The exit poll brings bad news for the MRPs and the SNP – politicalbetting.com
Comments
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I hope you all bet on Baso when I told you!0
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I thought Ed Davey had the best campaign. Labour’s campaign in the media was poor in my opinion. On the ground obviously quite impressive. .1
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I wouldn't be surprised if we actually finished very close to that tomorrow morning. From there it's 1.5 electoral cycles to get back into the lead for the Tories which is about enough time for them to figure out they need to become the party of work and hammer Labour on the worklessness problem that's only going to grow in the next few years.Ratters said:The exit poll is pretty similar to the 2001 result
- Labour 410 vs 419
- Tories 131 vs 166
- Lib Dems 53 vs 520 -
More likely it’s a modelling miss, rather than a polling miss.TimS said:This is actually a polling miss. The Tories have - surprise surprise - done better than the polls expected and it seems that Labour have had a decline during the campaign that in any normal election would have been catastrophic. They were just so far ahead beforehand that it didn’t matter, and their main opponents shat the bed.
And SNP and Green seem to have underperformed polling. Looks like Lib Dems are probably on par.
So all in all, Plaid excepted, the more left wing the party the more the polls overstate them.
I may even have won my mini bet with @Leon
Next election, pollsters, just add 5% on to any right of centre party and you’ll be spot on.
Question remains, whether the miss is more the MRPs, or actually the exit poll? The exit poll only spoke to 20,000-odd voters, and in way way far fewer locations than the MRPs.3 -
Reform in double figures would be interesting, Nigel Farage having to appoint a front bench, and that vetting company hoping they wielded out most of the undesirables1
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Finchley going Lib Dem. Thought Labour were odds on to win!
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There are still lots of comfortably off pensioners in this country who can easily be swayed back into the tory camp.TimS said:This is actually a polling miss. The Tories have - surprise surprise - done better than the polls expected and it seems that Labour have had a decline during the campaign that in any normal election would have been catastrophic. They were just so far ahead beforehand that it didn’t matter, and their main opponents shat the bed.
And SNP and Green seem to have underperformed polling. Looks like Lib Dems are probably on par.
So all in all, Plaid excepted, the more left wing the party the more the polls overstate them.
I may even have won my mini bet with @Leon
Next election, pollsters, just add 5% on to any right of centre party and you’ll be spot on.0 -
Now I've come back out from behind the drugs sofa and calmed down, obviously relieved at these numbers but also nervous. Many of those Tory holds must be wafer thin and likely to not come off. 12 Scots Tories seems way out of kilter with expectations
So could the Tories still end up around 100??
I'm worrying again now we're getting some of the projections through0 -
I will. SKS is more popular than Corbyn. There, I’ve said it. He’s going to be PM. You never mention 2019 do you. You know, the one when your man handed us Boris Fucking Johnson on a plate. You only mention the 2017 performance - where he still lost. SKS has saved the Labour Party from the ruin thatbigjohnowls said:
Not for my 4 figure win it's not. The fact they fell well short of 12.877m is all that matters for that.DougSeal said:
Which was of course slightly less than TMay got in 2017. Which is all that matters.bigjohnowls said:Kerching Lab implied vote share about 38% according to ITV
Four figure winning night for me if they get less than 12,877,000 votes
SKS looks like being circa 1 million votes short of Jezza 2017. How unpopular must he be
SKS fans please explain how that could possibly be right.
that arsehole led it into.
Corbyn was a failure. He lost 2 GEs - the second by a record amount. No one could carry on after that. SKS was then democratically elected leader of the Labour Party and (it appears) has now been democratically elected Prime Minister. On the first attempt. So he’s more successful than Corbyn on every metric.2 -
If he does it was a pretty well kept secret.Stark_Dawning said:Wow. Ed Balls: I'm sure Keir Starmer does have a plan.
I wonder how Rachel's "shocked" look is coming on.1 -
Vine on Beeb: almost all the Tory marginals projected to go, except in Scotland.1
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Hubris from Tories who have had a good thrashing, as popular as a bag of shit. Man up instead of trying to say "look a squirrel".Big_G_NorthWales said:
ExactlyBartholomewRoberts said:0 -
The Scottish electorate is so volatile there is always hope for independence. Give it 5 years and you might have every seat going to the SNP again.malcolmg said:
We cannot be kept prisoners forever, Independence is only a matter of time. The SNP do not equal Independence as they have proven.turbotubbs said:
Is the election not now a referendum on Scottish independence?RobD said:
Karma.TheScreamingEagles said:Just look at her face when the exit poll came out.
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Careful, he loves getting his lawyers involved.Taz said:Jeremy Vine is a dick
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Bassetlaw is TCTC apparently
If Jo (Lab) snaffles it it's probably thanks to Brendan (Con and predicted 3rd) holding back some Reform voters. My guess is he'll run in 2029 for Reform and win here0 -
West Dorset flashed up as a LD gain
And Epsom and Ewell. Where I got on at 14/1. And stand to gain over £360.5 -
3 or 4 is very possible.bigjohnowls said:
I will be disappointed if Greens only get 2 was hoping for 4Andy_JS said:Sceptical about:
1. Tories on 12 seats in Scotland
2. Reform on 13 seats
Everything else looks very plausible.0 -
Looks like Reform are going to be the Wimbledon (FC) of this Parliament.1
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You may feel you are a prisoner but not enough of your countrymen agree.malcolmg said:
We cannot be kept prisoners forever, Independence is only a matter of time. The SNP do not equal Independence as they have proven.turbotubbs said:
Is the election not now a referendum on Scottish independence?RobD said:
Karma.TheScreamingEagles said:Just look at her face when the exit poll came out.
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I thought Labour campaign in the media was fine. It was very disciplined and they weren't trying to sell some grand vision like 1997. It was be disciplined, don't say stupid shit, sound reasonable. And they kept the people most likely to drop a clanger well away from the media.Jonathan said:I thought Ed Davey had the best campaign. Labour’s campaign in the media was poor in my opinion. On the ground obviously quite impressive. .
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We have to allow for the exit poll being off by 20 to 30 seats.IanB2 said:
More likely it’s a modelling miss, rather than a polling miss.TimS said:This is actually a polling miss. The Tories have - surprise surprise - done better than the polls expected and it seems that Labour have had a decline during the campaign that in any normal election would have been catastrophic. They were just so far ahead beforehand that it didn’t matter, and their main opponents shat the bed.
And SNP and Green seem to have underperformed polling. Looks like Lib Dems are probably on par.
So all in all, Plaid excepted, the more left wing the party the more the polls overstate them.
I may even have won my mini bet with @Leon
Next election, pollsters, just add 5% on to any right of centre party and you’ll be spot on.
Question remains, whether the miss is more the MRPs, or actually the exit poll? The exit poll only spoke to 20,000-odd voters, and in way way far fewer locations than the MRPs.0 -
Who were these Scot nats given there are only 3 or 4 of us on here at best?TheScreamingEagles said:
The Scot Nats were rather abusive when I said that was a possibility.Chameleon said:Big con gains in scotland according to the exit poll.
I will die pissing myself laughing if the SCons end up with more MPs than the SNP.0 -
Tewkesbury looks a Tory hold1
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Tewkesbury predicted Tory, I know a couple here were interested.1
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I think Farage leading the Tories might still happen.
13 Reform seats will give him a presence.
It will be very tempting for some to look at the Tory vote share, and Reform on circa 20%, and think "if you add them together, you beat Labour."
Farage might not be the *next* Tory leader but he might yet become one.
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That’s not true.BatteryCorrectHorse said:
I am struggling to understand this analysis.TimS said:This is actually a polling miss. The Tories have - surprise surprise - done better than the polls expected and it seems that Labour have had a decline during the campaign that in any normal election would have been catastrophic. They were just so far ahead beforehand that it didn’t matter, and their main opponents shat the bed.
And SNP and Green seem to have underperformed polling. Looks like Lib Dems are probably on par.
So all in all, Plaid excepted, the more left wing the party the more the polls overstate them.
I may even have won my mini bet with @Leon
Next election, pollsters, just add 5% on to any right of centre party and you’ll be spot on.
Labour reverted back in the campaign to where they started, around 40%?
We will see.0 -
Richmond predicted Tory hold.0
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Reform take Basstlelaw0
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Tories doing best in wealthy seats? Message about Labour taxing the rich getting through?
Realignment unwind?0 -
Youse lot all waiting on Blyth and Ashington.
The English Riviera.
Wor all just chilling.
Not dark yet here. But it's getting there.0 -
Barnsley North is gone too.Nunu5 said:
Damn they should of put someone up in Barnsley north.Pulpstar said:Cheltenham 99+% LD, Wolv West 99% + Labour but those were heavily odds on.
Barnsley South
likely Reform UK gain - 98% likelyhood
possible Lab hold2%
Pleased about this one, on for £15 at 8-1.
Amazing each was 8-1 tbh given how close Brexit got in Barnsley East and Central in 2019.0 -
Well done.Pulpstar said:Cheltenham 99+% LD, Wolv West 99% + Labour but those were heavily odds on.
Barnsley South
likely Reform UK gain - 98% likelyhood
possible Lab hold2%
Pleased about this one, on for £15 at 8-1.1 -
You say it's not true but have you discounted those polls that changed their methodology half way through?turbotubbs said:
That’s not true.BatteryCorrectHorse said:
I am struggling to understand this analysis.TimS said:This is actually a polling miss. The Tories have - surprise surprise - done better than the polls expected and it seems that Labour have had a decline during the campaign that in any normal election would have been catastrophic. They were just so far ahead beforehand that it didn’t matter, and their main opponents shat the bed.
And SNP and Green seem to have underperformed polling. Looks like Lib Dems are probably on par.
So all in all, Plaid excepted, the more left wing the party the more the polls overstate them.
I may even have won my mini bet with @Leon
Next election, pollsters, just add 5% on to any right of centre party and you’ll be spot on.
Labour reverted back in the campaign to where they started, around 40%?
We will see.0 -
bookies suggesting turnout over 65% ! Reform voters I suspect coming out to vote like the euro ref . Would back up the 13 seats , maybe more!0
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There would be 12 other Ref MPs to take turns with.solarflare said:If Reform get 13 seats they're basically going to rename Question Time as Farage Time, right?
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Tory wipeout in London??0
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It's too early to say it's a polling miss. It's an Electoral Calculus Baxter seat prediction miss.TimS said:This is actually a polling miss. The Tories have - surprise surprise - done better than the polls expected and it seems that Labour have had a decline during the campaign that in any normal election would have been catastrophic. They were just so far ahead beforehand that it didn’t matter, and their main opponents shat the bed.
And SNP and Green seem to have underperformed polling. Looks like Lib Dems are probably on par.
So all in all, Plaid excepted, the more left wing the party the more the polls overstate them.
I may even have won my mini bet with @Leon
Next election, pollsters, just add 5% on to any right of centre party and you’ll be spot on.
The MRPs seem reasonably good to me given the size of the change involved.1 -
Tory statement shockingly ungracious.
Typical.0 -
It's close - 56% chance to Reform, 44% for Jo (Labour).Nunu5 said:Reform take Basstlelaw
Quite amazing given they didn't do any work here
The Reform candidate is older than Biden. If it's a Labour Gain it'll be thanks to BCS hiving off a few Reform voters. I expect Brendan will run here for Reform (He is quite Reformy tbh) next time round and win if that's the case.0 -
YOU CAN FIND HOW EACH SEAT WILL GO ACCORDING TO THE EXIT POLL HERE
https://news.sky.com/story/exit-poll-what-is-the-forecast-election-result-in-my-constituency-131631804 -
Naga munchetty can't pronounce "Blyth".0
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Reform 13 seats but only 2 Great Yarmouth and Bassetlaw on Vine's list. Does that mean there are some gains from Lab?0
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He's on ITVDavidL said:God I miss George Osborne.
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Hopefully she gets severely shaftedCasino_Royale said:Portsmouth North too close to call.
Hope Penny nabs it0 -
Reverse takeover is theoretically possible but the Tory rump will be the southern "One Nation" Lib Dem-types who won't have him in the party.PedestrianRock said:I think Farage leading the Tories might still happen.
13 Reform seats will give him a presence.
It will be very tempting for some to look at the Tory vote share, and Reform on circa 20%, and think "if you add them together, you beat Labour."
Farage might not be the *next* Tory leader but he might yet become one.1 -
The Crazy Gang? IndeedMisterBedfordshire said:Looks like Reform are going to be the Wimbledon (FC) of this Parliament.
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No there is a much smaller swing in London, which means it must be bigger elsewhere...wooliedyed said:Tory wipeout in London??
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Good spot.GarethoftheVale2 said:Reform 13 seats but only 2 Great Yarmouth and Bassetlaw on Vine's list. Does that mean there are some gains from Lab?
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Bad news for Rochdale.
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Scotland exit poll:
In a "chuck the buggers out" election, in Scotland the SNP were the buggers....
But I'll believe all those results when they happen...1 -
Interesting listening to the seat by seat analysis. Looking at this the seats that are the probable target of the labour party planning reforms have been lost from the tories to the lib dems.0
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To be fair he was going through the Tory seats from most to least vulnerable in blocks of 50. I was describing in real time and elected not to write an essay.DavidL said:
What an arse. What's his definition of a marginal? Anything under 15k?pigeon said:Vine on Beeb: almost all the Tory marginals projected to go, except in Scotland.
Almost all the first 150 are projected to go, except the Scottish seats which are all held, presumably because of Unionist consolidation and the rollback of the SNP.0 -
I know. Barton was deservedly sued and deservedly lost.FrancisUrquhart said:
Careful, he loves getting his lawyers involved.Taz said:Jeremy Vine is a dick
I just find him incredibly irritating. His piece to camera was garbled nonsense. He is no Peter Snow for sure.0 -
Did the LDs even campaign in Finchley? Can't see it myself.0
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Yes, our bet is going to be very closeTimS said:This is actually a polling miss. The Tories have - surprise surprise - done better than the polls expected and it seems that Labour have had a decline during the campaign that in any normal election would have been catastrophic. They were just so far ahead beforehand that it didn’t matter, and their main opponents shat the bed.
And SNP and Green seem to have underperformed polling. Looks like Lib Dems are probably on par.
So all in all, Plaid excepted, the more left wing the party the more the polls overstate them.
I may even have won my mini bet with @Leon
Next election, pollsters, just add 5% on to any right of centre party and you’ll be spot on.0 -
Exit poll says Rochdale is likely 99% Lab hold which means Galloway loses.7
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Very disciplined, but could have risked a bit of excitement. Just a tad. Too apologetic imo.FrancisUrquhart said:
I thought Labour campaign in the media was fine. It was very disciplined and they weren't trying to sell some grand vision like 1997. It was be disciplined, don't say stupid shit, sound reasonable. And they kept the people most likely to drop a clanger well away from the media.Jonathan said:I thought Ed Davey had the best campaign. Labour’s campaign in the media was poor in my opinion. On the ground obviously quite impressive. .
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"Stats for Lefties 🍉🏳️⚧️
@LeftieStats
🗳️ Change in Labour vote share by region [EXIT POLL]
🔴 Scotland +18%
🔴 Midlands +4%
🔴 North +3%
🔴 South +2%
🔴 London -2%
🔴 Wales -2%
Via
@IpsosUK"
https://x.com/LeftieStats/status/18089733174931131130 -
I know and his summary of how Sunak has screwed things up by failing to address the "demons" in his party unlike Starmer chucking out Corbyn was spot on.Casino_Royale said:
He's on ITVDavidL said:God I miss George Osborne.
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No, just looking at the poll tracker. Started the campaign around 43, look to have ended at 37-38.BatteryCorrectHorse said:
You say it's not true but have you discounted those polls that changed their methodology half way through?turbotubbs said:
That’s not true.BatteryCorrectHorse said:
I am struggling to understand this analysis.TimS said:This is actually a polling miss. The Tories have - surprise surprise - done better than the polls expected and it seems that Labour have had a decline during the campaign that in any normal election would have been catastrophic. They were just so far ahead beforehand that it didn’t matter, and their main opponents shat the bed.
And SNP and Green seem to have underperformed polling. Looks like Lib Dems are probably on par.
So all in all, Plaid excepted, the more left wing the party the more the polls overstate them.
I may even have won my mini bet with @Leon
Next election, pollsters, just add 5% on to any right of centre party and you’ll be spot on.
Labour reverted back in the campaign to where they started, around 40%?
We will see.0 -
I remember seeing them live when they were the crazy gang, they were actually a lot more skillful than they get got credit for. It was often pump it long to the wings, but then they could really play. And if the opposition had the ball, f##king kick'em in the stands.MisterBedfordshire said:Looks like Reform are going to be the Wimbledon (FC) of this Parliament.
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Interesting that Con are doing quite well in Scotland. That's a big difference to 1997 when they were totally wiped out?
Anyone know why that would be?0 -
Farage 99%0
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David Lammy expects to be Foreign Secretary0
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Spare a thought for the pandas.CarlottaVance said:Scotland exit poll:
In a "chuck the buggers out" election, in Scotland the SNP were the buggers....0 -
Lol, looks like I've messed up my Scotland betting.CarlottaVance said:Scotland exit poll:
In a "chuck the buggers out" election, in Scotland the SNP were the buggers....0 -
Wow so Con actually gaining seats in Scotland!CarlottaVance said:Scotland exit poll:
In a "chuck the buggers out" election, in Scotland the SNP were the buggers....0 -
I’m delighted with this…..
Monksfield Posts: 2,542
July 3
My predicted vote shares & seats:
Lab 38 / 410
Con 22 / 134
LD 13 / 53
Ref 14 / 2
Grn 5 / 3
SNP 2 / 22
Other 6 / 26 (18 NI, 4 PC, Speaker, Corbyn, Dewsbury + 1)5 -
Agree. And the Reform projection could be especially variable. I suspect that it principally relies on wins in unpredictable three way marginals.Christopher said:
We have to allow for the exit poll being off by 20 to 30 seats.IanB2 said:
More likely it’s a modelling miss, rather than a polling miss.TimS said:This is actually a polling miss. The Tories have - surprise surprise - done better than the polls expected and it seems that Labour have had a decline during the campaign that in any normal election would have been catastrophic. They were just so far ahead beforehand that it didn’t matter, and their main opponents shat the bed.
And SNP and Green seem to have underperformed polling. Looks like Lib Dems are probably on par.
So all in all, Plaid excepted, the more left wing the party the more the polls overstate them.
I may even have won my mini bet with @Leon
Next election, pollsters, just add 5% on to any right of centre party and you’ll be spot on.
Question remains, whether the miss is more the MRPs, or actually the exit poll? The exit poll only spoke to 20,000-odd voters, and in way way far fewer locations than the MRPs.3 -
That said, one of the big stories of the election - if the exit polls verify - is the OVER-performance of Reform
They aren't "down at 8%". they are much closer to 18%. So a lot of Reform-sceptics are looking quite foolish1 -
Boston and Skeggy, marginally Con favourites. Louth TCTC also.0
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When's the Ashington train line opening?dixiedean said:Youse lot all waiting on Blyth and Ashington.
The English Riviera.
Wor all just chilling.
Not dark yet here. But it's getting there.0 -
Didn't expect two Reform gains in Barnsley although I thought they'd get about 30% of the vote.0
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.
So, a bit shit, really?Andy_JS said:"Stats for Lefties 🍉🏳️⚧️
@LeftieStats
🗳️ Change in Labour vote share by region [EXIT POLL]
🔴 Scotland +18%
🔴 Midlands +4%
🔴 North +3%
🔴 South +2%
🔴 London -2%
🔴 Wales -2%
Via
@IpsosUK"
https://x.com/LeftieStats/status/18089733174931131132 -
Why do you call her a squirrel? Ungentlemanly.malcolmg said:
Hubris from Tories who have had a good thrashing, as popular as a bag of shit. Man up instead of trying to say "look a squirrel".Big_G_NorthWales said:
ExactlyBartholomewRoberts said:0 -
Exit poll predicting Hartlepool as a 91% chance for Reform.
Some people should have listened to me!3 -
Corbyn TCTC0
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I hope you all have a good night, everyone. I'll be popping in as & when I wake up throughout the night. May all your bets be successful.1
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Ashfield looks very odd, 46% chance Labour Gain, 44% Ashfield Independents Gain? That doesn't seem plausible.TheScreamingEagles said:YOU CAN FIND HOW EACH SEAT WILL GO ACCORDING TO THE EXIT POLL HERE
https://news.sky.com/story/exit-poll-what-is-the-forecast-election-result-in-my-constituency-13163180
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Aberdeen South would be something.CarlottaVance said:Scotland exit poll:
In a "chuck the buggers out" election, in Scotland the SNP were the buggers....0 -
6
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Rochdale Labour3
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Expect us to have given away Jersey to France by accident.SandyRentool said:David Lammy expects to be Foreign Secretary
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Its the Gareth Southgate approach to management, but actually winning.Jonathan said:
Very disciplined, but could have risked a bit of excitement. Just a tad. Too apologetic imo.FrancisUrquhart said:
I thought Labour campaign in the media was fine. It was very disciplined and they weren't trying to sell some grand vision like 1997. It was be disciplined, don't say stupid shit, sound reasonable. And they kept the people most likely to drop a clanger well away from the media.Jonathan said:I thought Ed Davey had the best campaign. Labour’s campaign in the media was poor in my opinion. On the ground obviously quite impressive. .
Now the difficult bit. My concern with Labour this time around, I don't think the wider team is very strong once you get past Reeves, Streeting, etc. 1997 there were plenty of people who even if you disagree with politically, you could see they could do a job.0 -
SNP?GIN1138 said:Interesting that Con are doing quite well in Scotland. That's a big difference to 1997 when they were totally wiped out?
Anyone know why that would be?1 -
Good.TheScreamingEagles said:Exit poll says Rochdale is likely 99% Lab hold which means Galloway loses.
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Basildon and Billericay is 56% Tory, 31% Labour.0
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It could be some very close results. Last time the exit poll had sno at 55 they got 48.GarethoftheVale2 said:
Wow so Con actually gaining seats in Scotland!CarlottaVance said:Scotland exit poll:
In a "chuck the buggers out" election, in Scotland the SNP were the buggers....0 -
Ah but not being a football fan, Sunak failed to recognise the reflected glory the Tory Gov't would surely have received by dint of England winning Euro 2024.another_richard said:
It would merely have given more time for Conservative MPs to disgrace themselves and for the country to get even more annoyed with them.darkage said:I think that by calling the early election Sunak has actually saved the conservative party. Things were not going to get any better for them had it been put off for another 6 months.
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Turns out that normalcy bias is called that for a reason. As per our discussion recently, yes a Lab win but a "normal" Lab win.Leon said:
Yes, our bet is going to be very closeTimS said:This is actually a polling miss. The Tories have - surprise surprise - done better than the polls expected and it seems that Labour have had a decline during the campaign that in any normal election would have been catastrophic. They were just so far ahead beforehand that it didn’t matter, and their main opponents shat the bed.
And SNP and Green seem to have underperformed polling. Looks like Lib Dems are probably on par.
So all in all, Plaid excepted, the more left wing the party the more the polls overstate them.
I may even have won my mini bet with @Leon
Next election, pollsters, just add 5% on to any right of centre party and you’ll be spot on.0 -
Could have won a few more votes. A bit more positivity and the Tories got off very lightly.FrancisUrquhart said:
Its the Gareth Southgate approach to management, but actually winning.Jonathan said:
Very disciplined, but could have risked a bit of excitement. Just a tad. Too apologetic imo.FrancisUrquhart said:
I thought Labour campaign in the media was fine. It was very disciplined and they weren't trying to sell some grand vision like 1997. It was be disciplined, don't say stupid shit, sound reasonable. And they kept the people most likely to drop a clanger well away from the media.Jonathan said:I thought Ed Davey had the best campaign. Labour’s campaign in the media was poor in my opinion. On the ground obviously quite impressive. .
Now the difficult bit.0