politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » October 17th Local By-Election Results
politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » October 17th Local By-Election Results
Dalston on Carlisle
Result (Change on 2011 local election): Lib Dem 506 (37% +15%), Con 476 (35% -14%), Lab 186 (14% -7%), UKIP 167 (12% +4%), Green 27 (2%)
Liberal Democrat GAIN from Conservative on a swing of 14.5% from Con to Lib Dem
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Result (Change on 2011 local election): Lab 646 (37% -8%), Con 570 (33% +6%), UKIP 504 (29% +5%), Lib Dem 35 (2% -1%)
Labour HOLD on a swing of 7% from Lab to Con
Ukip hold the key.,,
That and the rest of the results (or not even standing) show how toxic labour is in the south of the UK.
The Carlisle and Luton results are interesting in terms of the Labour-Lib Dem contest. Doesn't look as one-sided as the national opinion polls suggest.
Ukip are Labour's biggest friend.
Labour did appallingly in the south of England. In the south east, south west and eastern England combined, it won 10 seats. There were 197 on offer.
Holding the 32 seats it lost in these regions in 2010 would have made it the largest party instead of the second largest party.
Moreover, in a three party race, it got a smaller percentage of the vote in the south east and the south west (in 139 seats) than the Conservatives managed in Scotland in a four party race (in 59 seats).
Fewer than one in six voters in the south east and the south west voted for Labour. This was a near extinction level event.
I've just had an idea for a thread, that combines pb's two favourite topics.
Scottish Independence and electoral reform
Goes to show PB Kinnocks not understanding the south....again.
Sky News Newsdesk @SkyNewsBreak
Probation Officers have voted overwhelmingly in favour of taking strike action over Government's plans to privatise the service
At least there is a decent level of support in the area, UKIP got 7.4% in GE 2010
The LD comeback can be traced from the day they scuppered the boundary review. It emboldened them from that day and they realised, albeit belatedly, that they were equal partners in a coalition since the Tories could do nothing without their consent. Free Milk in Schools for Married Couple Allowance for some.
Ironically, Fitalass came to an almost exactly opposite conclusion !
I'm not complaining - I'm not living under a Labour councillor due to supporting a Ukip candidate - what leave the EU policy was he going to achieve on the town council ? - rip down any "Twinned with...." signs outside the town ?
Firstly, thanks for providing the results - they're really useful.
Secondly, the Lib Dems don't seem to be doing as badly in actual, real local results as they are in the national polling - it would be good for someone to repost national vote shares that are occasionally posted, although care obviously needs to be taken with them.
So is it:
1) Just the random variation of where the votes are being held,
2) The fact the Lib Dems are stronger in local areas than as a national organisation, or
3) Are the national polls radically underestimating how many people will vote Lib Dem?
Lets be honest - they are trying to knock down the economic recovery.
Purely political.
Even Labour MPs agree they are a bad influence on the country.
http://ericjoyce.co.uk/2013/10/united-in-calamity/
"Unite’s over-riding problem is that its leadership has chosen to put politics, pseudo-ideology and career self-interest above the interests of Unite members. Unite has completely lost it focus; it’s raison d’etre even.
Unite is now powerless over workers pay and conditions in Grangemouth and unable to shift the dominant public perception that at the top it is a corrupted organisation whose highly-paid senior officials come first and whose members come last."
'Drabcity
24 minutes ago
Looks like poor Christine is suffering from 'nappy-brain'. I can't see any evidence anywhere that Jo Swinson said men who stand up for a pregnant woman are sexist'
The on going local elections do seem to bolster the theory that the yellow peril are holding up much better in their enclaves whereas their support in weaker areas has largely collapsed.
If true, and I believe it to be so, it would indicate that a GE poll of 14-16% would still return a large block of their old seats, probably in the 35-45 range.
I gather the owners have lost £20m so far in the dispute.
2. Yes. They're also stronger in local government than at a national level, consistently polling better in real local elections (by-elections and in the May elections), than their parliamentary opinion polls suggest they should. For local by-elections, Lib Dem activists probably also concentrate their forces more effectively than other parties overall, though that's a big generalisation.
3. Polls are snapshots not predictions. They don't seek to estimate how many people will vote Lib Dem in 2015 but how many would do so were a vote held today. What I think it does suggest is that polls that ask about what people would do should come with the rider "in your constituency", as local matters count.
I haven't had time to go back through the posts to figure out the underlying question in your spat with Josias
The main impact of a low share price on investment plans is confidence related. If investors are not confident about the future (and therefore the share price is low) it is not the most propitious time to make major investments. This is partly because they won't necessarily see the value / negatively minded investors may mark down the share price based on risk and partly because they will be more focused on near term earnings to try and drive the share price higher
Rather harder to do that at a general election.
Eric Joyce is a member of the tea party ? Interesting..
I know he visited Dartford in the summer to campaign for the bridge toll to be scrapped, a campaign which will be a vote winner in Thurrock one presumes, but didn't know he campaigned in Thurrock for this by election.
EDIT: He did!
http://www.thurrockgazette.co.uk/news/10685194.Farage_talks_general_election_during_Thurrock_visit/
I'd estimate the LibDems will throw the kitchen sink at around 70 seats and almost completely forget the rest.
Oh dear. That was an expensive membership drive.
Do you have a break down of membership for the big unions? I know the aggregate membership is significantly weighted to the public sector but don't know on an individual union level