Keir Starmer HUMILIATED as Labour COLLAPSES to Fourth Place – Even the Greens Overtake Him!

A new p0lit!cal storm has erupted across Britain — and its epicentre lies squarely in the Labour Party headquarters.
A shocking new poll by FindOutNow has sent tremors through Westminster, suggesting that Sir Keir Starmer’s Labour has fallen to fourth place behind the Greens, the Conservatives, and Nigel Farage’s surging Reform UK.
For a man once hailed as the steady hand to restore credibility after the chaos of Corbynism, this is nothing short of a p0lit!cal humiliation.
Reform UK storms ahead — and the unthinkable happens
According to the poll, 32% of voters would now back Reform UK if a general election were held today — a result that would have been dismissed as fantasy just a year ago.
The Conservatives sit in second with 17%, but it’s what comes next that has left commentators gasping: the Green Party edges into third place with 15.3%, while Labour limps in fourth at 15.2%.
Yes — after months of sliding support, Labour has been overtaken by the Greens. For Starmer, who built his leadership on the promise of electability, the symbolism is devastating.
Even if the difference sits within the polling “margin of error” of 2–3%, the message is crystal clear: Labour’s once formidable coalition is fracturing from both sides.
Left-wing disillusionment and Reform’s populist rise
The findings reveal a deep malaise in British politics — one that Starmer’s cautious centrism appears unable to heal.
On the left, the Green Party has been quietly building momentum among students, urban professionals, and socially liberal voters disenchanted with Labour’s increasingly hardline stance on immigration and policing.
Zack Polanski, the Green leader, has presented himself as the “authentic progressive” voice in contrast to what many see as Starmer’s managerial politics.
Meanwhile, Reform UK — led by the irrepressible Nigel Farage — has become the vessel for angry, anti-establishment voters, particularly in the North and Midlands. These are the same regions that handed Labour its historic defeat in 2019, and which now seem ready to deliver another blow.
The once-solid “Red Wall” is crumbling all over again, and Starmer’s strategy of cautious moderation looks powerless to stop it.
“The beginning of the end” — insiders voice alarm

Within Labour’s ranks, the poll has sparked panic and finger-pointing.
One senior MP reportedly told GB News: “This is the nightmare scenario. We’re losing the working class to Reform and the middle class to the Greens. Keir’s trying to please everyone — and ends up pleasing no one.”
Another shadow cabinet source admitted that the party’s messaging on migration and crime has backfired: “When we try to sound tough, we alienate liberals. When we talk about fairness, we lose the Red Wall. We’ve become a p0lit!cal blur.”
Some MPs are even whispering about a potential leadership crisis if Labour’s polling doesn’t recover before Christmas.
Kemi Badenoch’s Conservatives quietly celebrate
While the Tories remain far behind Reform, the poll has offered Prime Minister Kemi Badenoch a brief glimmer of hope.
For the first time in months, Conservatives have edged ahead of Labour in at least one major survey. “It shows Labour’s weakness more than our strength,” a senior Tory aide said, “but it gives our MPs something to cling to.”
Tory strategists believe Labour’s collapse could split the opposition vote, potentially allowing the Conservatives to hold key seats even amid deep national unpopularity.
Starmer’s dilemma: two fronts, no safe ground
Starmer now faces an unprecedented challenge: how to fight off threats from two directions at once.
If he tacks right to win back working-class voters tempted by Reform, he risks alienating young progressives who are drifting to the Greens. But if he pivots left, he could lose credibility with moderates who see him as the “safe pair of hands” in uncertain times.
It’s a p0lit!cal trap with no easy escape.
p0lit!cal analyst Dr Sarah Whitfield from King’s College London says:
“Labour’s problem is structural, not tactical. They’re trying to be both the party of social justice and the party of economic restraint — but the electorate no longer believes one party can be both.”
She added that Starmer’s cautious style, once viewed as reassuring, now comes across as uninspired: “He doesn’t make people angry — but he doesn’t make them excited either. And excitement wins elections.”
A slow-motion collapse
While FindOutNow’s poll is a snapshot, the trendlines are unmistakable. Over the past three months, Labour’s average support has fallen steadily from 25% to below 17%, while the Greens have climbed from 9% to more than 14%.
The shift may seem small, but it represents millions of votes — and could redraw the entire map of British politics.
If these numbers held in a general election, Starmer could face a result even worse than Labour’s 2019 disaster under Jeremy Corbyn. Reform UK could emerge as the largest party by vote share — an outcome that would have once seemed laughable.
The road ahead — or the end of the road?
In public, Starmer’s allies have tried to project calm. A spokesperson for Labour dismissed the poll as “one outlier”, claiming that “voters still trust Keir to deliver serious government”.
But privately, many are far from confident. One former adviser warned:
“We’ve spent five years trying to prove we’re not radical — and in the process, we’ve lost our soul. The Greens now own the moral high ground, and Reform owns the anger. What’s left for us?”
Others believe Starmer must take bold action — perhaps reshuffling his shadow cabinet, or unveiling a dramatic new policy vision — to reassert control of the narrative before it’s too late.
A p0lit!cal earthquake in slow motion
For now, Britain appears to be witnessing a slow-motion p0lit!cal earthquake. Reform UK’s populist surge, the Greens’ progressive revival, and the Conservatives’ stubborn resilience have left Labour squeezed, uncertain, and exhausted.
Starmer once promised to make Labour “electable again.” Instead, he faces headlines declaring his party less popular than the Greens — a humiliation few could have imagined when he took the helm.
If the polling trend continues, the question may no longer be whether Keir Starmer can win the next election — but whether he will even survive as leader long enough to fight it.