday.

The ex-leader, who is held in high regard within the party and credited with a crucial late intervention in the Scottish referendum campaign, will deliver an address on "power for a purpose".

Sources in Ms Cooper's camp have played down reports that Mr Brown is set to endorse her for the leadership, but the shadow home secretary admitted she has spoken to the former prime minister.

"I have spoken to Gordon, I have spoken to lots of different people as part of the campaign, just asking people about their ideas for the future and so on," she said.

ComRes interviewed 2,035 adults in Britain online between August 12 and 13. Data were weighted to be demographically representative of all GB adults and by past vote recall.

Celebrities backing and attacking Jeremy Corbyn
ATTACK: Robert Webb(01 of10)
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The Peep Show actor said: "He's a nice guy, totally marooned in 1980s politics. And I remember the 1980s very well. The Bennites f****d Labour. And then we had 17 years of Tories. Lots of people suffered while the Left kept their splendid principles. F**k that. Come on, guys." (credit:Zak Hussein/PA Archive)
BACK: Charlotte Church(02 of10)
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The singer said: "He is one of the only politicians of note that seems to truly recognise the dire inequality that exists in this country today and actually have a problem with it. There is something inherently virtuous about him, and that is a quality that can rally the support of a lot of people, and most importantly, a lot of young people." (credit:Daniel Leal-Olivas/PA Wire)
ATTACK: Tony Blair(03 of10)
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The former Prime Minister said: "If Jeremy Corbyn becomes leader it won't be a defeat like 1983 or 2015 at the next election. It will mean rout, possibly annihilation. It doesn't matter whether you're on the left, right or centre of the party, whether you used to support me or hate me. But please understand the danger we are in. The party is walking eyes shut, arms outstretched over the cliff's edge to the jagged rocks below." (credit:JUSTIN TALLIS via Getty Images)
BACK: Maxine Peake (04 of10)
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The actor said: "For me Jeremy Corbyn is our only beacon of hope to get the Labour Party back on track, get the electorate back in touch with politics and save this country from the constant mindless bullying of the vulnerable and poor. Aspirational? Surely we should all aspire that everyone living in this country has the right to a decent quality of life." (credit:Matt Crossick/Matt Crossick)
BACK: Brian Eno(05 of10)
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The musician said: "Corbyn has a story that people want to hear. It’s positive – idealistic even – but it isn’t outlandish, although the neoliberals would like you to think it is." (credit:Michael Crabtree/PA Archive)
ATTACK: Alan Johnson(06 of10)
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The Labour grandee said: “In my view only Yvette Cooper can unite the party to win again. Those members who can’t give her their first preference should give her their second. After over a century of male leaders we have an election where the most qualified candidate to lead our party back to government happens to be a woman. Let’s end the madness and elect her.” (credit:Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire)
BACK: Mary Beard(07 of10)
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The scholar said: "If I were a member of the Labour Party, I would vote for Corbyn. He actually seems to have some ideological commitment, which could get the Labour Party to think about what it actually stands for." (credit:John Stillwell/PA Archive)
BACK: Ken Loach(08 of10)
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The film director said: ""Jeremy Corbyn, true to the best traditions of Labour, has a realistic plan to build new homes. Councils should have the power to plan and build good houses, environmentally sound, with proper infrastructure. Labour had the best Housing Minister ever in Nye Bevan. It's time for another with the same vision." (credit:Thibault Camus/AP)
ATTACK: Polly Toynbee(09 of10)
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The Guardian journalist said: "Labour people, motivated by the plight of the needy in a grossly unjust society, shouldn’t gamble the future of the weak on such a slender chance. Every Tory government impoverishes the poor and enriches the wealthy. Every Labour government makes landmark social progress. Winning next time matters desperately. A Cooper leadership offers an infinitely better hope of success." (credit:Ben Birchall/PA Archive)
BACK: Owen Jones(10 of10)
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The Guardian journalist said: "He is the very antithesis of the negative caricature of an MP: he’s defined by his principles and beliefs, uninterested in personal self-advancement, and determined to use his platform to further the interests of people and causes that are otherwise ignored." (credit:Rob Stothard via Getty Images)