By Alex Smith / @alexsmith1982
UPDATE: A separate poll for the Sunday Times has the gap at 9 points, with Labour up four.
In a new poll for tomorrow’s Independent on Sunday, the Tory lead has increased back to 17%. Compared to last week’s Independent poll, also conducted by ComRes, the Conservatives are up four points to 41% and Labour are languishing on 24%, with the Lib Dems just three points behind on 21%.
Translated broadly to a general election, these numbers would deliver the Tories with a 96 seat majority; they would win 373 seats to Labour’s 192.
After a string of positive polling numbers for Labour, tomorrow’s poll may be a reaction to the measures announced in Wednesday’s Pre-Budget Report, or to the party’s new focus on drawing divisions with the opposition along class lines: 70% of respondents disagreed with the notion “that David Cameron went to Eton makes it harder for him to be a good prime minister for the whole country.”
However, in an otherwise humbling set of numbers, there are one or two indicators that are more positive for Labour. For example, 66% agreed that the Government’s plans for heavier taxes on people with high incomes are fair.
Meanwhile, only 34% of respondents agreed that the Tories have the “right ideas about how to get Britain out of recession” (down from 38% in April). 46% disagree with that statement outright.
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