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    NeilVWNeilVW Posts: 725

    The evidence of what'#s happening is really pretty clear, confirmed by polls, canvassing and anecdotal evidence - there's almost no confusion:

    1. Tories have a huge swing from UKIP
    2. Labour is close to where they were in 2015.
    3.The LibDems are drifting
    4. UKIP is plunging.

    I see there are still posters denying it all - Labour must be below 25%, etc. But without evidence to the contrry, it seems reasonable to believe the polls.

    If we are to believe Comres then Labour is well down on 2015 in every region, including East Mids btw, except the South East (+6) and South West (+7).
    But they also have the Tories up 2 or 3 in the SE, and up 4 or 5 in the SW. The usual caveat about smallish subsamples applies, but this confirms the picture painted by other polls: little change since 2015 in the relative balance of support between Con and Lab in the south of England outside London, and maybe even a slight swing to Lab.

    Of course, given the GB shares, that must imply massive swings to the Tories elsewhere - which we see in the ComRes poll: a 10-point swing in the NW and an 8-point swing in Yorkshire and the Humber, for instance.

  • Options
    YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172
    surbiton said:

    justin124 said:

    Sean_F said:



    Labour's Welsh vote was flattered by fielding more candidates than the other parties.

    It's very difficult to attribute votes for Independents to other parties. My guess is that in places like Bridgend, Pembroke, Powys, Vale of Glamorgan , many Independents are Conservatives, whereas in the Valleys they're Labour supporters who've fallen out with the local party.

    I think that is correct. 80 per cent is a rough rule.

    Labour did well in the cities -- they even gained seats in Swansea and Llanelli, and the losses in Cardiff were less than they should have been. Plaid Cymru did well in the rural areas.

    I think this points to 6 Lab losses: Ynys Mon -> PC or Tory, and the 4 Welsh NE seats & Bridgend -> Tories.

    I think Ceredigion is TCTC, and my bet for a surprise result would be the Rhondda where Chris Bryant has lost votes in every election.
    I grew up in Pembrokeshire and am aware of many non-Tory Independents. Quite a few were Labour.
    Look at the map.

    https://twitter.com/siongwilym/status/860622162738257927/photo/1

    Look at where the independents are. They are in the Tory seats.

    Ynys Mon has zero Tory Councillors.

    Yet, the Tories will either come first or a very close second next month.
    I can see that Llafur beating the shit out of everyone else.
    If losing 1/5 th of your sitting councillors is called beating the shit, then, yes, Llafur beat the shit.
  • Options
    surbitonsurbiton Posts: 13,549
    RobD said:

    surbiton said:

    RobD said:

    surbiton said:

    Does ComRes breakdown by age group?

    Yes.

    He's an excerpt

    The only age groups more likely to vote Labour than Conservative are 18-24 year olds (51% v 26%) and 25-34 year olds (51% v 28%).

    These age groups are considerably less likely to vote than older, more Conservative people.
    So, it will be fair to assume that within ages 18-44 more will vote Labour. Labour will be massacred by the 45+ vote.

    Triple Lock ! Triple Lock ! Triple Lock ! Triple Lock ! Triple Lock ! Triple Lock ! Triple Lock !
    Safe to assume? The ComRes subsamples have 35-44 with the Tories marginally ahead. For it to be safe you'd assume a 5ish point lead for Labour.
    18-24 Con 26, Lab 51
    25-34 Con 28, Lab 51 (looks suspect to yours truly)
    35-44 Con 39, Lab 37

    It is more than safe to assume. It's an almost bloody guarantee ! Maybe even including those upto 54 years of age.

    Can we conclude more taxpayers vote Labour than the Tories ?
    Oh right, you are considering 18-44, rather than the three bins separately. Suspect 18-34 will go Labour, but 35-44 will go Tory.
    I did not say 35-44 will go Labour. I said 18-44 will go Labour. Clearly.

    If we look at this:

    18-24 Con 26, Lab 51
    25-34 Con 28, Lab 51
    35-44 Con 39, Lab 37
    45-54 Con 44, Lab 29

    Labour could even be leading 18-54. [ I have not done the weightings. So please take care ]

    Labour does get hammered in my age group. Shame on my cohorts.

    Triple Lock ! Triple Lock ! Triple Lock ! Triple Lock ! Triple Lock ! Triple Lock ! Triple Lock !
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    AlastairMeeksAlastairMeeks Posts: 30,340
    I'm glad that everyone got to hear Hungarian rap so that others get to understand what I regularly have to put up with.
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    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,612

    I'm glad that everyone got to hear Hungarian rap so that others get to understand what I regularly have to put up with.


    Glad I'm not playing playing the Eurovision drinking game. This Hungarian entry ticked so many boxes, my liver would be fecked.
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    RobDRobD Posts: 58,995
    surbiton said:

    RobD said:

    surbiton said:

    RobD said:

    surbiton said:

    Does ComRes breakdown by age group?

    Yes.

    He's an excerpt

    The only age groups more likely to vote Labour than Conservative are 18-24 year olds (51% v 26%) and 25-34 year olds (51% v 28%).

    These age groups are considerably less likely to vote than older, more Conservative people.
    So, it will be fair to assume that within ages 18-44 more will vote Labour. Labour will be massacred by the 45+ vote.

    Triple Lock ! Triple Lock ! Triple Lock ! Triple Lock ! Triple Lock ! Triple Lock ! Triple Lock !
    Safe to assume? The ComRes subsamples have 35-44 with the Tories marginally ahead. For it to be safe you'd assume a 5ish point lead for Labour.
    18-24 Con 26, Lab 51
    25-34 Con 28, Lab 51 (looks suspect to yours truly)
    35-44 Con 39, Lab 37

    It is more than safe to assume. It's an almost bloody guarantee ! Maybe even including those upto 54 years of age.

    Can we conclude more taxpayers vote Labour than the Tories ?
    Oh right, you are considering 18-44, rather than the three bins separately. Suspect 18-34 will go Labour, but 35-44 will go Tory.
    I did not say 35-44 will go Labour. I said 18-44 will go Labour. Clearly.
    Yeah, thats why I said "Oh right, you are considering 18-44, rather than the three bins separately."
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    Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905
    FWIW, I estimated the outcome of the election at Con 387, Lab 178, SNP 48, Lib Dem 13, Plaid Cymru 4, and others 20 back on May 1st. I've seen nothing to make me shift position radically. I still believe, and will probably continue to do so right the way until polling day, barring further radical shifts, that the polls are over-estimating Labour support and under-estimating that for the Liberal Democrats. The Ukip vote appears to be imploding so badly that I'm starting to have more confidence that a Tory share of around 45% may not be so far wide of the mark.

    I don't buy Labour on 30%+, and I think there'll be differential swings in the provinces versus the big cities that will favour the Tories. But nor do I believe that Labour will do catastrophically in terms of vote share, and they might even increase their already substantial majorities in some deep urban core areas. In approximate terms, my estimate would imply around fifty Conservative gains from Labour and half-a-dozen or so from the SNP, with an approximately even exchange of three or four seats with the Liberal Democrats (with their net gains coming from the SNP and Labour.)

    About three dozen Labour seats would turn nominally Conservative on a 50% defection rate from the 2015 Ukip vote, and I reckon above average swings in the marginal seats, along with a modest but valuable Lab to Lib Dem defection rate, ought to be enough to get the Tories the rest of the way there.
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    marke09marke09 Posts: 926

    Sean_F said:

    surbiton said:

    nunu said:

    surbiton said:

    valleyboy said:

    surbiton said:

    Anyone seen the latest poll in Wales?

    Tories leading by 75 points ?
    Tories still ahead, 41-35 but Labour picked up 4pts on last time.
    Even this one is at variance with the local election polls.
    The yougov ,_2017
    Whoa .... In Welsh Local elections, the Independents are usually Tories. To get the Tory vote, a simple thing to do is to take 80 per cent of the Independent vote and put it in the Tory column.

    This gives Labour 472 councillors, and the Tories on 184 + 0.8 * 322 = 441 councillors.

    I.e. Labour slightly ahead in the Locals, which is what the polling predicted for the Locals (from memory, Labour 28 per cent, Tories 26 per cent).
    In that case, shouldn't the pollsters also have asked about Independents if they are so numerous ?

    So, it looks to me as though the Tory tide will stop at Bridgend. The Tories won’t take the Newport seats.

    Considering the allegations of bullying and infighting in Cardiff Labour, I am surprised they didn’t lose control of the Council. It was a very good result for Labour. I see now though they have deposed the old leader Phil Bale and have installed Huw ‘Tippex’ Thomas as the new leader.

    “Tippex” Thomas was the Labour student who wanted the Welsh to spatter English cars with Tippex. He was one of the participants in the incredibly dirty Ceredigion election in 2015.
    Labour's Welsh vote was flattered by fielding more candidates than the other parties.

    It's very difficult to attribute votes for Independents to other parties. My guess is that in places like Bridgend, Pembroke, Powys, Vale of Glamorgan , many Independents are Conservatives, whereas in the Valleys they're Labour supporters who've fallen out with the local party.
    That figures.

    I think that also what helps is that Labour locally still has quite a strong Welsh identity.
    Well Welsh Labour have already distanced themselves from main manifesto saying they will have one of their own but they forgetting these are not Cardiff Bay elections
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    Fat_SteveFat_Steve Posts: 361
    surbiton said:

    Fat_Steve said:

    surbiton said:

    Omnium said:

    By the way, do we have "made up my mind" figures broken down by party?

    Dr P - have you made up your mind? You've often expressed support for Corbyn, but (and I find this contradictory) you've also often said wise things. I'm sure you know without doubt that were Mr Corbyn to be elected we'd immediately be in a financial crisis. That crisis in itself will disable his plans. His plans though are so raddled that even if the markets greeted him with joy they'd be unworkable. You have to know this - you're far too clever not to. Care to comment?

    One of the strengths of the Labour Party in this campaign is that nobody expects Labour to win. Therefore, all these "costing" nonsense which Labour has to answer and the Tories don't will not make much of an impact this time.

    Many Labour voters who do not like Corbyn particularly, will still vote Labour to stop the landslide.
    All this "costing" nonsense...
    Yes. This geeky detail about whether we have or haven;t got a spare £250 billion.
    As in 'I was planning to retire next month and buy a yacht, but my wife is obsessed with "costing" nonsense about mortgages and food.'
    Oh yes ! Tory Party pledges to eliminate the deficit by 2015. What happened ?

    The Tories borrowed £100bn more than it had planned ! Nothing happened. The world did not collapse.

    https://www.ifs.org.uk/uploads/gb/gb2015/ch1_gb2015.pdf#page=14

    Well, it;s not really "nothing happened"
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government_spending_in_the_United_Kingdom

    Government Debt Interest - 39 Billion quid.
    Call it, give or take, 600 quid for every man woman child and baby in the UK per year.

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    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,468
    Azerbaijan, another non-EU member :)
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    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,612
    Martin Boon's twitter feed tonight is a must read for anyone betting on the general election, or just interested in general election polling.
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527

    justin124 said:

    Sean_F said:



    Labour's Welsh vote was flattered by fielding more candidates than the other parties.

    It's very difficult to attribute votes for Independents to other parties. My guess is that in places like Bridgend, Pembroke, Powys, Vale of Glamorgan , many Independents are Conservatives, whereas in the Valleys they're Labour supporters who've fallen out with the local party.

    I think that is correct. 80 per cent is a rough rule.

    Labour did well in the cities -- they even gained seats in Swansea and Llanelli, and the losses in Cardiff were less than they should have been. Plaid Cymru did well in the rural areas.

    I think this points to 6 Lab losses: Ynys Mon -> PC or Tory, and the 4 Welsh NE seats & Bridgend -> Tories.

    I think Ceredigion is TCTC, and my bet for a surprise result would be the Rhondda where Chris Bryant has lost votes in every election.
    I grew up in Pembrokeshire and am aware of many non-Tory Independents. Quite a few were Labour.
    Look at the map.

    https://twitter.com/siongwilym/status/860622162738257927/photo/1

    Look at where the independents are. They are in the Tory seats.

    Ynys Mon has zero Tory Councillors.

    Yet, the Tories will either come first or a very close second next month.
    They are in the rural areas! Pembrokeshire - where I grew up - was Labour held from 1950 - 1970 and again from 1992 - 2005. Pembroke South & Carmarthen West did not go Tory until 2010. At some point I expect to see those seats Labour again. I remember canvassing for the Local Elections there in 1973 and was struck by the number of people who were genuinely puzzled at being asked to support a candidate bearing a party label. I regularly received the response - in strong Labour areas - of ' What does politics have to do with local government?' It was simply not part of the culture there in that people did not think in those terms. It has changed a bit now , but even today only circa 40% of County Councillors there have a party label.
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,468

    RobD said:

    surbiton said:

    surbiton said:

    Sean_F said:

    Barnesian said:

    The Tory strategy is not going to plan.

    It appears to be:
    1.Make it personal - May v. Corbyn
    2. Keep quiet or equivocal about specific policies.

    Although May outshines Corbyn, she only has a downside as she is exposed to be somewhat robotic, secretive, untrustworthy and not very competent or likeable. Corbyn, on the other hand, can only go up as he gets more TV exposure as a decent, likable open fellow with popular policies and not at all as portrayed in the right wing newspapers.

    He has a very long way to go and won't catch up with her but he's narrowing the gap. That's the dynamic.

    I think the Conservative campaign is going very much to plan. They've won very big in the local elections and have a big lead in the polls.
    Did the Tories really win big in the locals ? All the figures are compared to 2013 or 2012 in Scotland. Not compared to 2015.
    Not really , overall they fell a little short of their 2015 GE vote share . Did better in some areas such as NE but they had done very badly in 2013 hence the big gains .
    Thanks, Mark. You know these facts far better than me.

    You know how I am voting this time ? You can use that for the next 5 years !!
    Except it isn't true. The PBV has the Tories on 38, which is higher than what they got in 2015. That's forgetting that comparing locals with a GE is a fools errand.
    Excluding NI they got more than 38% in 2015
    No, they didn't! It was 37.77726%!
  • Options
    rural_voterrural_voter Posts: 2,038
    kle4 said:

    surbiton said:

    justin124 said:

    chestnut said:

    kle4 said:

    #ComRes
    Most likely to keep Britain safe from terrorism

    May 47%
    Corbyn 14%

    #Comres
    Best to lead Britain’s negotiations over Brexit

    May 50%
    Corbyn 15%

    And Labour are at 32%. Right.

    The uptick has to be students...has to be. Labour aren't even ahead with public sector workers or the working class.
    Is that not pilling up votes in areas they are already well ahead
    It's one possible scenario.

    a - Polls are just wrong - there is some reason for believing this might be the case, given anecdata and Labour struggles in many areas in locals and mayoralties

    b - Piling up votes in safe seats, losing elsewhere - Similar to a), but would mean polls could be right even as Labour's struggles are genuine and would be repeated at a GE

    c - There is a surge for Labour and Corbyn for some reason (fear of a big Tory majority, nonvoters saying they will vote Labour, popular policies overcoming doubts over Corbyn, sclerotic LD vote).
    My theory is:

    a) They are picking up around 1% of the electorate from the Lib Dems;
    b) They are picking up around 2% of the electorate from the Greens;
    c) They are picking up around 1% of the electorate from Plaid;
    d) They are picking up DNVs who will not actually vote when it comes to it;
    e) These votes are in overwhelmingly safe seats - Labour Urbans/Tory suburbans

    I don't think there is any significant swing to the Tories in SE/SW or East.
    Plaid only had 1% to start with! More likely is that some UKIP voters are going back to Labour.
    Triple lock !
    It was smart to court the grey vote. If only a little can be brought back, it's very helpful.
    They could have done even more of it, e.g. amend the triple lock so that the basic state pension recovers in value faster compared to mean earnings at times of high inflation.

    2-3% of the oldie vote is worth having. Just a reminder amid all this nonsense about pensioners being filthy rich - pensioners with only the state pension receive about half as much as a person on minimum wage.
  • Options
    RobDRobD Posts: 58,995

    Martin Boon's twitter feed tonight is a must read for anyone betting on the general election, or just interested in general election polling.

    You are a bloody tease.
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    OmniumOmnium Posts: 9,804

    Martin Boon's twitter feed tonight is a must read for anyone betting on the general election, or just interested in general election polling.

    Why?
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    brokenwheelbrokenwheel Posts: 3,352
    edited May 2017
    NeilVW said:

    The evidence of what'#s happening is really pretty clear, confirmed by polls, canvassing and anecdotal evidence - there's almost no confusion:

    1. Tories have a huge swing from UKIP
    2. Labour is close to where they were in 2015.
    3.The LibDems are drifting
    4. UKIP is plunging.

    I see there are still posters denying it all - Labour must be below 25%, etc. But without evidence to the contrry, it seems reasonable to believe the polls.

    If we are to believe Comres then Labour is well down on 2015 in every region, including East Mids btw, except the South East (+6) and South West (+7).
    But they also have the Tories up 2 or 3 in the SE, and up 4 or 5 in the SW. The usual caveat about smallish subsamples applies, but this confirms the picture painted by other polls: little change since 2015 in the relative balance of support between Con and Lab in the south of England outside London, and maybe even a slight swing to Lab.

    Of course, given the GB shares, that must imply massive swings to the Tories elsewhere - which we see in the ComRes poll: a 10-point swing in the NW and an 8-point swing in Yorkshire and the Humber, for instance.

    You are missing the point, if any of that is true than Nick's anecdotal evidence must be wide of the mark since Labour should be in collapse outside of the South.

    It would also contradict the poll's own figures on Labour voter retention firming up if the Labour increase is purely down to it gaining heavily on 2015 in the South of England outside of London more than it is haemorrhaging votes everywhere else.
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527

    RobD said:

    surbiton said:

    surbiton said:

    Sean_F said:

    Barnesian said:

    The Tory strategy is not going to plan.

    It appears to be:
    1.Make it personal - May v. Corbyn
    2. Keep quiet or equivocal about specific policies.

    Although May outshines Corbyn, she only has a downside as she is exposed to be somewhat robotic, secretive, untrustworthy and not very competent or likeable. Corbyn, on the other hand, can only go up as he gets more TV exposure as a decent, likable open fellow with popular policies and not at all as portrayed in the right wing newspapers.

    He has a very long way to go and won't catch up with her but he's narrowing the gap. That's the dynamic.

    I think the Conservative campaign is going very much to plan. They've won very big in the local elections and have a big lead in the polls.
    Did the Tories really win big in the locals ? All the figures are compared to 2013 or 2012 in Scotland. Not compared to 2015.
    Not really , overall they fell a little short of their 2015 GE vote share . Did better in some areas such as NE but they had done very badly in 2013 hence the big gains .
    Thanks, Mark. You know these facts far better than me.

    You know how I am voting this time ? You can use that for the next 5 years !!
    Except it isn't true. The PBV has the Tories on 38, which is higher than what they got in 2015. That's forgetting that comparing locals with a GE is a fools errand.
    Excluding NI they got more than 38% in 2015
    In 2015 the Tories polled 37.8% in GB.
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,468
    AUSTRALIA :lol:
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    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,612
    edited May 2017
    RobD said:

    Martin Boon's twitter feed tonight is a must read for anyone betting on the general election, or just interested in general election polling.

    You are a bloody tease.
    It's not to do with a specific poll, but exactly what Labour are polling at the moment, check out his entire feed from tonight, but here's a feeler.

    https://twitter.com/martinboon/with_replies

    https://twitter.com/martinboon/status/863476618135732224
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    RobDRobD Posts: 58,995
    Cheers TSE.
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    bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 21,904

    RobD said:

    surbiton said:

    surbiton said:

    Sean_F said:

    Barnesian said:

    The Tory strategy is not going to plan.

    It appears to be:
    1.Make it personal - May v. Corbyn
    2. Keep quiet or equivocal about specific policies.

    Although May outshines Corbyn, she only has a downside as she is exposed to be somewhat robotic, secretive, untrustworthy and not very competent or likeable. Corbyn, on the other hand, can only go up as he gets more TV exposure as a decent, likable open fellow with popular policies and not at all as portrayed in the right wing newspapers.

    He has a very long way to go and won't catch up with her but he's narrowing the gap. That's the dynamic.

    I think the Conservative campaign is going very much to plan. They've won very big in the local elections and have a big lead in the polls.
    Did the Tories really win big in the locals ? All the figures are compared to 2013 or 2012 in Scotland. Not compared to 2015.
    Not really , overall they fell a little short of their 2015 GE vote share . Did better in some areas such as NE but they had done very badly in 2013 hence the big gains .
    Thanks, Mark. You know these facts far better than me.

    You know how I am voting this time ? You can use that for the next 5 years !!
    Except it isn't true. The PBV has the Tories on 38, which is higher than what they got in 2015. That's forgetting that comparing locals with a GE is a fools errand.
    Excluding NI they got more than 38% in 2015
    No, they didn't! It was 37.77726%!
    When is Elbow due Sunil?
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    kjohnwkjohnw Posts: 1,456
    TSE is there any more polls out tonight?
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    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,612
    RobD said:

    Cheers TSE.

    Here's another feeler

    https://twitter.com/martinboon/status/863471800424034304
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    RobDRobD Posts: 58,995

    RobD said:

    Cheers TSE.

    Here's another feeler

    https://twitter.com/martinboon/status/863471800424034304
    LDs too high perhaps? :p
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    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,612
    kjohnw said:

    TSE is there any more polls out tonight?

    YouGov tonight, sometime between now and midnight.

    And ICM that usually comes out overnight/tomorrow morning.

    There maybe others, but I've not asked/been told by other pollsters.
  • Options
    YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172
    justin124 said:

    justin124 said:

    Sean_F said:



    Labour's Welsh vote was flattered by fielding more candidates than the other parties.

    It's very difficult to attribute votes for Independents to other parties. My guess is that in places like Bridgend, Pembroke, Powys, Vale of Glamorgan , many Independents are Conservatives, whereas in the Valleys they're Labour supporters who've fallen out with the local party.

    I think that is correct. 80 per cent is a rough rule.

    Labour did well in the cities -- they even gained seats in Swansea and Llanelli, and the losses in Cardiff were less than they should have been. Plaid Cymru did well in the rural areas.

    I think this points to 6 Lab losses: Ynys Mon -> PC or Tory, and the 4 Welsh NE seats & Bridgend -> Tories.

    I think Ceredigion is TCTC, and my bet for a surprise result would be the Rhondda where Chris Bryant has lost votes in every election.
    I grew up in Pembrokeshire and am aware of many non-Tory Independents. Quite a few were Labour.
    Look at the map.

    https://twitter.com/siongwilym/status/860622162738257927/photo/1

    Look at where the independents are. They are in the Tory seats.

    Ynys Mon has zero Tory Councillors.

    Yet, the Tories will either come first or a very close second next month.
    They are in the rural areas! Pembrokeshire - where I grew up - was Labour held from 1950 - 1970 and again from 1992 - 2005. Pembroke South & Carmarthen West did not go Tory until 2010. At some point I expect to see those seats Labour again. I remember canvassing for the Local Elections there in 1973 and was struck by the number of people who were genuinely puzzled at being asked to support a candidate bearing a party label. I regularly received the response - in strong Labour areas - of ' What does politics have to do with local government?' It was simply not part of the culture there in that people did not think in those terms. It has changed a bit now , but even today only circa 40% of County Councillors there have a party label.
    I don’t doubt you are correct that there are some Independent Labour-inclined councillors. There are also some mavericks and some kippers who prefer the Independent label.

    Pembrokeshire is one of the areas of Wales in which the population is increasing. I think the demographics of the incomers are slowly making the seats less fertile for Labour.

    In a very good year, Labour will take them. But, like the Gower, they are slowly moving away from Labour.
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,154
    "neeeeeebles!"
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    kjohnwkjohnw Posts: 1,456

    kjohnw said:

    TSE is there any more polls out tonight?

    YouGov tonight, sometime between now and midnight.

    And ICM that usually comes out overnight/tomorrow morning.

    There maybe others, but I've not asked/been told by other pollsters.
    cheers
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    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,468

    RobD said:

    surbiton said:

    surbiton said:

    Sean_F said:

    Barnesian said:

    The Tory strategy is not going to plan.

    It appears to be:
    1.Make it personal - May v. Corbyn
    2. Keep quiet or equivocal about specific policies.

    Although May outshines Corbyn, she only has a downside as she is exposed to be somewhat robotic, secretive, untrustworthy and not very competent or likeable. Corbyn, on the other hand, can only go up as he gets more TV exposure as a decent, likable open fellow with popular policies and not at all as portrayed in the right wing newspapers.

    He has a very long way to go and won't catch up with her but he's narrowing the gap. That's the dynamic.

    I think the Conservative campaign is going very much to plan. They've won very big in the local elections and have a big lead in the polls.
    Did the Tories really win big in the locals ? All the figures are compared to 2013 or 2012 in Scotland. Not compared to 2015.
    Not really , overall they fell a little short of their 2015 GE vote share . Did better in some areas such as NE but they had done very badly in 2013 hence the big gains .
    Thanks, Mark. You know these facts far better than me.

    You know how I am voting this time ? You can use that for the next 5 years !!
    Except it isn't true. The PBV has the Tories on 38, which is higher than what they got in 2015. That's forgetting that comparing locals with a GE is a fools errand.
    Excluding NI they got more than 38% in 2015
    No, they didn't! It was 37.77726%!
    When is Elbow due Sunil?
    It's the Sunil on Sunday, BigJohn :)
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    RogerRoger Posts: 18,906
    surbiton said:

    Chris said:

    LD campaign so far seems to have consisted of legalising cannabis and taking in another 50,000 refugees at a cost of £4.3 billion. Regardless of the merits of these policies they don't seem likely to improve their popularity.

    Some posters on here thought that the PM talking about fox hunting was an error. Is talking about legalising drug use and letting in refugees a political error in a Brexity election? Just asking.

    As errors go, I scarcely think anything ranks in the same league as targeting Vauxhall, where the Lib Dems are starting from 4th place and 47 percentage points behind the incumbent.
    They could hoover up quite a few Remain voters and hand the seat to the.......Tories
    Someone more Tory than Kate?
  • Options
    SquareRootSquareRoot Posts: 7,095
    kjohnw said:

    TSE is there any more polls out tonight?

    is there? dearie me...
  • Options
    JonathanJonathan Posts: 20,913
    Feeling better about Brexit after eurovision.
  • Options
    valleyboyvalleyboy Posts: 605

    justin124 said:

    justin124 said:

    Sean_F said:



    Labour's Welsh vote was flattered by fielding more candidates than the other parties.

    It's very difficult to attribute votes for Independents to other parties. My guess is that in places like Bridgend, Pembroke, Powys, Vale of Glamorgan , many Independents are Conservatives, whereas in the Valleys they're Labour supporters who've fallen out with the local party.

    I think that is correct. 80 per cent is a rough rule.

    Labour did well in the cities -- they even gained seats in Swansea and Llanelli, and the losses in Cardiff were less than they should have been. Plaid Cymru did well in the rural areas.

    I think this points to 6 Lab losses: Ynys Mon -> PC or Tory, and the 4 Welsh NE seats & Bridgend -> Tories.

    I think Ceredigion is TCTC, and my bet for a surprise result would be the Rhondda where Chris Bryant has lost votes in every election.
    I grew up in Pembrokeshire and am aware of many non-Tory Independents. Quite a few were Labour.
    Look at the map.

    https://twitter.com/siongwilym/status/860622162738257927/photo/1

    Look at where the independents are. They are in the Tory seats.

    Ynys Mon has zero Tory Councillors.

    Yet, the Tories will either come first or a very close second next month.
    They are in the rural areas! Pembrokeshire - where I grew up - was Labour held from 1950 - 1970 and again from 1992 - 2005. Pembroke South & Carmarthen West did not go Tory until 2010. At some point I expect to see those seats Labour again. I remember canvassing for the Local Elections there in 1973 and was struck by the number of people who were genuinely puzzled at being asked to support a candidate bearing a party label. I regularly received the response - in strong Labour areas - of ' What does politics have to do with local government?' It was simply not part of the culture there in that people did not think in those terms. It has changed a bit now , but even today only circa 40% of County Councillors there have a party label.
    I don’t doubt you are correct that there are some Independent Labour-inclined councillors. There are also some mavericks and some kippers who prefer the Independent label.

    Pembrokeshire is one of the areas of Wales in which the population is increasing. I think the demographics of the incomers are slowly making the seats less fertile for Labour.

    In a very good year, Labour will take them. But, like the Gower, they are slowly moving away from Labour.
    Yep, bloody English incomers all voting Tory. Will need a Blair style victory to get these seats back.
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,468

    kjohnw said:

    TSE is there any more polls out tonight?

    is there? dearie me...
    Yo! Is you commentin' on his grammar?
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    Black_RookBlack_Rook Posts: 8,905
    surbiton said:

    I did not say 35-44 will go Labour. I said 18-44 will go Labour. Clearly.

    If we look at this:

    18-24 Con 26, Lab 51
    25-34 Con 28, Lab 51
    35-44 Con 39, Lab 37
    45-54 Con 44, Lab 29

    Labour could even be leading 18-54. [ I have not done the weightings. So please take care ]

    Figures from YouGov (forgive fact that I can't seem to find the easy-to-post tweet with the graph in it anywhere...)

    "Age is the new key predictor of voting intention in British politics"

    * Labour-Conservative crossover occurs at age 34
    * For every ten years older a person is, the likelihood that they would vote Conservative increases by 8 points
    * For every ten years older a person is, the likelihood that they would vote Labour decreases by 6 points

    Context: the median age of the entire UK population is just over 40 years. I don't have an exact value for the median age of the electorate (i.e. population with non-voting children and babies subtracted,) but it must be somewhere close to 50.

    Labour can do as well as it likes amongst the can't-be-arsed-to-vote youth. If it's well adrift amongst the middle aged, and losing catastrophically amongst pensioners, it hardly matters. And a similar pattern is being seen by all of the pollsters; they might be out by a few percentage points here and there, but not by enough to call these findings seriously into question.

    At this rate, it's quite possible that it will only manage to gather two votes for every three that the Tories get on June 8th.
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    paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,461
    Just backed Croatia. Perfect Eurovision material.
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    bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 21,904
    Are the BBC still paying @BBCLauraK should be paid by the tory party.
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    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,468
    Norway - voted against EU membership twice :lol:
  • Options
    kjohnwkjohnw Posts: 1,456
    edited May 2017

    kjohnw said:

    TSE is there any more polls out tonight?

    is there? dearie me...
    Yo! Is you commentin' on his grammar?
    sorry it's been a long day :) are there any good English teachers on PB?
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    bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 21,904

    RobD said:

    surbiton said:

    surbiton said:

    Sean_F said:

    Barnesian said:

    The Tory strategy is not going to plan.

    It appears to be:
    1.Make it personal - May v. Corbyn
    2. Keep quiet or equivocal about specific policies.

    Although May outshines Corbyn, she only has a downside as she is exposed to be somewhat robotic, secretive, untrustworthy and not very competent or likeable. Corbyn, on the other hand, can only go up as he gets more TV exposure as a decent, likable open fellow with popular policies and not at all as portrayed in the right wing newspapers.

    He has a very long way to go and won't catch up with her but he's narrowing the gap. That's the dynamic.

    I think the Conservative campaign is going very much to plan. They've won very big in the local elections and have a big lead in the polls.
    Did the Tories really win big in the locals ? All the figures are compared to 2013 or 2012 in Scotland. Not compared to 2015.
    Not really , overall they fell a little short of their 2015 GE vote share . Did better in some areas such as NE but they had done very badly in 2013 hence the big gains .
    Thanks, Mark. You know these facts far better than me.

    You know how I am voting this time ? You can use that for the next 5 years !!
    Except it isn't true. The PBV has the Tories on 38, which is higher than what they got in 2015. That's forgetting that comparing locals with a GE is a fools errand.
    Excluding NI they got more than 38% in 2015
    No, they didn't! It was 37.77726%!
    When is Elbow due Sunil?
    It's the Sunil on Sunday, BigJohn :)
    3hrs then?
  • Options
    YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172
    edited May 2017
    valleyboy said:

    justin124 said:

    justin124 said:

    Sean_F said:



    Labour's Welsh vote was flattered by fielding more candidates than the other parties.

    It's very difficult to attribute votes for Independents to other parties. My guess is that in places like Bridgend, Pembroke, Powys, Vale of Glamorgan , many Independents are Conservatives, whereas in the Valleys they're Labour supporters who've fallen out with the local party.

    I think that is correct. 80 per cent is a rough rule.

    Labour did well in the cities -- they even gained seats in Swansea and Llanelli, and the losses in Cardiff were less than they should have been. Plaid Cymru did well in the rural areas.

    I think this points to 6 Lab losses: Ynys Mon -> PC or Tory, and the 4 Welsh NE seats & Bridgend -> Tories.

    I think Ceredigion is TCTC, and my bet for a surprise result would be the Rhondda where Chris Bryant has lost votes in every election.
    I grew up in Pembrokeshire and am aware of many non-Tory Independents. Quite a few were Labour.
    Look at the map.

    https://twitter.com/siongwilym/status/860622162738257927/photo/1

    Look at where the independents are. They are in the Tory seats.

    Ynys Mon has zero Tory Councillors.

    Yet, the Tories will either come first or a very close second next month.
    They are in the rural areas! Pembrokeshire - where I grew up - was Labour held from 1950 - 1970 and again from 1992 - 2005. Pembroke South & Carmarthen West did not go Tory until 2010. At some point I expect to see those seats Labour again. I remember canvassing for the Local Elections there in 1973 and was struck by the number of people who were genuinely puzzled at being asked to support a candidate bearing a party label. I regularly received the response - in strong Labour areas - of ' What does politics have to do with local government?' It was simply not part of the culture there in that people did not think in those terms. It has changed a bit now , but even today only circa 40% of County Councillors there have a party label.
    I don’t doubt you are correct that there are some Independent Labour-inclined councillors. There are also some mavericks and some kippers who prefer the Independent label.

    Pembrokeshire is one of the areas of Wales in which the population is increasing. I think the demographics of the incomers are slowly making the seats less fertile for Labour.

    In a very good year, Labour will take them. But, like the Gower, they are slowly moving away from Labour.
    Yep, bloody English incomers all voting Tory. Will need a Blair style victory to get these seats back.
    Yes, that sums it up pretty succinctly!
  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,106

    Are the BBC still paying @BBCLauraK should be paid by the tory party.

    Like a broken record.
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,298
    edited May 2017

    Are the BBC still paying @BBCLauraK should be paid by the tory party.

    Is this the same lauraK who advised the labour party?
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,468
    Jonathan said:

    Feeling better about Brexit after eurovision.

    Stress not, Jonathan!

    a) we havne't actually left yet
    b) there are stacks of non-EU members participating each year!
  • Options
    OmniumOmnium Posts: 9,804
    Jonathan said:

    Feeling better about Brexit after eurovision.

    Eurovision instills in all normal people the idea that you should immediately sleep with Nigel Farage. This is an extreme reaction, and it's entirely normal. Eurovision is a very nasty and dangerous thing.
  • Options
    justin124justin124 Posts: 11,527

    RobD said:

    Cheers TSE.

    Here's another feeler

    https://twitter.com/martinboon/status/863471800424034304
    ICM was the only pollster in 1997 to understate the Labour lead.
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    paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,461
    I think the spread firms keeping a 3 seat margin on their SNP spreads is very tight when the maximum realistic variation is probably only 20 seats.
  • Options
    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,612
    justin124 said:

    RobD said:

    Cheers TSE.

    Here's another feeler

    https://twitter.com/martinboon/status/863471800424034304
    ICM was the only pollster in 1997 to understate the Labour lead.
    You mean ICM was the most accurate pollster at the 1997 general election.
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,298

    justin124 said:

    RobD said:

    Cheers TSE.

    Here's another feeler

    https://twitter.com/martinboon/status/863471800424034304
    ICM was the only pollster in 1997 to understate the Labour lead.
    You mean ICM was the most accurate pollster at the 1997 general election.
    Get your short Straws, get you short Straws, going cheap...
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    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,468
    Lucie Jones!!
  • Options
    mattmatt Posts: 3,789
    justin124 said:

    RobD said:

    Cheers TSE.

    Here's another feeler

    https://twitter.com/martinboon/status/863471800424034304
    ICM was the only pollster in 1997 to understate the Labour lead.
    And in the 4 elections and 20 years since?
  • Options
    NeilVWNeilVW Posts: 725

    NeilVW said:

    The evidence of what'#s happening is really pretty clear, confirmed by polls, canvassing and anecdotal evidence - there's almost no confusion:

    1. Tories have a huge swing from UKIP
    2. Labour is close to where they were in 2015.
    3.The LibDems are drifting
    4. UKIP is plunging.

    I see there are still posters denying it all - Labour must be below 25%, etc. But without evidence to the contrry, it seems reasonable to believe the polls.

    If we are to believe Comres then Labour is well down on 2015 in every region, including East Mids btw, except the South East (+6) and South West (+7).
    But they also have the Tories up 2 or 3 in the SE, and up 4 or 5 in the SW. The usual caveat about smallish subsamples applies, but this confirms the picture painted by other polls: little change since 2015 in the relative balance of support between Con and Lab in the south of England outside London, and maybe even a slight swing to Lab.

    Of course, given the GB shares, that must imply massive swings to the Tories elsewhere - which we see in the ComRes poll: a 10-point swing in the NW and an 8-point swing in Yorkshire and the Humber, for instance.

    You are missing the point, if any of that is true than Nick's anecdotal evidence must be wide of the mark since Labour should be in collapse outside of the South.

    It would also contradict the poll's own figures on Labour voter retention firming up if the Labour increase is purely down to it gaining heavily on 2015 in the South of England outside of London more than it is haemorrhaging votes everywhere else.
    Sorry, I missed the earlier comments. East Midlands is showing a c. 10-point swing in this poll. In Nick's defence he is not canvassing the whole region. :smile:

    Looking at the two previous ComRes polls in April, there seems to be a sharp increase in Lab support in the SE over one month: 14% in mid-April, 14% a few days later, 25% in this latest one - possibly an outlier. SW more stable: 22%, 23%, 25%.

    As for Lab retention of its 2015 vote, it hasn't shifted massively: 73%, 72%, 77%. The Tories: 92%, 92%, 90%.
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,468
    TSE: "I will never give up on EU!" :lol:
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    ydoethurydoethur Posts: 67,464
    Prodicus said:
    A clever Roos by the EU to make up for Brexit?

    I'll get my coat...
  • Options
    bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 21,904
    Britain Elects‏ @britainelects 42s42 seconds ago
    More
    Westminster voting intention:

    CON: 49% (+3)
    LAB: 31% (+1)
    LDEM: 9% (-2)
    UKIP: 3% (-2)
  • Options
    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,612
    Tonight's YouGov/Sunday Times poll (changes since Wednesday)

    Con 49 (+3) Lab 31 (+1) LD 9 (-2) UKIP 3 (-2)
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,298
    edited May 2017
    Tory see a big bump from labour supermarket trolley dash manifesto launch....Will the last ukipper please remember to turn the lights off at hq.
  • Options
    numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 5,522
    I think our Eurovision entry is good. There, I've just given it the kiss of death.
  • Options
    RobDRobD Posts: 58,995

    Tonight's YouGov/Sunday Times poll (changes since Wednesday)

    Con 49 (+3) Lab 31 (+1) LD 9 (-2) UKIP 3 (-2)

    I think we have a new gold standard :o
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,298
    edited May 2017
    Lib dems project target remainers seems to be going well..The thing is the stuff they have proposed is a damn sight more sensible that labours Venezuelan utopia nonsense.
  • Options
    RobDRobD Posts: 58,995
    UKIP may be polling lower than the SNP :p
  • Options
    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,612
    RobD said:

    Tonight's YouGov/Sunday Times poll (changes since Wednesday)

    Con 49 (+3) Lab 31 (+1) LD 9 (-2) UKIP 3 (-2)

    I think we have a new gold standard :o
    Nah, ICM are still the gold standard.

    Their last poll gave the Tories a 22% lead last time.
  • Options
    TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 114,612

    I think our Eurovision entry is good. There, I've just given it the kiss of death.

    I liked it too.

    However, I really do regret the fall of the Berlin Wall and collapse of the Soviet Union, it ultimately ruined the integrity of Eurovision voting
  • Options
    bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 21,904

    Tonight's YouGov/Sunday Times poll (changes since Wednesday)

    Con 49 (+3) Lab 31 (+1) LD 9 (-2) UKIP 3 (-2)

    TMICIPM (BAL)
  • Options
    saddosaddo Posts: 534
    ydoethur said:

    Prodicus said:
    A clever Roos by the EU to make up for Brexit?

    I'll get my coat...
    You should be so lucky
  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,106
    https://twitter.com/ShippersUnbound/status/863492184653352962

    Won't be much grass left on Labour's lawn.
  • Options
    numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 5,522

    Tonight's YouGov/Sunday Times poll (changes since Wednesday)

    Con 49 (+3) Lab 31 (+1) LD 9 (-2) UKIP 3 (-2)

    Different message from the other polls so far tonight. They suggested a minor bounce for Labour but Tory vote holding firm. This one suggests the manifesto might have helped the Tories. Which is right?
  • Options
    chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341
    If the LD vote collapses as the futility of voting for them grows increasingly obvious we could easily see the Tories over 50.
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    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,154
    Ample evidence that everybody sane has now left Romania.....
  • Options
    brokenwheelbrokenwheel Posts: 3,352

    https://twitter.com/ShippersUnbound/status/863492184653352962

    Won't be much grass left on Labour's lawn.

    It's ok, the army doesn't have that many tanks anymore.
  • Options
    MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 50,154

    Britain Elects‏ @britainelects 42s42 seconds ago
    More
    Westminster voting intention:

    CON: 49% (+3)
    LAB: 31% (+1)
    LDEM: 9% (-2)
    UKIP: 3% (-2)

    LibDems having a mare of an election.....
  • Options
    saddosaddo Posts: 534
    dr_spyn said:
    Labour "We'll give you loads of free stuff that other evil rich bastards pay for" policy working well so far.
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,298
    edited May 2017

    Tonight's YouGov/Sunday Times poll (changes since Wednesday)

    Con 49 (+3) Lab 31 (+1) LD 9 (-2) UKIP 3 (-2)

    Different message from the other polls so far tonight. They suggested a minor bounce for Labour but Tory vote holding firm. This one suggests the manifesto might have helped the Tories. Which is right?
    My hunch is both might be true...Labour have got a bump with 18-24 students, but they don't vote....And oldies remember the 70s who do vote.

    Difference could then be down to weighting of these groups propensity to vote.
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,298

    Britain Elects‏ @britainelects 42s42 seconds ago
    More
    Westminster voting intention:

    CON: 49% (+3)
    LAB: 31% (+1)
    LDEM: 9% (-2)
    UKIP: 3% (-2)

    LibDems having a mare of an election.....
    I wonder what the safe word is to stop the sinners being punished?
  • Options
    numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 5,522

    Britain Elects‏ @britainelects 42s42 seconds ago
    More
    Westminster voting intention:

    CON: 49% (+3)
    LAB: 31% (+1)
    LDEM: 9% (-2)
    UKIP: 3% (-2)

    LibDems having a mare of an election.....
    Who would have thought it a few weeks ago?

    I don't mind admitting I thought they'd be around 20% and challenging Labour for second back then.
  • Options
    glwglw Posts: 9,554
    edited May 2017

    Ample evidence that everybody sane has now left Romania.....

    I honestly at first read that as Remainia and thought you were talking about the YouGov poll.
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,468
    Ukraine, the hosts - yet another non-EU member!
  • Options
    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,298
    edited May 2017

    Britain Elects‏ @britainelects 42s42 seconds ago
    More
    Westminster voting intention:

    CON: 49% (+3)
    LAB: 31% (+1)
    LDEM: 9% (-2)
    UKIP: 3% (-2)

    LibDems having a mare of an election.....
    Who would have thought it a few weeks ago?

    I don't mind admitting I thought they'd be around 20% and challenging Labour for second back then.
    Putting aside the sinners stuff, they haven't had any car crashes...Labour on the other hand are involved in daily multi car pile ups. Doesn't like like any justice.
  • Options
    glwglw Posts: 9,554

    Who would have thought it a few weeks ago?

    I don't mind admitting I thought they'd be around 20% and challenging Labour for second back then.

    Me too, I thought Labour will lose a ton of votes directly to the Lib Dems, but unless the polls are wrong (and nobody knows that as yet) it's not happening.
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    numbertwelvenumbertwelve Posts: 5,522

    I think our Eurovision entry is good. There, I've just given it the kiss of death.

    I liked it too.

    However, I really do regret the fall of the Berlin Wall and collapse of the Soviet Union, it ultimately ruined the integrity of Eurovision voting
    Another unintended consequence of the Easten expansion of Europe?
  • Options
    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,144
    edited May 2017
    We had polls from ComRes, Opinium and YouGov four weeks ago:

    ComRes 46, 25, 11, 9
    Opinium 38, 29, 7, 14
    YouGov 44, 23, 12, 10

    http://ukpollingreport.co.uk/voting-intention-2

    Those average to 43, 26, 10, 11

    and today's three polls from ComRes, Opinium and YouGov average to 48, 31, 9, 4.

    Giving campaign changes of:

    Con +5
    Lab +5
    LibD -1
    UKIP -7

    Its interesting that the NOTA parties are being squeezed in favour of the two main parties - is this perhaps a Corbyn effect ie people either love or fear him and so support the party which either supports or opposes him.
  • Options
    GIN1138GIN1138 Posts: 20,925
    dr_spyn said:
    Go Jezza!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,468

    Britain Elects‏ @britainelects 42s42 seconds ago
    More
    Westminster voting intention:

    CON: 49% (+3)
    LAB: 31% (+1)
    LDEM: 9% (-2)
    UKIP: 3% (-2)

    LibDems having a mare of an election.....
    Kippers in freefall....
  • Options
    Sunil_PrasannanSunil_Prasannan Posts: 49,468

    https://twitter.com/ShippersUnbound/status/863492184653352962

    Won't be much grass left on Labour's lawn.

    It's ok, the army doesn't have that many tanks anymore.
    "There are no Tory Leads in Baghdad!"
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    AlistairAlistair Posts: 23,670

    Tonight's YouGov/Sunday Times poll (changes since Wednesday)

    Con 49 (+3) Lab 31 (+1) LD 9 (-2) UKIP 3 (-2)

    But what is the Scotland subsample?
  • Options
    chestnutchestnut Posts: 7,341

    We had polls from ComRes, Opinium and YouGov four weeks ago:

    ComRes 46, 25, 11, 9
    Opinium 38, 29, 7, 14
    YouGov 44, 23, 12, 10

    http://ukpollingreport.co.uk/voting-intention-2

    Those average to 43, 26, 10, 11

    and today's three polls from ComRes, Opinium and YouGov average to 48, 31, 9, 4.

    Giving campaign changes of:

    Con +5
    Lab +5
    LibD -1
    UKIP -7

    Its interesting that the NOTA parties are being squeezed in favour of the two main parties - is this perhaps a Corbyn effect ie people either love or fear him and so support the party which either supports or opposes him.

    The NOTA parties all represented supposedly fringe opinion, yet the Tories and Labour have moved to occupy both.

    I am interested to see how this plays out in Scotland because the RedTory schtick that the SNP thrived with clearly shouldn't wash with Jihadi Jez.

    If the realistic possibility of an independence referendum drops off the table, the SNP become very vulnerable in my opinion.
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    frpenkridgefrpenkridge Posts: 670
    Two party system !
  • Options
    another_richardanother_richard Posts: 25,144

    Britain Elects‏ @britainelects 42s42 seconds ago
    More
    Westminster voting intention:

    CON: 49% (+3)
    LAB: 31% (+1)
    LDEM: 9% (-2)
    UKIP: 3% (-2)

    LibDems having a mare of an election.....
    It will all change when those Conservatives MPs get jailed for their 2015 campaign expenses.

    :wink:

    That's if they don't all lose their seats first:

    ' The latest local by elections with an LD gain from UKIP on a whopping 26% swing top off what has been a good week for the LDs. Firstly there have been the Rallings/Thrasher and Lord Robert Hayward May elections’ projection suggesting that the yellows are in for a substantial number of gains on May 4th.

    In addition to that we have had news of the private Crosby Textor constituency polling for the Tories suggesting that the party is set to win back a the bulk of the seats lost in the South West and Greater London that were lost to the Tories at GE2015.

    That information is, of course, private, but PB sources have it that all but three or four of the seats could be back in LD hands at the next election and we know that it is Tory MPs who made gains last time who are most opposed to an early general election. '

    http://www2.politicalbetting.com/index.php/archives/2017/04/07/it-is-organisation-more-than-brexit-that-is-driving-the-lib-dem-resurgence/
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    frpenkridgefrpenkridge Posts: 670
    Is Australia being put there by Europe to cut off our Gulf Stream warming?
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    paulyork64paulyork64 Posts: 2,461
    Wish I could cash out my Bulgaria bet. Not impressed tonight.
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    NeilVWNeilVW Posts: 725
    Con majority of 136 on these YouGov figures (using the latest YouGov Scotland poll for Scottish shares).
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    FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 76,298
    NeilVW said:

    Con majority of 136 on these YouGov figures (using the latest YouGov Scotland poll for Scottish shares).

    And corbyn stays on...Worst of all worlds for the country.
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    bigjohnowlsbigjohnowls Posts: 21,904
    BREAKING: Labour proud to announce support of a "Robin Hood" tax that ensures bankers pay their share in fixing the mess of the 2008 crisis
  • Options
    GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 19,106
This discussion has been closed.