LABOUR has abandoned its traditional values and supporters, according to a poll.

Most voters - 27 per cent - think the party represents people who “weren’t born in the UK”, according to an extensive survey by Britain Thinks.

One said: “I don’t think Labour now stands for the kind of values it stood for when I was a child.”
Voters said the Labour’s identity had changed. One declared: “They used to be a casserole and now they are quinoa.”

Another added: “Now they’d live in a hippy commune.”

The biggest thing Labour could do to soar ahead in the polls is to replace Jeremy Corbyn as leader, the poll found. The number one priority for Tories would be to boost NHS spending.

Britain Thinks director Deborah Mattinson said: “There is a strong feeling that the Labour brand has changed.”