politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » The Populus monthly aggregates show LAB losing a seventh of
politicalbetting.com » Blog Archive » The Populus monthly aggregates show LAB losing a seventh of its 2010 LD switchers over the past quarter
Whilst there can be greater variation in individual polls the aggregate helps us see the bigger picture and here, as the chart shows, the LAB shares have been edging downwards.
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If reducing, stalling or reversing the drift of LD>LAB was the intention, then last night's PPB cannot have helped.
It showed one thing: despite the protestations of their supporters, the current Labour party is the real nasty party ...
a) the two big Lord Ashcroft Scottish polls last year, which are becoming ridiculously out of date
b) the monthly YouGov aggregates, with their fatally-flawed weightings
c) sub-samples of GB-wide polls, with their tiny sample sizes and lack of weightings
An unsatisfactory situation all round. The political parties are of course measuring Scottish Westminster VI constantly, but we ordinary folks very rarely get a glimpse.
Then, last month, a cheer went up! Populus joined YouGov in publishing monthly aggregates (for the Financial Times). Now we could see just how silly those YouGov weightings really were.
Here is today's bang up-to-date Populus aggregate. The Scottish sub-sample size is 1,589
(+/- change on last month's Populus aggregate)
SNP 34% (n/c)
Lab 32% (-2)
Con 19% (+1)
LD 7% (n/c)
UKIP 4% (+1)
Grn 3% (+1)
http://www.populuslimited.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/OmOnline_Vote_April_2014.pdf
(The headline, published VI figures are at Table 4, Page 36)
http://newstonoone.blogspot.co.uk/2014/05/telling-yorkshiremen-yorkshire-and.html
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2622911/Were-risk-wipeout-South-Ed-Miliband-warned-Labour-accused-waging-class-war-TV-broadcast.html
2010 splits
Conservatives
Today: Cons:77;LAB:4; LD:2;UKIP:16; GN:2
Yes'dy:Cons:74; LAB:4; LD:2;UKIP:18; GN:1
Labour:
Today: Cons:6;LAB;83;LD:1;UKIP:7;GN:2
Yes'dy:Cons:7;LAB:80;LD:1;UKIP:9;GN:1
LibDem
Today:Cons:17;LAB:26;LD:32;UKIP:14;GN:7
Yes'dy:Cons:16;LAB:29;LD:34;UKIP:12;GN:5
Of their 2010 voters, 4% are now Con (vs 5% the other way, so near enough zero net movement), 2% are Lib Dem (so they're still heavily up there), 1% SNP, but fully 6% to UKIP, worth around 2% off their overall score.
Miliband might still make it to No 10 but the weakness of his and his party's support is abundantly clear in poll after poll and while the prospect of a collapse in Labour's voting after an election win is almost assured, the possibility of one before the election is very much there.
In fact, Labour almost certainly know this, hence the extremely defensive PEB. What was telling to me was that Labour was not promoting themselves, not hitting the insurgent UKIP, only hitting the Tories indirectly, but were majoring on the Lib Dems, from whom they've already taken as much as was likely: the PEB was all about keeping them (and only them) onside. Conclusion: they're more worried about the LD-Lab switchers moving off than anything else. And as Mike has rightly pointed out, they have reason to be.
Your criticism is of course valid, but what the hell else have we got to go on???
The full-sample, properly weighted Lord Ascroft polls were last year. Prior to that the last proper Scottish Westminster VI poll was a YouGov in May 2012 (!!) -> Lab 40%, SNP 35%, Con 14%, LD 5%, UKIP 2%.
Here are the Ashcroft polls:
CON 18%, LAB 40%, LIBDEM 6%, SNP 31%, UKIP 2% (1,039 adults in Scotland were interviewed by telephone between 4 and 8 October 2013.)
http://ukpollingreport.co.uk/blog/archives/8320
In addition, he conducted a huge 10,000 sample (!!) Westminster VI poll back in the springtime:
CON 16%, LAB 45%, LIBDEM 8%, SNP 23%, UKIP 5% (10,007 adults in Scotland were interviewed by telephone and online between 22 Feb and 9 May 2013.)
Those Westminster Voting Intention findings are presented on Page 29 of this report:
http://lordashcroftpolls.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/Camerons-Caledonian-Conundrum.pdf
Lots of other info and links here:
http://lordashcroftpolls.com/2013/10/camerons-caledonian-conundrum/
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-27321589
Everything about politics, indeed I find increasingly everything about Scottish life seems to be revolving around the vote in September. Voting intention will mean very little until that is determined.
http://whatscotlandthinks.org/questions/how-would-you-be-likely-to-vote-in-a-uk-general-election#table
There is a logic to that if you can obtain truly accurate results but so far that has not really been possible. Of course no one has previously tried as hard as Lord Ashcroft is doing at the moment.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Parliament_election,_2014_(United_Kingdom)#Scottish_polls
Good morning everyone.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/travel/article-2622378/After-Virgin-Galactic-Sir-Richard-Branson-wants-develop-supersonic-planes.html
For note: the x-prize for sub-orbital space was won back in October 2004, when the one-man SpaceShip One flew to 112 km altitude. Soon afterwards, Branson announced that they would take passengers in an updated version under the banner "Virgin Galactic". Ten years later, it still has not taken paying passengers, and has killed three engineers in a ground explosion.
In comparison, SpaceX was founded in 2002, has developed its own rocket engines and two launch vehicles, and has a commercial contract to provide supplies to the ISS. Their manned crew cabin is flying as a cargo store.
Branson is fully image over substance.
Nick Palmer was reduced to dissing the Wisdom Index because he didn't like what it was saying,. don't recall him doing so previously.
He's moved from Cornwall to no-man's land...
Therefore their policy is love the sin, hate the sinner. Even when the 'sinner' is a lowly bank teller.
Mr. G, that's an uncalled for comment about Mr. Financier. [Edited extra bit: likewise, Mr. Mark. Sticks and stones will break my bones but words (of an insulting nature) will make a thread really tedious].
On the pound: I remain convinced Scotland should not have a currency union with us if they vote to leave. I'm sure there will be much wailing and gnashing of teeth, but I can't see how being lender of last resort and supporting Scotland's finance sector makes sense, when no currency union would save us potentially crippling liabilities *and* bolster our own finance sector.
Of course, I'd imagine the Scots would react by being as unhelpful as possible on Faslane, which would mean that relations between the newly independent Scotland and England, Wales and Northern Ireland would begin with each side making life difficult for the other.
The Prime Minister has told friends he has ‘no intention’ of quitting if the Scots vote for independence in the referendum he agreed with Alex Salmond.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2622868/I-wont-resign-Scots-decide-vows-Cameron-Senior-Tories-fear-yes-vote-plunge-premiership-crisis.html
So that's just un-named "Senior Tories" and miscellaneous hysterics.....
Better Together is cross-party, so this doesn’t arise. He would not resign - definitely not.
In Scotland, Labour is the big, dominant political force. Does Ed Miliband have to resign too if there’s a yes vote? The SNP was elected with a clear majority in the Scottish parliament having said they would hold a referendum.
We either moved ahead with that referendum or we blocked it. Do people really think the Prime Minister could have said to the people of Scotland: 'You may have voted in favour of having a referendum but you can’t have one?'
http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/2014/05/why-cameron-has-said-he-wont-resign-if-scotland-votes-independence
I wonder if senior Tories include David Davis, perchance...
In seats won by the Conservatives in 2005, the swing was also above-average, as the MPs acquired a personal vote.
Re: Labour PPB. - A lot of chat this morning attributing Ed’s new campaign strategist David Axelrod, as the man behind the ‘shrinking man’. – Sounds unlikely to me, but then I’m not familiar with his campaign style when employed by Obama and others. – any theories ?
It strikes me as more the handiwork of someone more interested in fighting old battles with a bit of class war thrown in - Ed Balls?
The more Tory prospects improve in England (and Wales) so the prospect of a Tory government in Westminster will be used to send Scots scurrying for the comforts of independence. It’s all part of the positive case for independence, don’t you know?
http://blogs.spectator.co.uk/coffeehouse/2014/05/rising-tory-hidden-danger-david-cameron-is-doing-too-much-too-well/
1. How much of the 2010 LD vote Labour can keep;and
2. How much of the 2010 Con vote UKIP can lure away.
Point 1 is all Labour have. Their own 2010 vote shows a small leaking away and they are policy/talent/vision/competence vacuum right now. Miliband is desperate to keep the lefty ex-yellows in his camp – and while we may deride the truly abysmal PEB, it was precisely targeted at such people. A low 30s result would see him lose the popular vote but get more seats than Dave – especially if point 2 keeps Dave in the low 30s also.
Received wisdom and my own previous view was that the Con/Lab split will be very even in the mid 30s. It seems more likely now to me that Labour will score low 30s and Dave mid to high 30s, giving him a solid popular vote win but a hung parliament overall with close MP counts between Con/Lab. I’ll leave it to those with more constitutional expertise than me to say what happens if either Lab/Lib or Con/Lib coalitions are mathematically possible, but I’m guessing the current coalition carries on. (???)
Either them, or Balls and the missus dreamed it up over a late night cocoa
http://www.bluestatedigital.com/news/entry/a-year-with-the-labour-party
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/labour-election-campaign-ed-miliband-authorises-the-uncredible-shrinking-man-pastiche-targeting-nick-clegg-9334625.html
(1) get rid of Clegg after the Euros.
(2) have the new party leader tell Osborne that he has to spend some of his election-bribes war chest on bribing the students who got shafted by student fees. Say, offering to pay the first five grand of student loan repayments as they would have fallen due. And scream all through the election that it was the LibDem's what done it....
http://youtu.be/u7ax683aI-U
Axing Clegg might be an idea... when is it that the new EU commissioner is chosen? I maintain Cameron shouldn't give Clegg such an easy way out, but he might.
Fund them through the Banker's bonus tax?
Miss Vance, the bankers' bonus tax is Labour's quantum policy: it's simultaneously used to fund multiple commitments, until the policy is observed, at which point it can only fund one.
The Labour PPB director is a "Labour voter" resident in Los Angeles:
http://riccantor.com/bio/
Therefore whilst one can never guarantee I do believe there will be a currency union even though my preference would be to NOT have one. Despite all the rhetoric on here it will be politicians based on stark necessities that will decide, the public will not come into it , at least until the next GE.
"09:00 In Our Time: Melvyn Bragg and his guests discuss the Second Sino-Japanese War. bbc.in/1iZLl3E"
https://mobile.twitter.com/onradio4now
But the Labour lead is clearly lower than it was - apart from the Red Liberal drift, UKIP is nibbling at some of the traditional C2DE Labour vote.
Baxtered, those findings would result in the following seat distribution in Scotland
Lab 29 seats (-11)
SNP 25 seats (+19)
Con 3 seats (+2)
LD 2 seats (-9)
IND 0 seats (-1)
CON Gains (both from Lib Dems):
Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk (Moore)
West Aberdeenshire and Kincardine (Smith)
SNP Gains from LAB:
Aberdeen North (vacant)
Aberdeen South (Begg)
Ayrshire North and Arran (Clark)
Dundee West (McGovern)
Edinburgh East (Gilmore)
Edinburgh North and Leith (Lazarowicz)
Edinburgh South (Murray)
Livingston (Morrice)
Midlothian (Hamilton)
Ochil and South Perthshire (Banks)
Stirling (vacant)
SNP Gains from LIB DEMS:
Argyll and Bute (Reid)
Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross (Thurso)
East Dunbartonshire (Swinson)
Edinburgh West (Crockart)
Gordon (vacant)
Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey (Alexander)
North East Fife (vacant)
SNP Gain from IND:
Falkirk (vacant, Joyce standing down)