Less than a month after her inauguration, more than half of Britons think Prime Minister Liz Terrace should step down, according to a YouGov poll.

The poll, which was prepared yesterday Friday, highlights damage to the reputation of Terrace and the ruling Conservative Party in the UK as a result of a huge package of unwarranted tax cuts uncovered by her government a week ago, which led to a decline in the pound and the sale of government bonds, while her the party trails the opposition Labor Party by a record margin, according to Bloomberg.

Some 51% of the roughly 5,000 Britons polled said Gears should step down, while 54% thought Treasurer Kwasi Quarting should also step down.

Despite market backlash, Conservative MPs and voters, Truss and Quarting are sticking to a tax-cut package that has benefited the rich more than the poor, insisting they will present a mid-term economic plan and an independent economic outlook on Nov. 23. next, according to Bloomberg.

Tros is gearing up for the Conservative Party’s annual conference, which is expected on Sunday, in light of the challenge to reassert its position among the party’s MPs and reassure financial markets that the party continues to support responsible economic management.

The YouGov poll also showed Truss losing support for the Conservative Party in the last general election in 2019, with about 36% of them calling for her to leave and 41% calling for Quarting to leave.

This comes after a YouGov poll of voting intent for The Times, released on Thursday, showed the Labor Party 33 points ahead of the Conservatives, while the Left gained 54%, up 9 points to 21. % of the conservatives who lost 7 points.

The Institute and the newspaper pointed out that this was the biggest progress recorded by the Labor Party since the late nineties of the twentieth century. The Institute attributed this progress to the fact that 17 percent of Conservative voters in the 2019 election now intend to vote Labor.

This progress is also linked to the fluctuation of 26% of Conservative voters and a decrease in intentions to vote for the Liberal Democrats, according to AFP.