politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » Predicting the election: What the leading academic teams are saying
We got a name check from YouGov polling head Jo Twyman, at the opening of today’s conference at the LSE when different academic groups made their predictions.
Some of these guys have been smoking that waccy baccy, no? Con 233? It would win me shedloads, but not in my wildest dreams do I imagine it likely.
Hanretty looks pretty plausible, apart from its UKIP prediction. I have them down for three minimum, but that wouldn't alter the overall pattern of results much.
"Rupert Murdoch ✔ @rupertmurdoch Thanks for 2 mentions, Ed Miliband. Only met once for all of 2 minutes when you embarrassed me with over the top flattery."
Extraordinary. Who but a fetid vulgarian would send a tweet like that?
ARSE is so far out from all the other predictions do we put it down as another PB embarrassment like Angus Reid or merely an outlier?
How about you wait and see how the election goes before calling a particular forecast an embarrassment? You wouldnt want to get a reputation as a poster who makes very wrong calls very prematurely.
"Rupert Murdoch ✔ @rupertmurdoch Thanks for 2 mentions, Ed Miliband. Only met once for all of 2 minutes when you embarrassed me with over the top flattery."
Extraordinary. Who but a fetid vulgarian would send a tweet like that?
Woger - I once had red wine with fish or even may even have worn tweed outside shooting season but I would never stoop to post a tweet by the dirty Digger after his Braveheart conversion during Sindy ref.
So, when you get 12 groups of academics, every one of which is forecasting a hung parliament, what should you do?
Consider the alternative, of course.
Quite possibly.
After all, the saying that "An economist is an expert who will be able to tell you tomorrow why what he forecast yesterday didn't happen today" applies to psephologists as well.
So, when you get 12 groups of academics, every one of which is forecasting a hung parliament, what should you do?
Consider the alternative, of course.
Labour would need about a hundred gains from the Conservatives to win a majority at the same time as losing Scotland to the SNP, so the only realistic alternative is a Conservative majority - I think Pulpstar and others already came to the conclusion this morning...
I've regularly introduced the word "wankfest" onto PB, but I don't think I'm responsible for this one.
Anyway, apart from some outlandish predictions, it is all pretty consistent with what looks ever increasingly likely - Ed Miliband is about to become Prime Minister.
Nick Palmer: "What is this 2% lead of which you speak? I'm aware of two polls in the last couple of days that weren't a tie - one had Con+2, the other Lab +2. Everything else has been +1 to -1.TFPT"
Nick .... as I stated in my post the 2% Tory lead (i.e. 34% vs 32%) is as applied by Stephen Fisher - check this out on his website as necessary. Exactly how he arrived at these figures I know not, but doutless it's all set out in his small print.
Candidates are all getting floods of NGO material. A small prize for drama goes to this one: ----- UK's FUTURE ON THE LINE
With a controversial referendum in Scotland behind us – for the time being - a General Election and a new Government just around the corner, increasing devolution of power around the country, and the longer-term prospect of a referendum and further renegotiation of the UK’s relationship with Europe, this is a critical time for the UK.
Prospective parliamentary candidates will be honing their messages to voters, and, if past turn-out is an indicator of future engagement in General Elections, those carefully-thought-out words will fall on largely deaf ears – so it’s time to talk about some of the issues that affect real people every day… ----- So what is it about? Er, it's a proposal to paint road markings more often, from the Road Safety markings Association.
"How about you wait and see how the election goes before calling a particular forecast an embarrassment? You wouldnt want to get a reputation as a poster who makes very wrong calls very prematurely."
Apart from the 'very prematurely' I think your warning's too late
So, when you get 12 groups of academics, every one of which is forecasting a hung parliament, what should you do?
Consider the alternative, of course.
Labour would need about a hundred gains from the Conservatives to win a majority at the same time as losing Scotland to the SNP, so the only realistic alternative is a Conservative majority - I think Pulpstar and others already came to the conclusion this morning...
Yes, I've backed Con majority for £40 at 7.8 and now it's drifted to 8.2/8.6 !
How come a lot of the predictions have stuck LDs and SNP or both in with "others"?
Two-body problems are much simpler than six-body problems. So you produce a much simpler model if you assume it's just a two-party contest between Labour and Conservative, and then tack on some others afterwards.
I guess we'll see how valid that approximation is on May 8th.
So, when you get 12 groups of academics, every one of which is forecasting a hung parliament, what should you do?
Consider the alternative, of course.
Labour would need about a hundred gains from the Conservatives to win a majority at the same time as losing Scotland to the SNP, so the only realistic alternative is a Conservative majority - I think Pulpstar and others already came to the conclusion this morning...
Yes, I've backed Con majority for £40 at 7.8 and now it's drifted to 8.2/8.6 !
It might come in on the night if the Tories do better than expected.
One of the things that we are seeing in this table is the problem of seeing everyone's best guess. This means that the results cluster much more closely than they should. Is it unthinkable that Labour will get fewer than 260 seats or more than 315? Of course it isn't - that's quite a narrow band. Similarly, is it unthinkable that UKIP will get more than five seats? No, of course not.
I expect most of these forecasters would readily acknowledge the possibility of other results.
Overhearing a sadly superficial discussion between 2 ladies, they were not impressed by politicians (although as I say their reasoning was not deep) and were totally undecided. I put them down as Green. One thought Caroline Lucas MP deserved to be re-elected because she was an 'outsider' to the system, nothing to do with policy - and of course she was charming sweetness and light. Yesterdays interviews/debates did not budge them either way. On that basis I think there is all to play for and every chance of one or other party with a majority.
On the subject of Lucas I see she wants an alliance with the SNP, no surprise as Greens are essentially far left if policy is to be examined and are happy to break the system as a precursor to getting their way.
S&W model forecasts the best part of 85 Labour gains from the Tories in E&W.
I'd like to have some of what they're smoking.
The Conservatives would have to be losing seats like Basildon South and East Thurrock, Burton, Reading West, Rugby, Battersea. For that to happen, they'd have to be 2-3% behind in England and Wales. Not completely beyond the bounds of possibility, if it's a really bad night, but significantly worse than current polling.
S&W model forecasts the best part of 85 Labour gains from the Tories in E&W.
I'd like to have some of what they're smoking.
The Conservatives would have to be losing seats like Basildon South and East Thurrock, Burton, Reading West, Rugby, Battersea. For that to happen, they'd have to be 2-3% behind in England and Wales. Not completely beyond the bounds of possibility, if it's a really bad night, but significantly worse than current polling.
I've got Reading West down as an outside shot for Labour
BBC bosses insist it is due to "heightened sensitivities" and to avoid accusations of a conflict of interest, and the father-of-four will be back after May.
Will Peston, Ben Wright, etc be bumped to the graveyard shifts during the GE's due to being relations of Labourites? What about Craig Oliver's wife who is a newsreader?
I think if the BBC took this policy across the board and clear out all those who are connected to politicians and political families, not sure they could keep the lights on.
Good afternoon all and what struck me was the substantial change in Stephen Fisher's team prediction from last week. Have read their reasoning beyond the methodology which whether correct or not, is easy to follow.
This brings me back to my recurring comment, what chance Labour end up with fewer seats on 8th May than in 2010?
Good afternoon all and what struck me was the substantial change in Stephen Fisher's team prediction from last week. Have read their reasoning beyond the methodology which whether correct or not, is easy to follow.
This brings me back to my recurring comment, what chance Labour end up with fewer seats on 8th May than in 2010?
Good afternoon all and what struck me was the substantial change in Stephen Fisher's team prediction from last week. Have read their reasoning beyond the methodology which whether correct or not, is easy to follow.
This brings me back to my recurring comment, what chance Labour end up with fewer seats on 8th May than in 2010?
It was a significant moment, because it was the Syria vote that Miliband himself selected as the best example of his suitability to be Prime Minister of this country.
And it was a lie. A total, and utter misrepresentation of what Ed Miliband did, and did not do, over the Syria vote. He knows it’s a lie, the shadow cabinet know it’s a lie, Labour MPs know it’s a lie.
Good afternoon all and what struck me was the substantial change in Stephen Fisher's team prediction from last week. Have read their reasoning beyond the methodology which whether correct or not, is easy to follow.
This brings me back to my recurring comment, what chance Labour end up with fewer seats on 8th May than in 2010?
Zero
Certainly not zero, if say, 35 seats go in Scotland.
One of the things that we are seeing in this table is the problem of seeing everyone's best guess. This means that the results cluster much more closely than they should. Is it unthinkable that Labour will get fewer than 260 seats or more than 315? Of course it isn't - that's quite a narrow band. Similarly, is it unthinkable that UKIP will get more than five seats? No, of course not.
I expect most of these forecasters would readily acknowledge the possibility of other results.
Probability distributions would be more helpful.
Fisher of course does provide error bars, currently for example he has:
Con: 296 (251– 343 at 95% confidence limits)
So, yes, in general commentators and punters under-estimate the probability of reasonably large shifts from the current position. Of course as the election gets closer polls start to become more and more reliable as predictors. We're pretty close now, so I wouldn't expect big shifts from current polling - however a shift of a few points makes quite a big difference in seats, so the full outcome is quite uncertain.
Overall, it looks like a hung parliament, Con most seats slightly more likely than Lab, Lab Maj out of reach, Con Maj still in reach but unlikely, SNP surge nailed on, LibDems floundering, UKIP around 3.
Candidates are all getting floods of NGO material. A small prize for drama goes to this one: ----- UK's FUTURE ON THE LINE
With a controversial referendum in Scotland behind us – for the time being - a General Election and a new Government just around the corner, increasing devolution of power around the country, and the longer-term prospect of a referendum and further renegotiation of the UK’s relationship with Europe, this is a critical time for the UK.
Prospective parliamentary candidates will be honing their messages to voters, and, if past turn-out is an indicator of future engagement in General Elections, those carefully-thought-out words will fall on largely deaf ears – so it’s time to talk about some of the issues that affect real people every day… ----- So what is it about? Er, it's a proposal to paint road markings more often, from the Road Safety markings Association.
Actually more relevant than you possibly think. Road signage is one of the very few additional powers for Scotland that survived the Vow and the Smith Commission - and even then it's being watered down.
One of the things that we are seeing in this table is the problem of seeing everyone's best guess. This means that the results cluster much more closely than they should. Is it unthinkable that Labour will get fewer than 260 seats or more than 315? Of course it isn't - that's quite a narrow band. Similarly, is it unthinkable that UKIP will get more than five seats? No, of course not.
I expect most of these forecasters would readily acknowledge the possibility of other results.
Probability distributions would be more helpful.
Fisher of course does provide error bars, currently for example he has:
Con: 296 (251– 343 at 95% confidence limits)
So, yes, in general commentators and punters under-estimate the probability of reasonably large shifts from the current position. Of course as the election gets closer polls start to become more and more reliable as predictors. We're pretty close now, so I wouldn't expect big shifts from current polling - however a shift of a few points makes quite a big difference in seats, so the full outcome is quite uncertain.
Overall, it looks like a hung parliament, Con most seats slightly more likely than Lab, Lab Maj out of reach, Con Maj still in reach but unlikely, SNP surge nailed on, LibDems floundering, UKIP around 3.
Basically everyone loses apart from the SNP.
I would add in the wildcard that isam keeps noting, which is that polling this time round is not necessarily as reliable as in previous cycles because the pollsters don't know what to make of the kippers (and to a lesser extent the SNP). So while opinion may be slowly setting, we can't be too confident that the pollsters are accurately picking up how it is setting.
It was a significant moment, because it was the Syria vote that Miliband himself selected as the best example of his suitability to be Prime Minister of this country.
And it was a lie. A total, and utter misrepresentation of what Ed Miliband did, and did not do, over the Syria vote. He knows it’s a lie, the shadow cabinet know it’s a lie, Labour MPs know it’s a lie.
Yep, Dan H is spot-on on that. Labour's attempt to rewrite history is breath-takingly cynical.
It was Ed's weakness in allowing himself to be pushed into breaking his word, on a matter of international importance, which pushed me from the 'Ed's useless but relatively harmless" camp into the realisation that he will be an unmitigated disaster.
One of the things that we are seeing in this table is the problem of seeing everyone's best guess. This means that the results cluster much more closely than they should. Is it unthinkable that Labour will get fewer than 260 seats or more than 315? Of course it isn't - that's quite a narrow band. Similarly, is it unthinkable that UKIP will get more than five seats? No, of course not.
I expect most of these forecasters would readily acknowledge the possibility of other results.
Probability distributions would be more helpful.
Fisher of course does provide error bars, currently for example he has:
Con: 296 (251– 343 at 95% confidence limits)
So, yes, in general commentators and punters under-estimate the probability of reasonably large shifts from the current position. Of course as the election gets closer polls start to become more and more reliable as predictors. We're pretty close now, so I wouldn't expect big shifts from current polling - however a shift of a few points makes quite a big difference in seats, so the full outcome is quite uncertain.
Overall, it looks like a hung parliament, Con most seats slightly more likely than Lab, Lab Maj out of reach, Con Maj still in reach but unlikely, SNP surge nailed on, LibDems floundering, UKIP around 3.
Basically everyone loses apart from the SNP.
I would add in the wildcard that isam keeps noting, which is that polling this time round is not necessarily as reliable as in previous cycles because the pollsters don't know what to make of the kippers (and to a lesser extent the SNP). So while opinion may be slowly setting, we can't be too confident that the pollsters are accurately picking up how it is setting.
Thanks for the name check!
What I find quite mystifying are the Ukip scores in the last three ICM polls
One UK (or GB I don't know the difference!) One Scotland only One London only
One of the things that we are seeing in this table is the problem of seeing everyone's best guess. This means that the results cluster much more closely than they should. Is it unthinkable that Labour will get fewer than 260 seats or more than 315? Of course it isn't - that's quite a narrow band. Similarly, is it unthinkable that UKIP will get more than five seats? No, of course not.
I expect most of these forecasters would readily acknowledge the possibility of other results.
Probability distributions would be more helpful.
Fisher of course does provide error bars, currently for example he has:
Con: 296 (251– 343 at 95% confidence limits)
So, yes, in general commentators and punters under-estimate the probability of reasonably large shifts from the current position. Of course as the election gets closer polls start to become more and more reliable as predictors. We're pretty close now, so I wouldn't expect big shifts from current polling - however a shift of a few points makes quite a big difference in seats, so the full outcome is quite uncertain.
Overall, it looks like a hung parliament, Con most seats slightly more likely than Lab, Lab Maj out of reach, Con Maj still in reach but unlikely, SNP surge nailed on, LibDems floundering, UKIP around 3.
Basically everyone loses apart from the SNP.
I would add in the wildcard that isam keeps noting, which is that polling this time round is not necessarily as reliable as in previous cycles because the pollsters don't know what to make of the kippers (and to a lesser extent the SNP). So while opinion may be slowly setting, we can't be too confident that the pollsters are accurately picking up how it is setting.
Thanks for the name check!
What I find quite mystifying are the Ukip scores in the last three ICM polls
One UK (or GB I don't know the difference!) One Scotland only One London only
Ukip got 9%, 7% & 9%
I can't make sense of that.
9% for London is about right, I think. 7% for Scotland is far too high (more like 2% IMHO). But neither is compatible with 9% nationwide.
It was a significant moment, because it was the Syria vote that Miliband himself selected as the best example of his suitability to be Prime Minister of this country.
And it was a lie. A total, and utter misrepresentation of what Ed Miliband did, and did not do, over the Syria vote. He knows it’s a lie, the shadow cabinet know it’s a lie, Labour MPs know it’s a lie.
Yep, Dan H is spot-on on that. Labour's attempt to rewrite history is breath-takingly cynical.
It was Ed's weakness in allowing himself to be pushed into breaking his word, on a matter of international importance, which pushed me from the 'Ed's useless but relatively harmless" camp into the realisation that he will be an unmitigated disaster.
Pushed you from the Tory voter camp to the Tory voter camp.
May2015 (@May2015NS) 27/03/2015 14:35 After a few polls dragged them below 13%, Ukip are now back at 14% in the polls (via May2015.com). pic.twitter.com/KWAMupaNIy
It was a significant moment, because it was the Syria vote that Miliband himself selected as the best example of his suitability to be Prime Minister of this country.
And it was a lie. A total, and utter misrepresentation of what Ed Miliband did, and did not do, over the Syria vote. He knows it’s a lie, the shadow cabinet know it’s a lie, Labour MPs know it’s a lie.
DH - My initial impression last night was that it was essentially a tie, but because of the lower expectations attached to Ed Miliband, the prevailing narrative would be that he edged it. And that remains my view this morning.
But bad for Ed because DH knows why Ed saved us from being on the wrong side in Syria better than Ed does
Had a look at Fisher's working paper to see where his 2-point Tory bonus comes from. As noted elsewhere, he's given up on swingback. However, he notes that in several recent elections the Tory-Lab difference was typically slightly greater than polls in the final week, especially in 1992 (Major/Kinnock). Caveats: the reverse was true in 2010, and in pre-2010 polling the pollsters used older methods which have been revised.
There's also some evidence that what happened in earlier elections was that the party seen as leading by miles (not the case this time) lost ground towards the end (presumably because people were scared of giving them too much) - that happened in 1997-2005 and in 1983. It's all quite inconclusive - there might be something there, or not...
S&W model forecasts the best part of 85 Labour gains from the Tories in E&W.
I'd like to have some of what they're smoking.
The Conservatives would have to be losing seats like Basildon South and East Thurrock, Burton, Reading West, Rugby, Battersea. For that to happen, they'd have to be 2-3% behind in England and Wales. Not completely beyond the bounds of possibility, if it's a really bad night, but significantly worse than current polling.
I've got Reading West down as an outside shot for Labour
Yes, Reading for some reason has been giving Labour some of its more spectacular results in local elections. Probably a better bet than a good few of the seats on Labour's official target list.
It was a significant moment, because it was the Syria vote that Miliband himself selected as the best example of his suitability to be Prime Minister of this country.
And it was a lie. A total, and utter misrepresentation of what Ed Miliband did, and did not do, over the Syria vote. He knows it’s a lie, the shadow cabinet know it’s a lie, Labour MPs know it’s a lie.
I'm still struggling to understand how anyone could actually be criticising Miliband for choosing NOT to side with ISIS.
But no one has the guts to say that that's what was being proposed. And Ed certainly didn't oppose the action on the grounds that he thought the rebels were worse than Assad.
Miliband apparently also lied when he said that he had stood up to Rupert Murdoch, who subsequently tweeted...
Rupert Murdoch (@rupertmurdoch) March 26, 2015 Thanks for 2 mentions, Ed Miliband. Only met once for all of 2 minutes when you embarrassed me with over the top flattery.
Miliband apparently also lied when he said that he had stood up to Rupert Murdoch, who subsequently tweeted...
Rupert Murdoch (@rupertmurdoch) March 26, 2015 Thanks for 2 mentions, Ed Miliband. Only met once for all of 2 minutes when you embarrassed me with over the top flattery.
That would have been at the Freud party. I believe the other Ed was there too.
It was a significant moment, because it was the Syria vote that Miliband himself selected as the best example of his suitability to be Prime Minister of this country.
And it was a lie. A total, and utter misrepresentation of what Ed Miliband did, and did not do, over the Syria vote. He knows it’s a lie, the shadow cabinet know it’s a lie, Labour MPs know it’s a lie.
I'm still struggling to understand how anyone could actually be criticising Miliband for choosing NOT to side with ISIS.
But no one has the guts to say that that's what was being proposed. And Ed certainly didn't oppose the action on the grounds that he thought the rebels were worse than Assad.
I can't really remember what arguments Ed made, but I remember reading online at the time reports about how sinister some of the rebels were, and how we'd better sticking with Assad as the devil we knew.
Comments
Honest I didn't write that.
Lowest Lab on 261 more likely to be breached than the 312 upper limit I'd suggest.
Labour and Tories lead one another by a massive...... 0.0% (just like two Sundays ago!)
Some of these guys have been smoking that waccy baccy, no? Con 233? It would win me shedloads, but not in my wildest dreams do I imagine it likely.
Hanretty looks pretty plausible, apart from its UKIP prediction. I have them down for three minimum, but that wouldn't alter the overall pattern of results much.
Lab/SNP looks like the only viable government from all but the bottom two forecasts.
9 SNP, 48 Lib Dems and 233 Tories
Please form an orderly queue if you'd like to join in
http://www2.politicalbetting.com/index.php/archives/2010/05/
"Rupert Murdoch ✔ @rupertmurdoch
Thanks for 2 mentions, Ed Miliband. Only met once for all of 2 minutes when you embarrassed me with over the top flattery."
Extraordinary. Who but a fetid vulgarian would send a tweet like that?
You can't often say that a 1/5 shot is value, but NOM at that price with Betfair is an exception.
How do you know if a girl in Sheffield is a Prosser
They have a Pleat in their Skirt
Should now read they are forecasting EICIPM
After all, the saying that "An economist is an expert who will be able to tell you tomorrow why what he forecast yesterday didn't happen today" applies to psephologists as well.
Suggest both Rod and Jack are outside the range of these "academics" ?
Anyway, apart from some outlandish predictions, it is all pretty consistent with what looks ever increasingly likely - Ed Miliband is about to become Prime Minister.
I'd like to have some of what they're smoking.
11 have EICIPM against 1 that has EWNBPM (EICIPM 2.42 Betfair)
Nick Palmer: "What is this 2% lead of which you speak? I'm aware of two polls in the last couple of days that weren't a tie - one had Con+2, the other Lab +2. Everything else has been +1 to -1.TFPT"
Nick .... as I stated in my post the 2% Tory lead (i.e. 34% vs 32%) is as applied by Stephen Fisher - check this out on his website as necessary. Exactly how he arrived at these figures I know not, but doutless it's all set out in his small print.
-----
UK's FUTURE ON THE LINE
With a controversial referendum in Scotland behind us – for the time being - a General Election and a new Government just around the corner, increasing devolution of power around the country, and the longer-term prospect of a referendum and further renegotiation of the UK’s relationship with Europe, this is a critical time for the UK.
Prospective parliamentary candidates will be honing their messages to voters, and, if past turn-out is an indicator of future engagement in General Elections, those carefully-thought-out words will fall on largely deaf ears – so it’s time to talk about some of the issues that affect real people every day…
-----
So what is it about? Er, it's a proposal to paint road markings more often, from the Road Safety markings Association.
"How about you wait and see how the election goes before calling a particular forecast an embarrassment? You wouldnt want to get a reputation as a poster who makes very wrong calls very prematurely."
Apart from the 'very prematurely' I think your warning's too late
I guess we'll see how valid that approximation is on May 8th.
I think you're safe - after May, there will still be food on the table at Chez Pulpstar
I expect most of these forecasters would readily acknowledge the possibility of other results.
Probability distributions would be more helpful.
Yesterdays interviews/debates did not budge them either way.
On that basis I think there is all to play for and every chance of one or other party with a majority.
On the subject of Lucas I see she wants an alliance with the SNP, no surprise as Greens are essentially far left if policy is to be examined and are happy to break the system as a precursor to getting their way.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/general-election-2015/politics-blog/11497669/Every-single-possible-coalition-and-post-election-power-sharing-deal-in-one-chart.html
TheWatcher said:
» show previous quotes
Wee Jimmy Krankie's more your thing.
You stick to your dogging and stop trying to guess human beings tastes
BBC bosses insist it is due to "heightened sensitivities" and to avoid accusations of a conflict of interest, and the father-of-four will be back after May.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/bbc/11498823/BBC-Radio-DJ-vents-anger-after-being-ousted-for-getting-engaged-to-Tory-MP.html
Will Peston, Ben Wright, etc be bumped to the graveyard shifts during the GE's due to being relations of Labourites? What about Craig Oliver's wife who is a newsreader?
I think if the BBC took this policy across the board and clear out all those who are connected to politicians and political families, not sure they could keep the lights on.
This brings me back to my recurring comment, what chance Labour end up with fewer seats on 8th May than in 2010?
Con: 296 (251– 343 at 95% confidence limits)
So, yes, in general commentators and punters under-estimate the probability of reasonably large shifts from the current position. Of course as the election gets closer polls start to become more and more reliable as predictors. We're pretty close now, so I wouldn't expect big shifts from current polling - however a shift of a few points makes quite a big difference in seats, so the full outcome is quite uncertain.
Overall, it looks like a hung parliament, Con most seats slightly more likely than Lab, Lab Maj out of reach, Con Maj still in reach but unlikely, SNP surge nailed on, LibDems floundering, UKIP around 3.
Basically everyone loses apart from the SNP.
Yep, Dan H is spot-on on that. Labour's attempt to rewrite history is breath-takingly cynical.
It was Ed's weakness in allowing himself to be pushed into breaking his word, on a matter of international importance, which pushed me from the 'Ed's useless but relatively harmless" camp into the realisation that he will be an unmitigated disaster.
What I find quite mystifying are the Ukip scores in the last three ICM polls
One UK (or GB I don't know the difference!)
One Scotland only
One London only
Ukip got 9%, 7% & 9%
I can't make sense of that.
1. Since everyone knows he was lying, will it come up in any of the other TV formats?
2. If he really could stand up to "the Leader of the Free World" (sic), why can't he tell Eck where to shove his tartan trews?
@LabourList: Coventry North West: Might Geoffrey Robinson stay on as an MP after all? http://labli.st/1Eb9YVF
It was Ed's weakness in allowing himself to be pushed into breaking his word, on a matter of international importance, which pushed me from the 'Ed's useless but relatively harmless" camp into the realisation that he will be an unmitigated disaster.
Pushed you from the Tory voter camp to the Tory voter camp.
May2015 (@May2015NS)
27/03/2015 14:35
After a few polls dragged them below 13%, Ukip are now back at 14% in the polls (via May2015.com). pic.twitter.com/KWAMupaNIy
I'm still struggling to understand how anyone could actually be criticising Miliband for choosing NOT to side with ISIS.
But bad for Ed because DH knows why Ed saved us from being on the wrong side in Syria better than Ed does
There's also some evidence that what happened in earlier elections was that the party seen as leading by miles (not the case this time) lost ground towards the end (presumably because people were scared of giving them too much) - that happened in 1997-2005 and in 1983. It's all quite inconclusive - there might be something there, or not...
I admire these academics.
It is economists I think are a great shower of shite, especially when in a group.
Yes I'm thinking about the 364
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/personal-view/3623669/How-364-economists-got-it-totally-wrong.html
But no one has the guts to say that that's what was being proposed. And Ed certainly didn't oppose the action on the grounds that he thought the rebels were worse than Assad.
Rupert Murdoch (@rupertmurdoch) March 26, 2015
Thanks for 2 mentions, Ed Miliband. Only met once for all of 2 minutes when you embarrassed me with over the top flattery.
http://www.thecourier.co.uk/news/politics/rupert-murdoch-mocks-ed-miliband-s-tough-talk-1.856560
Sun Politics @SunPolitics 1m1 minute ago
Lib Dem arrested over child sex allegation http://sunpl.us/6014N3a4
I can't really remember what arguments Ed made, but I remember reading online at the time reports about how sinister some of the rebels were, and how we'd better sticking with Assad as the devil we knew.