presenter Kevin O'Sullivan has slammed the 's efforts since they took office, saying they have done "nothing at all" for people.
"What do you think it is this government is trying to do for us in what way since they came in last July 5?" he enquired. "Have they improved any of our lives? Are our energy bills way down? Are we freer? Are we richer? Are we happier? What are this lot doing to make our lives better?" he asked.
"I don't perceive anything [they have done]. Nothing at all. They're just doing a great deal of nonsense to make our lives worse," he said. Many viewers agreed with his viewpoint and flooded the show with support on X (formerly Twitter) to share their own opinons. "They do not work for us. They have no interest in our interests, they work for the globalist EU," one said.
"I'm a lifelong Labour voter who was looking forward to a Labour government I am now for the first time in my life considering voting for another party. They spend money like water on themselves and tax UK citizens whilst sending billions abroad. Asking the UK to suffer more," another commented.
"Labour always makes things worse. It's like a law of nature," a third opined.
A fourth chimed in: "They are trying to kill off the elderly and fill the country with potential loyal voters..."
"What makes you think they want to do anything for us?" a fifth asked.
However some others shared a different viewpoint. "Definitely wouldn't be richer under your Reform, unless you're rolling in money," one wrote.
O'Sullivan's remarks come after as too many activists refuse to defend Sir 's unpopular policies.
After the Government's landslide victory in the 2024 General Election, people were swarming to help leaflet and knock on doors. However, just eight months into their leadership, just a "handful" are reportedly willing to continue their support.
A Labour councillor shared with The i Paper that volunteers for door-knocking is "definitely a problem" in the north of England, adding that support has been dwindling ever since Sir Keir took over the party's reins.
The source added how people were now "moaning about Keir and Rachel [Reeves] rather than helping", with "a significant drop-off" in volunteer numbers compared to the 2017 and 2019 elections.