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politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » The monthly projection from Electoral Calculus sees the LAB majority down from 80 seats to 78
The latet monthly projection from Martin Baxter’s Electoral Calculus sees a slight falling off of the projected LAB majority, The caluclation is based on applying Martin’s polling computation to his seat model and assuming a uniform national swing.
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Hehe. Rather like this piece on the BBC rejecting a subscription approach:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-25576289
"Current research shows 96% of UK adults use one or more of the BBC's services each week, costing 40p per household, per day."
Lots of people use news service which has a monopoly on radio, the lion's share of TV and one of the last free major news sites. Shocking.
Also, listing a price per day or week is a great way to make something seem cheap. To be fair, the annual cost is mentioned earlier.
"Responding to a government inquiry into the future of the BBC, it argued the £145.50 licence fee was the "most effective way" to fund the corporation.
It warned a subscription model - where users only pay for the services they want - would exclude many who could not afford it."
That's only rational if you make it more expensive. If someone only wants current events and history documentaries they could probably save quite a bit. And you can't argue against charging people too much making a network exclusive when you're collecting involuntary payment as a tax.
I do think there's a case for a core BBC service (current events) being funded by a licence fee, but the current approach is just crazy. It's also unsustainable. TVs will never die out (too convenient) but the proportion of people without a dedicated telly will only rise in the near future.
My own guess is two more (short-lived) hung Parliaments during the second of which there'll be another referendum on PR - a proper one this time. How that will go I've no idea.
Over recent years the number if public workers have fallen and private workers has risen. This I would expect to continue. Presumably by 2015 a portion of the electorate will be ex-public, now-private workers.
Is there any logic or way of knowing the likely effect on voting intentions of these voters? In a close election this sort of change could make a difference.
By the way, reading through Nate Silver's book, it's a delight for anyone interested in this sort of thing: http://www.amazon.co.uk/The-Signal-Noise-Science-Prediction/dp/1846147522 .
He goes through diverse example from different walks of life, showing the ways in which people extrapolate from what they want to what they think. One of the intriguing suggestions (backed by survey research) is that people with strong ideological views become LESS accurate at prediction when they get more information, because they use it to build on their rigid theories and make themselves feel they're yet more perfect than before.
Mr. Neil, if UKIP fell to 5% from where they are it could be good for the Conservative or great for Labour. The purples will be the most interesting party to watch at the next election.
The percentages are the result of a particular polling average. Therefore the Baxter'd figures are effectively a nowcast, not a forecast. Although Baxter says "at the next general election", the "pred votes" column matches the current polls (predicting the future being an altogether different question). Hence the graph at the bottom on what future movement we might expect.
Christian May @ChristianJMay 24m
FT report majority of economists predict rise in living standards in 2014. Labour's cost of living crisis could actually become...a crisis.
30 JAN 2009
YouGov’s monthly poll for the Telegraph has topline figures, with changes from the last YouGov poll in the middle of January, of CON 43%(-2), LAB 32%(nc), LDEM 16%(+2).
CON 349
LAB 252
LIB 21
Actual was ofc:
CON 36.97%
LAB 29.66%
LIB 23.56%
CON 307
LAB 258 (Quite close...)
LIB 57
The abyss ahead of Gordon Brown…
19 DEC 2008
"The polls are now showing levels of support that would result in a hung parliament that would, given the maths, almost certainly produce another Labour government. However, expectations continue to be that Labour will lose the next election. As I type the bookies still have the Conservatives as the heavy odds-on favourite, betting spreads have a Tory majority, the last time the PoliticsHome panel of MPs, political journalists and so on were polled 40-odd percent still thought there would be a Conservative majority, even left leaning pundits like Michael White in the Guardian are saying they still don’t expect Labour to win. "
So the polls at this point show a stonking Labour Majority, whereas the bookies have it as Labour Most seats, NOM.
By this analysis of splicing the middle of bookies' expectations and polls we arrive at a paper thin Miliband Majority ?
The problem for labour is that this really is a last redoubt position. If living standards for the many do improve, what's their critique after that?
The Daily Mail splashed it with glee..
There is a page explaining the model in more detail on the website.
http://www.electoralcalculus.co.uk/strongmodel.html
http://www.electoralcalculus.co.uk/trackrecord_10models.html
http://www.electoralcalculus.co.uk/sitemap.html
Best of luck taking him on
Good Lord :P
You will be worse off in 2015 - if you ignore tax cuts, fuel price freezes, rising house prices and include gym membership.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-23079082
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-23079082
Q1 2012 contracted by 0.04%.
Try data, not news reports.
pic.twitter.com/7hcPf5wRlK
Apols.
Kevin Maguire @Kevin_Maguire 7m
Miliband "bottled" an EU referendum says Lab's ex-campaign chief @tom_watson in his mirror online column http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/tom-watson-european-elections-referendum-2980809 …
Only ONE Opposition with as small a mid-term lead as Labour's has gone on to 'win' the GE.
Labour 1972, but they still lost the popular vote in 1974, emerging just 4 seats ahead of the Tories, despite Heath's best efforts to commit electoral suicide...
They all cover the first part, namely the central forecast part - the majority 78 part - rather than the variance - 78% lab majority - part.
Boost public spending??? he seems to want to do the opposite. Raise taxes??? he now seems to want to cut them. Even as he raises them.
Luckily the whole of Europe's in the same boat. Except it isn't. Austerity economies like Spain, Italy and Greece are doing what Benomics dictated was impossible. They are recovering. Greek M/F PMI at 52 weak high, Italy 32 month high.
Perfect storm for Milli. The horse he backed is coming last, and the ones he laid are out front. And of course, a recovering Europe will only boost UK growth further.
Some left wing commentators are trying to tiptoe their way to being on the side of the worker on low wages because eastern Europeans are depressing pay.
Really funny when it was you who let in 3 million, and called anybody who objected a racist.
http://www.electoralcalculus.co.uk/hungparl.html
We note that just three months before the last GE his probability of a hung parliament was only 38%, whereas for years prior I had said it was around 68% likely...
http://www.teacherdevelopmenttrust.org/why-evidence-will-never-overcome-disagreement-in-education/?utm_content=buffer377eb&utm_source=buffer&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Buffer
Which is based on a book that's in my 'books to read pile':
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Righteous-Mind-Divided-Politics-Religion-ebook/dp/B0076O2VMI?tag=httpwwwteache-21
http://news.tes.co.uk/news_blog/b/weblog/archive/2014/01/02/young-classroom-teachers-could-earn-163-70k-a-year-through-performance-pay-new-report-claims.aspx
So is your view that the 2010 LD switchers ar not going to remain with Labour? Yes or no?
Is there any real evidence the Tories have eaten into anything? Based on the their average monthly polling figure (taken from UK Polling report) they are 1 point higher in December (32.7%) than they were in January (31.6%). Their polling slumped around election time and subsequently recovered but seems to have been stagnant for much of the second half of the year.
From a Tory perspective they must be hoping the election time slump doesn't happen again in the next two years.
Huzzah for good economic news!
It is not a zero sum gain as many seem to think.
The coalition parties are both recording very high levels of don't know but that will change as we get closer. Also the best indicator of whether you will vote is whether you did last time.
I'll go next....err.....I'm Tim !
They do really miss him, don't they.