Thus the big news from latest Ipsos-MORI “like/dislike” party and leader ratings was the big fall in Ed Miliband’s personal position which, of course, has been the big political story this summer. This has overshadowed other numbers from the firm about UKIP that might be more interesting from a GE2015 forecasting perspective.
Comments
Mike, we PB Tories have been banging on for ages that the natural Kipper constituency is p***ed of Tories most of whom have no intention of actually voting Kipper come the day. I give it 4-6% at GE2015.
They are holding their nose and expressing a preference. Fine. But don't expect them to actually vote for NF/UKIP (was there ever a more unfortunate set of initials?).
From my point of view on the left, it is hard to understand why someone would dislike the Conservatives and not dislike UKIP too, but given that there are such people it makes life rather difficult for the Tories - although the 38% who say they like the Tories is more than voted for them last time. Perhaps they could increase their vote after all?
Speaking of which one of the best bets currently on offer has to be the 4/6 from Laddies on Danny Alexander retaining his seat at Inverness - a real shoo-in imho, but DYOR.
http://mrmxyzptlkaa.blogspot.se/2011/05/dont-let-dangerous-alex-salmond-destroy.html
"David Cameron is liked by 43%, and disliked by 52%. The Conservative party is liked by 39%, and disliked by 57%. The proportion liking the Conservative party has slightly increased from 35% in October 2012.
Ed Miliband is liked by 30% (down from 37% in October 2012), and disliked by 63%. The Labour party is liked by 49%, and disliked by 43%, which represents little change.
Nick Clegg is liked by 33% (up from 29% in October 2012), and disliked by 57%. The Liberal Democrat party is liked by 43% (up from 40%), and disliked by 47%.
Nigel Farage is liked by 27%, and disliked by 50%. The UK Independence Party is also liked by 25%, and disliked by 52%. Around one in four (22%) say they don’t know."
http://www.ipsos-mori.com/researchpublications/researcharchive/3245/Ipsos-MORI-Political-Monitor-August-2013.aspx
The crucial difference being that Eden resigned shortly after Suez, while Blair continued as PM for four more years.
-4% for the LDs isn't bad, although I'm sure they were riding high in 2010 (or 2009, before the Clegg thing). The size of the 2010 LD > 2015 Any Other Party pie will be more important than how that pie is divied up among other parties.
http://www.ipsos-mori.com/Assets/Docs/Polls/ipsos-mori-political-monitor-august-2013-tables.pdf
Like UKIP
2010 Con: 47%, 2010 Lab: 17%, 2010 LD: 15%
Dislike UKIP
2010 Con: 48%, 2010 Lab: 60%, 2010 LD: 72%
Seems fair enough, and swapping leaders wouldn't fix it.
For current declared Conservative voters, the balance on like/dislike the Conservative party is 85%/13%, and for Cameron is 73%/25%
For current declared Labour voters, the balance on like/dislike the Labour party is 90%/6%, and for Miliband is 55%/42%.
So we can see that the Conservatives do have the support of more people who dislike them than Labour; a differential that would have to rise for the Conservatives to lead in the polls - unless they can convince people that they really do not eat babies.
Enter Billy Bragg
IMO the Tories appear to prefer to be disliked. Odd. One of Thatcher's legacies perhaps. Something that limits their progress.
The first two are based on a light gut feeling, not a deeply rooted conviction, and are not too difficult to alter.
The second two are based on emotion, and are very hard to shift.
The real question therefore, is how many of those polled hold the view emotionally as opposed to dispassionately?
One middle aged woman came on the stand, and whispered to me not to spend any time with her: 'I always vote UKIP'. The most interesting point of that was that she was embarrassed to admit it 'out loud'.
There is a potential, albeit distant plus, for us. If it ever became fashionable to vote for UKIP, the sky is the limit. Currently, we are at the other extreme....
It is the same logic when buying a house. Always choose an unfashionable location. You always get more sq ft/£, and as fashions change, you only have up-sides.
If Cameron could make a similar argument with respect to eating culled Badger, and tying it into the politics of austerity, it might help. I do think that no Conservative politician should be seen out and about without a pack of jelly babies, somewhere close to hand.
They expect to be disliked, not prefer to be.
God knows what Cameron is doing, trying desperately to be liked by everyone but failing miserably is my guess. If he sends forces to Syria then he's just going to be remembered as a pathetic copy of Blair without the electoral success.
Edit: Actually thinking about it, his accusations towards UKIP were probably part of his Tory detox strategy and it might actually have been midly successful, although probably only with people who would never vote Tory in a million years.
A politician saying what he thinks and leaving it to the public to vote as they see fit rather than pretending to change his opinion to grab votes?
Absolute filth
Middlesbrough -6.4%
Richmond upon Thames +6.7%
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/hi/in_depth/uk_house_prices/html/bd.stm
http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/danielhannan/100232667/its-finely-balanced-but-supporters-of-intervention-in-syria-have-not-yet-made-a-convincing-case/
If anything Blair tried to give Labour a harder edge "Tough on Crime" etc.
Labour got in with a landslide in 1997 by painting the Tories as nasty and being the nice guy alternative. It worked because the economy was doing well.
http://www.slate.com/blogs/moneybox/2013/08/27/syria_intervention_cost_military_strikes_are_a_highly_cost_ineffective_way.html
Keep parroting the same smears and that should shut the debate down nicely, eh?
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2402354/Peace-envoy-Tony-Blair-yacht-Mediterranean-West-debates-air-strikes-Syria.html
Would you prefer they lie to con your vote?
Almost as difficult as finding a miner....
Of course not.
I've got no problem with the debate as such, but it's hard to characterise his comments as anything else.
Really?
I'm not anti-Cameron, but I hope he loses the vote, assuming he speaks for intervention.
Public services were creaking.
VAT had been raised despite promises that it would not be.
We'd had the whole ERM fiasco.
We'd had moral and political Tory sleaze in Westminster Council and in Parliament.
We'd had Peter Liley's charming little list and the uproarious applause it attracted at the Tory conference.
The economy was recovering, it is true; but only because Tory policies had buggered it up in the first place.
In short, the Tories did plenty to ensure people felt the way they did about them in 1997. They deserved what they got. The same thing happened to Labour in 2010, except the Tories were not able to capitalise in the way that Blair did in 1997. In part, at least, for reasons not unconnected with the chart in Mike's intro.
Given the protections against discrimination that exist in law, those comments are meaningless. Stupid, but meaningless.
Is Bloom proposing to repeal those laws or to erect barriers to women from taking part in certain walks of life?
Not that I'm aware.
http://spectator.org/archives/2013/06/17/revenge-of-the-fruitcakes/
How I hate smart arsery... theres a lot of it on here
You said his comments meant...
"he was not interested in the votes of any women of child-bearing age"
Are you are suggesting it is better for a politician to pretend to think something they dont in order to get votes from people who wouldnt otherwise vote for them?
Wouldnt it be better if they all spoke their mind and left us to decide who we thought was best for the job?
If this finding means anything, it suggests that UKIP's current ceiling is about 25%.
Maybe but I'd prefer to reserve the emotionally charged term 'sexist' for people who oblige women to cover up in public, force them to undergo female circumcision, deny them property rights or equal remedies in law, forbid them from driving, deny them equal rights in education (or any rights in education), to name but a few.
And it always amazes me how people who cannot wait to dub Godfrey Bloom a 'sexist' are strangely silent when it comes to condemning the far more sexist behaviour I have just outlined.
2. You're mixing two things, how much politicians speak their minds, and how much we like what they say. I'm fine with him speaking his mind, but I don't see why you object to my coming on a political forum and commenting that I don't like what he says?
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/10268610/The-Telegraphs-fantasy-Cabinet-reshuffle-interactive.html
UKIP already seem to be offering TV licence (£145), and perhaps abolishing green taxes/subsidies on gas/power. So their ceiling may move.
Call him what you like, but don;t expect not to be challenged. In my book you are using a sledgehammer to knock a nail in.
For me Bloom is a foolish attention seeker who may not even believe the comments he made, let alone expect them to be taken seriously by the public at large. Best ignored.
The Mail is running an article today on how people choose their partners differently based on whether they are male or female. That's probably sexist in the sense that Bloom is because its absurd to make generalizations about morals or behaviour based on sex or biology.
However, these are still a world away from seeking to deny women rights or equal opportunities, or even calling them 'hoes' or 'bitches'.
Unconscious sexism, which I imagine the Mail's article would be about would for me be a level below Bloom's conscious sexism.
Isam seems convinced he's just speaking honestly.
Indeed, with the conflict escalatinv all around it seems as if the Israel/Palestine question will be an easier one to solve than either Egypt or Syrias internal conflicts.
"Councils are to be urged to build a new generation of bungalows as part of a planning revolution to create bespoke homes for people aged above 65, Eric Pickles will announce this week. The Communities Secretary is to publish rules to make town halls match development to the type of accommodation needed locally to cater for the ageing population.
Planners will have to ensure that they have enough properties of the right type — including clusters of bungalows that can be let only to older people. Pensioners will be encouraged to downsize, freeing up family homes...The regulations are part of the Government’s national planning guidance to be published on Wednesday. The document will include plans to remove council tax premiums on family annexes and allow bigger extensions without planning permission.
Bungalow building has almost ground to a halt since the 1980s with only 300 built in 2009. Last year builders registered plans to construct 1,700 bungalows with the National House Building Council, but many of these will not have started..." http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/politics/article3852372.ece
"Is Russia really anti-LGBT?"
Tony Blair is on his way !
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2013/08/26/article-0-1B747F72000005DC-553_634x465.jpg
That was then, of course, we've moved one, and perchance down!
http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/timstanley/100232698/syria-why-would-assad-invite-a-western-intervention-by-using-wmds-in-a-war-he-was-winning/#disqus_thread
John Rentoul does visit PB.
He even voted in yesterday's PB Poll.