Labour Leadership: two thirds of voters haven’t heard of ANY of the contenders to replace Jeremy Corbyn, poll reveals
BRITS across the country have no idea who any of the candidates vying for the top job as Labour leader are, according to a new poll.
The Labour party is facing more chaos in a three-month long leadership campaign, but the struggle they face is to get people to know, or even care, about the new leader.
According to a survey by Deltapoll, seen by The Daily Telegraph, two thirds of people questioned did not know who any of the candidates for the Labour leadership were, including front-runners Sir Keir Starmer and Rebecca Long Bailey.
A Corbyn-loyalist, Ms Long Bailey has been dubbed the "continuity" candidate.
Following Mr Corbyn's humiliating election defeat, she has been on a media offensive as she launches her bid to be Labour leader.
Still, only 15 per cent of people polled knew who she was, even when they were shown a photo of the shadow business secretary.
Ms Long Bailey has refused to admit Mr Corbyn was a disastrous Labour leader, or that Labour's policies were to blame for the massive defeat.
Instead, she blamed "campaign strategy" not Labour's "socialist program".
One poll put Sir Keir, a Labour moderate, as the favourite to place Mr Corbyn, but according to the poll only 25 per cent of people could place the millionaire barrister.
Yvette Cooper, former chief secretary to the Treasury under Tony Blair, was the most recognisable Labour politician, with 32 per cent of people and 29 per cent of Labour saying they knew who she was, even though Ms Cooper is not even running in the leadership race.
Emily Thornberry was next on the list of candidates who people had actually heard of, with 26 per cent of people recognising the shadow foreign secretary.
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Only 10 per cent of people knew who former shadow energy secretary Lisa Nandy was, while Jess Phillips was a familiar face to only 15 per cent of people.
Shadow education secretary Angela Rayner threw her hat into the race to be deputy-leader, saying she didn't want to fight for the leadership in case someone asked whether she or flatmate and friend Ms Long Bailey was the "better woman".