More than half of voters view Farage and Reform as ‘very sleazy’ as Clacton byelection called for 13 August– UK politics live | Politics

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More than half


More than half of voters regard Farage as ‘very sleazy’, poll suggests

YouGov has published pollingtoday suggesting that more than half of voters regard Nigel Farage as “very sleazy”. On this measure, he scores far worse than any of the other party leaders. Even 40% of Reform UK voters regard him as “sleazy”.

Here are the figures. This chart shows the figures for parties, party leaders, and “British governments in general”.

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Polling on whether parties and their leaders are ‘sleazy’
Polling on whether parties and their leaders are ‘sleazy’ Photograph: YouGov

And this chart shows how views vary depending on which parties people support.

Polling on politcians and parties viewed as ‘sleazy’
Polling on politcians and parties viewed as ‘sleazy’ Photograph: YouGov

In his write-up for YouGov, Dylan Difford points out that Reform UK’s rating on this measure has got worse.

double quotation markReform being viewed as sleazy is not necessarily a new thing, but the perception has grown. In October 2024, at the height of the freebie-gate scandal, half of Britons saw the party as sleazy, a clear 18 points lower than today.

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However, a seedy shift is not limited to Reform, with belief that the Green party is sleazy having roughly doubled from 18% to 35% over the last 21 months, while such a view of the Lib Dems is also up seven points.

By comparison, evaluations of the current Labour government, its Conservative predecessor, or British governments in general remain largely unchanged over this period.

One problem with polling like this is that, while the views of voters are always interesting, they are not always correct. When people tell pollsters they regard a politician or a party as “sleazy”, it can mean they view them as corrupt, or morally dubious; but it can just mean they do not like them.

For example, this polling suggests 73% of people view Farage as either very (56%) or fairly (17%) sleazy. But 77% of people see “British governments in general” as either very (26%) or fairly (51%) sleazy.

That is a judgment that would surprise many people who take a serious interest in how British politics operates. UK governments have multiple flaws, but by international standards they are not corrupt and ethical standards are reasonably high. These figures probably have more to say about popularity than morality.

Key events

Polanski says new report shows rent controls could cut poverty and save state billions, with minimal impact on landlords

Zack Polanski, the Green party leader, has welcomed research out today arguing that a well-designed rent control policy could save the government billions of pounds and lift hundreds of thousands of people out of poverty.

The report, produced by the Institute for Innovation and Public Purpose at UCL, says that if rents in England had been frozen in November 2022, the government would now be saving £2bn a year – and average renting households would be saving £2,400 a year.

The report also dismisses claims that rent controls would collapse the private rental market because they would lead to landlords refusing to carry on renting their property.

In his speech, Polanski said:

double quotation markIf Andy Burnham is serious about ending rip-off Britain, fixing our broken system and putting money back in the pockets of ordinary people – rent controls simply must be at the top of his agenda.

We hear plenty of scare stories about landlords being bankrupted by rent controls. But this research exposes that as nonsense. Over the last three and a half years, we could have saved households on average £2400 a year – while still allowing landlords to enjoy profit margins four and a half times larger than the average UK business.

We need a prime minister who is willing to control the rental market, lower prices – and doesn’t fear the bond markets. No half measures: it’s time for our next prime minister to show us what he’s made of.

The report, by Beth Stratfordand Joe Beswick, says:

double quotation markWe conclude that the risks associated with rent controls, though significant, are manageable – and pale against the cost of inaction: spiralling housing benefit spending, rising homelessness, and entrenched poverty and inequality.

The authors say that rent controls have worked in the past.

double quotation markEngland’s private renters face some of the worst affordability pressures in the developed world. The evidence makes clear that neither new house-building nor increased housing subsidies can realistically address the full scale of the problem. By contrast the historical record across Europe shows that the most decisive improvements in housing affordability in the 20th century came from the direct regulation of rents.

On potential savings, the authors say that if the government had frozen rents in November 2022, it would have been able “to restore housing support payments to cover the cheapest 30% of local rents and would still be saving an estimated £2bn a year in housing benefit spending by now”.

That would save the average renting household £2,400 a year, “boosting the disposable income of renters in the poorest quintile by 22%”, they say.

As for claims that rent controls would put landlords out of business, the authors say even with rent controls landlords would still be making healthy profits.

double quotation markFor mortgaged landlords, a 20% reduction in rent reduces mean pre-tax profit margins from 70% to 64% – which means they would still be 4.5 times bigger than the mean pre-tax profit margin for UK businesses. Profit margins for unmortgaged landlords (58% of all unincorporated landlords) would be higher still. These figures do not take account of capital gains from house price appreciation.

This chart illustrates these figures.

Impact of rent controls on profit margins Photograph: IIPP

The authors say:

double quotation markA 10% reduction in rents would cause 2.3% of landlords to become unprofitable – significantly fewer than the 4.8% of landlords tipped into lossmaking by changes to mortgage interest tax relief (MITR) and interest rate rises since 2021-22.

The report recommends combining rent controls with a policy giving tenants a minimum six months to find alternative accommodation if a landlord decides to sell, and giving tenants, and then councils and housing associations, first refusal to buy.

It also says rent controls could lead to many properties being sold off and acquired by councils for social rent.

double quotation markCrucially, if accompanied by the right fiscal and legal framework, landlord exit presents a historic opportunity: a managed transfer of homes out of the insecure private rented sector and into permanently affordable ownership.

Zack Polanski speaking in Greater Manchester on Thursday. Photograph: Rich McCarthy/PA
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