Professor Sir John Curtice, the political Nostradamus, has delivered a bombshell that’s bound to send Westminster’s cosy cartel into meltdown. Labour’s broken promises have sparked a petition for a general election, and Curtice had some sharp words on GB News about the electorate’s growing discontent.
“The electorate were more fragmented in July than they had been at any previous post-war election… If the Government doesn’t turn it around, and if the Conservative Party doesn’t succeed in reingratiating itself with the public, where will the public go?”
Well, faster than you can say “two tier, free gear, never here Keir,” voters are already turning to Nigel Farage and Reform UK, now polling at 19 per cent. That’s not a protest vote—that’s a political earthquake in the making.
Curtice went further, suggesting that the dominance of the Labour and Tory duopoly—those two parties that love to trade power while delivering the same old policies—could finally be crumbling:
“I don’t think we can necessarily assume the Conservative and Labour dominance of the electorate of most of the post-war period is necessarily going to survive this period.”
It’s clear: voters are tired of empty promises, tired of being ignored, and tired of business-as-usual politics. Farage’s rise isn’t just a challenge—it’s a wake-up call to a political class that’s failed on borders, culture, and the economy. Reform’s momentum is more than a protest; it’s a warning shot to the establishment that their time is running out.