The English flag is "racist and divisive and should not be displayed", according to one in eight Labour voters.
A new poll found that nearly three-quarters of voters say the flag is "a symbol to represent England and no-one should be offended by it".
Ahead of St George's Day tomorrow, the data revealed that Labour voters were 13 times more likely than Conservative supporters to describe England's flag as "racist and divisive".
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has made a deliberate effort to rebrand the Party as patriotic, in the wake of Jeremy Corbyn's leadership.
The Labour leader said his Party was now "the true party of patriotism".
He said he had "no time for those who flinch at displaying out flag.... because the cross of St George belongs to every person who loves this country and seeks to make it better - a symbol of pride, belonging and inclusion."
"Labour is the patriotic party now. We will celebrate St George's Day with enthusiasm, an enthusiasm shared by each patrol saints' day on our isles," Starmer wrote in the Sunday Telegraph.
However, the survey of 5,400 voters showed a divisive political split on the issue of the English flag.
The poll found that while 74 per cent of voters overall say "no-one should be offended" by a flag which "represents England", the figures drop to 56 per cent of 2019 Labour voters, compared with 91 per cent of Tory supporters.
More to follow...
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