Jeremy Corbyn predicted landslide 53% victory in shock new YouGov poll
A shock poll tonight has predicted a landslide 53% victory for Jeremy Corbyn in the Labour leadership race.
The YouGov poll for the Times claims he could smash aside his three contenders in the first round of votes without having to win over second preferences.
It's the second public poll of the leadership race, just 36 hours before the deadline for members and supporters to sign up to vote.
Ladbrokes immediately slashed their odds on the left-winger to 1/2, with Andy Burnham on 3/1 and Yvette Cooper on 4/1.
The poll puts Mr Corbyn an astonishing 32 points ahead of closest rival Mr Burnham.
Despite being in second place the shadow health secretary is trailing on 21%.
Shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper would win 18% of the vote while Liz Kendall would win just 8%.
The lead is far more dramatic than the first YouGov poll last month, which put Mr Corbyn on 43% compared to 26% for Mr Burnham.
That kind of result would force the two frontrunners to fight for second-preference votes from people who would have wanted to pick Ms Cooper or Ms Kendall.
This could have posed a headache for Mr Corbyn - whose outsider badge makes him less likely to pick up second-preference votes.
But if he wins more than 50% in the first round, it'll be enough to carry him through to the top job automatically.
Around 400,000 people are thought to have signed up to vote for Labour's next leader - and just half were part of the party before polling day.
It's sparked fears of mass 'entryism' by hard-left candidates who've stood against Labour in the past.
YouGov said four of the 10 new percentage points voting for Mr Corbyn have switched candidates - the other six have joined afresh in the last month.
YouGov chief Peter Kellner, who faced embarrassment over off-the-mark polls before the election, has put his reputation on the line by predicting a Corbyn 'knockout'.
He writes in tomorrow's Times: "I would personally be astonished if Mr Corbyn does not end up as Labour leader - but I have seldom released a poll with as much trepidation as I have done this time".
