What likelihood of a Boris Johnson comeback? Well, according to the man himself, there is, apparently, ‘more chance of a baked bean winning Royal Ascot’ than an improbable second premiership. Yet amid Kemi Badenoch’s constant woes, there are those who still harbour hopes of Johnson 2.0. Of course, one massive stumbling block could be the so-called ‘Boriswave’ – the huge numbers of mass migration unleashed on the country between 2019 and 2024, with legal arrivals peaking at 906,000 in June 2023.
But now Mr S has some good news for our onetime premier. It seems that the public are rather less aware of this term than many online right-wingers. A poll by Merlin Strategy of 1,500 voters between 27 to 29 June for The Spectator finds that only 27 per cent of voters are either 'very aware' or 'quite aware' of this term. Therefore nearly three in four (73 per cent) say that they are 'not very aware' (24 per cent) or 'not at all aware' (49 per cent) of this phrase. But when this term is explained to voters, some 65 per cent say that 'I think that term is fair' – including 50 per cent of 2024 Conservative voters. Just 35 per cent of all voters think that term 'is unfair.'
Luckily for Johnson, 62 per cent of all respondents believe that 'other factors are to blame for the increase in migration' rather than Boris himself. Still, some 32 per cent blame him personally for the spike in mass migration, including 40 per cent of non-voters. Yet there is a widespread acceptance that legal migration has increased since 2019, with 42 per cent arguing it has 'increased by a lot' and 26 per cent saying it 'increased a little.' By contrast a mere 6 per cent believe it has 'decreased a little' and only 2 per cent that it has 'decreased a lot.'
Let's see if the ball comes loose out of the back of the scrum eh?
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