Final general election poll shows Labour's support has slipped five points in a week as Reform are predicted to win 13 MPs but Tories are still languishing at their lowest-ever level - as millions of voters head out to decide Britain's fate GENERAL ELECTION 2024 LIVE: Follow MailOnline's liveblog for latest updates By Greg Heffer, Political Correspondent For Mailonline Published: 12:26, 4 July 2024 | Updated: 12:27, 4 July 2024 e-mail 25 View comments Advertisement A final general election poll has shown Labour dropping five percentage points in a week - although the Tories continued to languish at their lowest-ever level. The last Ipsos survey before polling stations opened at 7am today put Sir Keir Starmer 's party on a 37 per cent vote share - giving Labour an 18-point lead over the Conservatives, who were unchanged on 19 per cent. Despite Labour's support falling to its lowest level since 2021, the pollster said Sir Keir would enter Downing Street tomorrow with a 'healthy majority' amid wider expectations of a landslide win for the party.

The Tories' vote share remained at its lowest in Ipsos records since the late 1970s, with the party's woes compounded by Nigel Farage 's Reform UK attracting the support of 15 per cent of voters. The research showed a quarter (25 per cent) of voters who backed the Conservatives in 2019 had now switched to Mr Farage's party. A separate Survation poll, published last night, put Reform on 17 per cent compared to the Tories on 20 per cent.

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