A new poll came out Friday that shocked the UK establishment. Labour is on the upswing.



Theresa May risks being ousted from Downing Street after a shock new poll suggests Labour could be on course to cut her majority down to just two seats.

The YouGov poll for the Times found that the Conservatives are on 43%, just five points ahead of Labour on 38%.

At the start of the election campaign, some polls had the Tories with leads of more than 20 points.

The turn-around has been extraordinary and it has left many asking "how is this possible?"

One source examined Corbyn's unconventional campaign style, and this is what they found.



However, there appears to be a groundswell of support building for Labour, and that support seems to be a direct result of a radical, bizarre new strategy set out by Jeremy Corbyn. The likes of this which hasn’t been seen in British politics before. Jeremy Corbyn has taken these unthinkable steps to try and win over the British public: Has instructed his party to run a positive campaign and not be drawn into gutter politics.

Refuses to name-call or smear the opposition.

He actually seems to care about people.

Generally answers questions honestly when asked (even if they are loaded questions from the media).

Is appearing in public and meeting the electorate face to face.

Is not locking journalists in store-rooms and stage managing questions from them.

Refused to use so called ‘big data’ companies to tap into individual’s worries and fears via targeted campaigns on social media.

And this is the craziest thing, he has actually released a really good manifesto that’s been well received by the public.

Crazy, huh? It's almost as if he's treating the voter with respect.

What's wrong with him?

Corbyn, not being happy with throwing out normal campaign conventions, even addressed the failure of the War on Terror.



The sight of the army on Britain’s streets after the Manchester suicide bomb attack is a clear sign that the UK’s foreign policy and approach to fighting terrorism is not working, Jeremy Corbyn has said. The Labour leader said there must be more money for law enforcement, as he suggested Britain’s intervention in wars abroad had fuelled the risk of terrorism at home. “Many experts, including professionals in our intelligence and security services, have pointed to the connections between wars our government has supported or fought in other countries and terrorism here at home,” he said. His comments drew immediate criticism from the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats, with Sir Michael Fallon, the defence secretary, accusing Corbyn of “very muddled and dangerous thinking” that implied blame on Britain for somehow bringing the Manchester terror attack on itself.

Many pundits say this speech will doom Corbyn, but then they already said he was doomed.