It is noteworthy that the Labour vote is pretty much unchanged with this hypothetical change of leader. It suggests that the Labour vote is quite settled - and that both the Lib Dems and UKIP are vulnerable to losses of enthusiasm.
It is noteworthy that the Labour vote is pretty much unchanged with this hypothetical change of leader. It suggests that the Labour vote is quite settled - and that both the Lib Dems and UKIP are vulnerable to losses of enthusiasm.
If you take it at face value it also suggests that the problem the Conservatives face at the moment is a problem with their leadership.
Dangerous for party unity for the idea that their problems would be solved if only they had a different leader to be established.
All this poll tells us is that nothing has changed - all movements well within the margin of error so nothing to get too excited about.
The equivalent monthly poll in April 2009 had the Conservatives on 40%, Labour on 30% and the Liberal Democrats on 19% so that's an 8% swing from Conservative to Labour. That produced 38% for the Tories, 28% for the Lib Dems and 23% for Labour in the following month's voting.
What goes on in peoples minds when they merrily list the state knows best Gordon Brown as heir to Thatcher?
Well, I suppose that if you mistakenly start from the common misconception that Margaret Thatcher did great damage to British manufacturing, it is logical enough to name Gordon Brown as her heir.
It is noteworthy that the Labour vote is pretty much unchanged with this hypothetical change of leader. It suggests that the Labour vote is quite settled - and that both the Lib Dems and UKIP are vulnerable to losses of enthusiasm.
Unless CCHQ have found a very good book of spells, I think Mrs Thatcher has permanently retired from politics.
I wouldn't of thought the LDs had any enthusiasm left to lose. You encourage me!
All this poll tells us is that nothing has changed - all movements well within the margin of error so nothing to get too excited about.
The equivalent monthly poll in April 2009 had the Conservatives on 40%, Labour on 30% and the Liberal Democrats on 19% so that's an 8% swing from Conservative to Labour. That produced 38% for the Tories, 28% for the Lib Dems and 23% for Labour in the following month's voting.
Hi Stodge , no it didn't . The actual vote shares in the 2009 locals were Con 43 LD 24 Lab 14 , your figures are the notional national projected figures .
It is noteworthy that the Labour vote is pretty much unchanged with this hypothetical change of leader. It suggests that the Labour vote is quite settled - and that both the Lib Dems and UKIP are vulnerable to losses of enthusiasm.
If you take it at face value it also suggests that the problem the Conservatives face at the moment is a problem with their leadership.
Dangerous for party unity for the idea that their problems would be solved if only they had a different leader to be established.
The leadership's strategy is, as I understand it, designed to attract LDs. That Mrs Thatcher is preferable over Mr Cameron to LDs should provoke a re-think. I don't think it will, but it should.
As antifrank observes, it shows the Labour vote is pretty immune to a more Thatcherite approach - if they don't respond to this leading question putting Maggie herself in charge, it's unlikely they'd respond to Dave doing Thatcher karaoke.
Move 5 from Ukip to Labour and you get what they should be on that this point in the parliament
Not sure that works. This is the first coalition government we have had since the war, so it's a bit tricky to say what any party "should" be on.
Hmmm.... coalition = one mainstream party in opposition and yet Labour are 10% lower than two years before the 1997 election and the Tories are up 3%. A bit tricky I agree, but surely one would expect the non-coalition party to be performing better at this stage and certainly not be running this far below par.
Don't believe it, I'm afraid. With the greatest respect, if Mrs T was leader, she'd be making herself unpopular somehow. She wouldn't be afraid of going against the focus-groups.
Move 5 from Ukip to Labour and you get what they should be on that this point in the parliament
Not sure that works. This is the first coalition government we have had since the war, so it's a bit tricky to say what any party "should" be on.
Well I don't underestimate the balancing act Labour must perform, particularly so soon after a big defeat, but a sensible centrist party would be able to pick up disgruntled left-wing Tories as well as former Lib Dems.
This is true - but Labour had a booming economy and Blair. Cameron is no Blair but he's at least keeping the blues in the 30s, which will be good if it lasts until late 2014.
Cameron is no Blair but he's at least keeping the blues in the 30s, which will be good if it lasts until late 2014.
.
Are you kidding? The Tories are bobbing around their core vote. Donkey in a blue rosette territory. IDS was polling around 30 when Labour were in the 40s and 50s.
This is true - but Labour had a booming economy and Blair. Cameron is no Blair but he's at least keeping the blues in the 30s, which will be good if it lasts until late 2014.
And Labour won't poll in the high 30s come 2015.
Millsy, tim is usually an astute analyst and draws reasoned conclusions from the evidence before him. On this occasion, however, he seems to be in denial over the Labour VI figures.
That Labour is 12 and 10% points lower than the same point in the two electoral cycles when they were most recently in opposition, not the sole opposition party and facing a working class Tory leader simply doesn't compute for tim.
Cameron is no Blair but he's at least keeping the blues in the 30s, which will be good if it lasts until late 2014.
.
Are you kidding? The Tories are bobbing around their core vote. Donkey in a blue rosette territory. IDS was polling around 30 when Labour were in the 40s and 50s.
It's not great, but not bad either bearing in mind they're a governing party and relative to Labour
"Nothing has done more to poison the Conservative party’s bond with ordinary voters in recent decades than its reputation as a defender of entrenched wealth. By background and temperament, senior Tories are more at home in Davos than with small, scrappy entrepreneurs. Voters can smell this intimacy with elites; in an anti-establishment age, it is toxic. The Conservatives cannot win elections as the party of bankers and utility fat-cats.
The party’s future lies in a popular capitalism that aggressively backs the consumer and the entrepreneur over the cartel and the state. Tories must be pro-market, not pro-business."
"The Conservatives cannot assume that anti-corporatism is a cause that belongs unambiguously to the right. On the surface, Ed Miliband is a union-backed Labour party leader flirting unwisely with worker representation on company boards and other ideas evocative of the 1970s. But he is also readier than Tony Blair or Gordon Brown ever were to acknowledge that markets sometimes result in monopoly, that bigness in economic life can harm consumers individually and the system as a whole. If there is to be a capitalism of the little guy, he will challenge the Tories for ownership of the idea."
Move 5 from Ukip to Labour and you get what they should be on that this point in the parliament
Not sure that works. This is the first coalition government we have had since the war, so it's a bit tricky to say what any party "should" be on.
Hmmm.... coalition = one mainstream party in opposition and yet Labour are 10% lower than two years before the 1997 election and the Tories are up 3%. A bit tricky I agree, but surely one would expect the non-coalition party to be performing better at this stage and certainly not be running this far below par.
Why? ICM have a unique way of redistributing won't say or don't remember responses, which may not work for coalitions, or which may work brilliantly. We have no idea, because there is nothing to compare against.
If you are saying that Labour is less popular than it was in 1995 and the Tories are more popular, then I agree. But that means very little. Labour does not need to win a landslide and the Tories have to be several points in front of Labour to have a chance of winning in 2015.
It's baffling why the Tories insist on being the party of big business and the super-rich. Trickle-down was discredited last century.
Is it really beyond them to start building a modern one-nation (yuck) style Tory party, that looks after the little guy, the striver, the business start up, rather than the media mogul, the millionaire, the CEO of a monopoly?
Personally I suspect a lot of it is down to the ongoing Thatcher addiction amongst the Tory Party. They can't let go of her or her ways.
British businesses show support for Dave's plan to renegotiate powers from the EU, as revealed by British Chambers of Commerce survey.
A high proportion of UK companies want a renegotiation of Britain's membership in the EU, with certain powers returned to Westminster.
Of the 4,000 companies surveyed, 64% said that transferring power back to Britain would have positive effect on businesses in the UK.
11% said they felt it would have a negative impact, 14% no impact, while the rest were unsure.
A number of respondents identified employment law as the area they felt would most benefit from being brought back to London.
AveryLP again peddling 'fools gold'. Cammo has promised a referendum on Europe IF he wins the next GE in 2015; IF he is still leader of the Tories; IF he doesn't renege on his promise and IF he is even alive. A week is a long time in politics as Thatchers death attests. How long in time is a full two years into the future?
Move 5 from Ukip to Labour and you get what they should be on that this point in the parliament
Not sure that works. This is the first coalition government we have had since the war, so it's a bit tricky to say what any party "should" be on.
Hmmm.... coalition = one mainstream party in opposition and yet Labour are 10% lower than two years before the 1997 election and the Tories are up 3%. A bit tricky I agree, but surely one would expect the non-coalition party to be performing better at this stage and certainly not be running this far below par.
Why? ICM have a unique way of redistributing won't say or don't remember responses, which may not work for coalitions, or which may work brilliantly. We have no idea, because there is nothing to compare against.
If you are saying that Labour is less popular than it was in 1995 and the Tories are more popular, then I agree. But that means very little. Labour does not need to win a landslide and the Tories have to be several points in front of Labour to have a chance of winning in 2015.
AveryLP again peddling 'fools gold'. Cammo has promised a referendum on Europe IF he wins the next GE in 2015; IF he is still leader of the Tories; IF he doesn't renege on his promise and IF he is even alive. A week is a long time in politics as Thatchers death attests. How long in time is a full two years into the future?
<blockquote class="Quote" rel="MarkSenior"><blockquote class="Quote" rel="stodge">All this poll tells us is that nothing has changed - all movements well within the margin of error so nothing to get too excited about.
The equivalent monthly poll in April 2009 had the Conservatives on 40%, Labour on 30% and the Liberal Democrats on 19% so that's an 8% swing from Conservative to Labour. That produced 38% for the Tories, 28% for the Lib Dems and 23% for Labour in the following month's voting. </blockquote>
Hi Stodge , no it didn't . The actual vote shares in the 2009 locals were Con 43 LD 24 Lab 14 , your figures are the notional national projected figures .
</blockquote>
@stodge
"That produced 38% for the Tories, 28% for the Lib Dems and 23% for Labour in the following month's voting."
This would mean something like a 10% swing to Labour from CON if current national polls are reflected on 2nd May.
It does still mean about a 4% swing from LD to CON.
Ed has at least found something he's good at. The next Labour manifesto could be full of moving tributes to dead Tory prime ministers, Ed could read them out on the tv debates as well. Alternatively he could stick with a blank 200 page document with 'NO to everything,YES to nothing', written in big letters on the front.
What were the LSE students doing in North Korea by the way? Libya not good enough for them anymore? Maybe they were teaching the psycho fatboy how to screw up his country even more than it is already.
Unless they are being pedantically chronological, I assume the 3% declaring Brown to be Thatcher's heir are usually denied the use of sharp cutlery for their own good?
It's baffling why the Tories insist on being the party of big business and the super-rich. Trickle-down was discredited last century.
Is it really beyond them to start building a modern one-nation (yuck) style Tory party, that looks after the little guy, the striver, the business start up, rather than the media mogul, the millionaire, the CEO of a monopoly?
Personally I suspect a lot of it is down to the ongoing Thatcher addiction amongst the Tory Party. They can't let go of her or her ways.
So you didn't read the article then.
"What Thatcher really destroyed was corporatism, the clunky co-stewardship of the economy by government, trade unions and industrial nabobs.
Freeing the UK of postwar corporatism was the great achievement of the 1980s. The work of seeing off its latest incarnation, which cloys and stultifies in its own way, falls to Thatcher’s children."
All this poll tells us is that nothing has changed - all movements well within the margin of error so nothing to get too excited about.
The equivalent monthly poll in April 2009 had the Conservatives on 40%, Labour on 30% and the Liberal Democrats on 19% so that's an 8% swing from Conservative to Labour. That produced 38% for the Tories, 28% for the Lib Dems and 23% for Labour in the following month's voting.
Hi Stodge , no it didn't . The actual vote shares in the 2009 locals were Con 43 LD 24 Lab 14 , your figures are the notional national projected figures .
"That produced 38% for the Tories, 28% for the Lib Dems and 23% for Labour in the following month's voting."
This would mean something like a 10% swing to Labour from CON if current national polls are reflected on 2nd May.
It does still mean about a 4% swing from LD to CON.
Mark raises the fair point that the County Council elections are taking place in largely Conservative-dominated areas (many urban areas, including London, have no elections). It may well be that it becomes even more precarious to extrapolate party performance at these elections into General Election predictions.
Letter in the Telegraph today: My late father, Sir Giles Shaw, recounted a story about the first ballot of the 1990 Conservative Party leadership contest, which I believe has remained untold to this day.
As treasurer of the 1922 Committee, he presided over the voting in Committee Room 11. At 5pm, the chairman, Cranley Onslow, ordered the door to be shut and counting to begin. After several recounts, the committee realised to its horror that it was missing 12 ballot papers.
My father, one of the smallest members of the House, noticed several ballots that had fallen under the table. Committee members went on hands and knees in a frantic search. The atmosphere of mild panic grew more tense with mysterious loud bleeps from Sir Bernard Braine, whose two hearing aids objected in shrill tones to the change in altitude.
Outside the room, the world’s media and MPs were growing impatient. Eventually the committee found the missing ballots: two were for Thatcher, 10 for Heseltine.
Clearly largely irrelevant now that the great lady has passed on, but interesting that even now she still wipes the floor with everyone else! However, I think it is largely nostaligia than anything else, but it does show the Tories can still win if they get back the UKIP vote!
ICM describe it as the "Fantasy Thatcher Effect" and I think "fantasy" is right. As Sean points out in The Telegraph, there is a straw-man Thatcher used for ridicule by parts of the political left and another for worship by parts of the right. The image of Thatcher in the public consciousness is quite different to how she actually would be (picking our new PM from a year of her premiership). Interesting, but not very useful.
...and a new Agnetha song (in the same link)! Lyrics a bit limited, I have to say, but nice to hear the voice again.
O/T: Back in Parliament today, lobbying MPs over this: http://www.nickpalmer.org.uk/from-the-day-job/ I picked up a briefing from the Parliamentary research office. Is it generally known that support for councils is being cut by 33% by 2015 (compared with 8% for central government spending predictions)? I wonder if county candidates realise just how rough it's gonig to be.
Nick Palmer - Savage indictment of Pickles I am afraid, drawn to the 'Star Chamber' rather than fighting for his department! In any case, if there is genuine localism, councils should be able to raise more revenue themselves, and put up council tax, without Whitehall interference!
I hope everyone's okay. It seems rather pointless to say much more or speculate at this stage.
Three reported dead.
We're watching the BBC coverage. I think they should be slightly more careful about using some of the footage, especially pre-watershed. The same goes for the other broadcasters.
SeanT: don't make an ass of yourself. You may be right, but we don't know. It could be homegrown terrorists - America's produced enough of those in the past, or any number of other groups or individuals.
Comments
So George leading the welfare debate sees his ratings improve and the Tories improve.
More George please?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kim_Il-sung
Churchill was a double turncoat.
The Lib Dems would hate him.
Dangerous for party unity for the idea that their problems would be solved if only they had a different leader to be established.
The equivalent monthly poll in April 2009 had the Conservatives on 40%, Labour on 30% and the Liberal Democrats on 19% so that's an 8% swing from Conservative to Labour. That produced 38% for the Tories, 28% for the Lib Dems and 23% for Labour in the following month's voting.
For UKIP.
God will respond only after taking advice from Ted Heath..
I wouldn't of thought the LDs had any enthusiasm left to lose. You encourage me!
http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/seanthomas/100212162/the-developing-world-has-turned-thatcherite-no-wonder-its-overtaking-us/
http://sg.sports.yahoo.com/video/cat-invades-pitch-dutch-league-122950978.html
It is surprising to see the Lib Dem>Con shift. Perhaps hints at just how Rightwing many remaining Lib Dems are.
This is true - but Labour had a booming economy and Blair. Cameron is no Blair but he's at least keeping the blues in the 30s, which will be good if it lasts until late 2014.
And Labour won't poll in the high 30s come 2015.
That Labour is 12 and 10% points lower than the same point in the two electoral cycles when they were most recently in opposition, not the sole opposition party and facing a working class Tory leader simply doesn't compute for tim.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/03412914-a5b8-11e2-9b77-00144feabdc0.html#axzz2QWXkhWDa
"Nothing has done more to poison the Conservative party’s bond with ordinary voters in recent decades than its reputation as a defender of entrenched wealth. By background and temperament, senior Tories are more at home in Davos than with small, scrappy entrepreneurs. Voters can smell this intimacy with elites; in an anti-establishment age, it is toxic. The Conservatives cannot win elections as the party of bankers and utility fat-cats.
The party’s future lies in a popular capitalism that aggressively backs the consumer and the entrepreneur over the cartel and the state. Tories must be pro-market, not pro-business."
"The Conservatives cannot assume that anti-corporatism is a cause that belongs unambiguously to the right. On the surface, Ed Miliband is a union-backed Labour party leader flirting unwisely with worker representation on company boards and other ideas evocative of the 1970s. But he is also readier than Tony Blair or Gordon Brown ever were to acknowledge that markets sometimes result in monopoly, that bigness in economic life can harm consumers individually and the system as a whole. If there is to be a capitalism of the little guy, he will challenge the Tories for ownership of the idea."
ICM April 2012
ICM April 2013
33/41/15/3
32/38/15/9
Averages since and including April 2012
32/40/14/6
If you are saying that Labour is less popular than it was in 1995 and the Tories are more popular, then I agree. But that means very little. Labour does not need to win a landslide and the Tories have to be several points in front of Labour to have a chance of winning in 2015.
It's baffling why the Tories insist on being the party of big business and the super-rich. Trickle-down was discredited last century.
Is it really beyond them to start building a modern one-nation (yuck) style Tory party, that looks after the little guy, the striver, the business start up, rather than the media mogul, the millionaire, the CEO of a monopoly?
Personally I suspect a lot of it is down to the ongoing Thatcher addiction amongst the Tory Party. They can't let go of her or her ways.
Abba's Benny Andersson and Bjorn Ulvaeus are set to write an anthem for this year's Eurovision Song Contest, organisers have announced.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-22152995
So, there is no hope then.
Hope to see you on Friday at DD's.
Without the adjustment you highlight they would not have been the top pollster in 2010 when everybody was understating Labour.
Populus and Survation also use this approach.
ComRes have something similar asking the DKs "which party you most associate with" and adding 100% of the responses to the voting totals.
The equivalent monthly poll in April 2009 had the Conservatives on 40%, Labour on 30% and the Liberal Democrats on 19% so that's an 8% swing from Conservative to Labour. That produced 38% for the Tories, 28% for the Lib Dems and 23% for Labour in the following month's voting.
</blockquote>
Hi Stodge , no it didn't . The actual vote shares in the 2009 locals were Con 43 LD 24 Lab 14 , your figures are the notional national projected figures .
</blockquote>
@stodge
"That produced 38% for the Tories, 28% for the Lib Dems and 23% for Labour in the following month's voting."
This would mean something like a 10% swing to Labour from CON if current national polls are reflected on 2nd May.
It does still mean about a 4% swing from LD to CON.
Government 51% (!!!)
Labour 37%
What were the LSE students doing in North Korea by the way? Libya not good enough for them anymore? Maybe they were teaching the psycho fatboy how to screw up his country even more than it is already.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business/market_data/commodities/143908/twelve_month.stm
Did getting rid of Maggie really make that much difference? It looks to me as though it just increased a trend that was already well under way?
Have I got news for you on Friday with Brian Blessed = lol
The part in which I keep laughing at,starts at 08.47 = lol
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b01ry872/Have_I_Got_News_for_You_Series_45_Episode_2/
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-21828547
Links to council websites.
http://ukpollingreport.co.uk/historical-polls/voting-intention-1987-1992
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0At91c3wX1Wu5dDRiT1FSRTF2bjVYRThSTnRaNzFXMlE&om=true&richtext=false#gid=0
http://www.itv.com/news/story/2013-04-15/explosion-at-boston-marathon/
8:30pm, BBC1.
As treasurer of the 1922 Committee, he presided over the voting in Committee Room 11. At 5pm, the chairman, Cranley Onslow, ordered the door to be shut and counting to begin. After several recounts, the committee realised to its horror that it was missing 12 ballot papers.
My father, one of the smallest members of the House, noticed several ballots that had fallen under the table. Committee members went on hands and knees in a frantic search. The atmosphere of mild panic grew more tense with mysterious loud bleeps from Sir Bernard Braine, whose two hearing aids objected in shrill tones to the change in altitude.
Outside the room, the world’s media and MPs were growing impatient. Eventually the committee found the missing ballots: two were for Thatcher, 10 for Heseltine.
My younger brother is living there, I hope he isn't mixed up in it. (Apologies for being nepotistic for a moment).
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-22160691
I hope everyone's okay. It seems rather pointless to say much more or speculate at this stage.
http://www.cbsnews.com/
O/T: Back in Parliament today, lobbying MPs over this:
http://www.nickpalmer.org.uk/from-the-day-job/
I picked up a briefing from the Parliamentary research office. Is it generally known that support for councils is being cut by 33% by 2015 (compared with 8% for central government spending predictions)? I wonder if county candidates realise just how rough it's gonig to be.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/9995208/Vince-Cable-says-he-didnt-mean-to-attack-One-Direction-after-branding-their-pay-immoral.html
http://playpolitical.typepad.com/uk_conservative/2013/04/watch-bernard-ingham-if-thatcher-hadnt-succeeded-britain-would-be-like-russia.html
SeanT: don't make an ass of yourself. You may be right, but we don't know. It could be homegrown terrorists - America's produced enough of those in the past, or any number of other groups or individuals.