Archive for the ' General Election' Category

h1

Will the happy times return to Number 10?

Monday, April 21st, 2008

guardian-icm-april.JPG

The April ICM poll for the Guardian is just out and reports a big reversal on last month.

The figures which, unlike the chart from the paper, has comparisons with the last published ICM poll are: CON 39% (-4): LAB 34 (+2): LD 19% (+1)

So instead of a poll suggesting a substantial Tory overall majority we are now back in hung parliament territory with Labour and the Tories competing for top spot on seats.

This polling change could not have come at a better time for the Prime Minister as he seeks to face the rebellion over the 10% tax rate.

Cameron, however, has a bigger lead on “who would make the best PM?”. He gets 37% against 29% for Brown and 8% for Nick Clegg.

This is one poll and we’ll have to see whether it is the start of a trend showing Labour doing better again.

But remember Smithson’s rule: A rogue poll is one where you do not agree with the numbers.

Mike Smithson



h1

How did Gord become PM with this 06/07 polling baggage?

Sunday, April 20th, 2008

named-leader-q.JPG

    Was getting a coronation the political achievement of the decade?

As another pollster, Populus, reports a double digit deficit for Labour let’s consider this morning the remarkable campaign a year ago that saw Gordon become his party’s leader and PM without having to face a contest.

For in the year before the “handover” a vast body of polling evidence built up that Labour would do much worse with him as a leader than the party was already doing. The results of the monthly named leader questions, reproduced above from UKPollingReport, were there for all to see yet Team Brown managed to convince well over 300 Labour MPs to give him a coronation.

    For the recent polling has shown that ICM and Populus got this one right - and members of the PLP were duped with the result that many of their jobs and salaries are now on the line.

For a long period in the run-up to last June I argued, and for a time took a big betting position on the proposition, that nobody who was polling so badly against Cameron when the “named leader” question was put could possibly make it to the top job. It seemed a no-brainer. Parties like to keep in power and two of our most respected pollsters were saying month after month that Gordon was an electoral liability - not an electoral asset.

I highlighted these results whenever they came out and was subject to a lot of abuse. The “astro-turfers” would come out in their droves to argue that these polls should be ignored - it was all hypothetical they said.

In trying to explain the numbers which were so consistent I suggested that Labour’s poorer position with Brown named was because Cameron was included in the voting intention question. That might have had a part but what we have seen in recent weeks suggests that it was Brown that affected thinking.

Looking back one can only marvel at the way Gord’s coronation campaign succeeded and how they managed to diss the polls. The only problem is that Labour will be facing a general election within two years and the prospects don’t look good.

Mike Smithson

odds-ge-most-seats-2004.JPG



h1

Now Populus reports a double digit Labour deficit

Saturday, April 19th, 2008

ten-grumpy-gordons.JPG

    Are we now heading for a Conservative majority?

As well as the Ken-Boris survey there’s also a Populus poll on national voting intentions in the Sunday Mirror. This records the following shares with comparisons on the last survey by the pollster nearly three weeks ago CON 40% (+1): LAB 30% (-3): LD 19% (+2)

Looking at previous surveys from the firm on UKPollingreport these are the worst figures for Labour that we have ever seen. In February there was a 9% margin but Populus have never reported a double digit deficit before.

The firm’s past vote weighting and certainty to vote formulas are slightly more favourable to Labour than the main phone pollster, ICM which has also been finding big Labour deficits.

    What is clear is that the internal bickering within Labour about the abolition of the 10% tax band does not suggest a united party - and all the evidence is that lack of unity gets punished in the polls.

Unlike the non-BPC listed MRUK whose London poll featured in the previous thread, Populus operates past vote weighting to ensure a politically balanced sample and also weights on the likelihood that respondents will actually vote.

This latest polling will underpin the recent trend on the betting markets towards support for the Tories winning the next election with an overall majority. My guess is that the spread markets on commons seats will see a further move against Labour.

si-spread-ge-1904.JPG

Mike Smithson



h1

Rest in Peace Gwyneth Dunwoody 1930-2008

Friday, April 18th, 2008

crewe-and-nantwich.JPG

    Will this be a by election nightmare for Cameron?

It is always sad that when a sitting MP dies the first thoughts of the political classes are on the up-coming by election - and I am sure that such a hardy campaigner as Gwyneth Dunwoody was the same. She was 77 when she died yesterday and holds the distinction of being the longest ever serving female MP.

As her Wikipedia biography records she was first elected to the commons for Exeter in Harold Wilson’s 1966 general election victory. She lost at the 1970 election but then went onto to win Crewe in February 1974. The seat became Crewe and Nantwich in 1983 which she retained since then.

Gwyneth was a fiercely independent parliamentarian and for me her finest hour was in 2001 when she successfully resisted an attempt by Labour whips to remove her from the House of Commons’ Transport Committee. Gwyneth Dunwoody will be sadly missed enormously.

Her majority in May 2005 was 16.1% which means that the Tories need a swing of just over 8% to take the seat - a target that is in line with several recent polls. The latest YouGov poll recorded a swing from Labour to the Conservative on the last election of more than 9%.

Given the record of third term governments at their mid-term Cameron’s party really needs to be taking Crewe & Nantwich if it is going to be on target for a general election win. Yet the party’s record in this form of election is appalling. The last time it won a seat from another party in a by-election was in June 1982 in the super-charged political atmosphere of the Falklands War.

Looking at the results from last time the Lib Dems increased their share by 5% but, on the face of it, look too far behind to mount a significant challenge. But I would not bet against them. Remember Dunfermline in February 2006 when the party was leaderless and at rock bottom in the polls.

Crewe and Nantwich is an ideal opportunity for Nick Clegg to stamp his authority on his party and I have little doubt that plans swung into operation over-night to get ready for the coming fight.

The numbers say it should be a Tory gain but I’m not convinced that the party has the capabilities to win in this very special form of campaigning.

Mike Smithson



h1

Rod Crosby asks: Will Regional Swings Help the Tories?

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

crosby-1a.JPG

    Is five seats the most that Cameron can hope for?

There has been much discussion on whether regional swings may provide a hidden bonus for the Tories at the next election. In particular, so the logic goes, the Tories are underperforming in Scotland, so they must be doing above average in England (and/or Wales.)

True enough, but how can we measure the differences, and calibrate any possible benefit? In truth we can’t, for the simple fact that regional poll breakdowns are based on samples of about 100 people – in statistical terms, garbage….

But in the absence of reliable poll data, we can still make reasonable hypotheses, based on quantifiable aspects of the electoral system, and previous experience.

The above graph of Labour’s battleground seats shows, in rank order, the number of marginal Labour seats where the Tories are second-placed to Labour. I have split the seats into those requiring up to a 5% swing, and those requiring up to a 10% swing. A 5% swing would surely see the Tories as the largest party, forming a minority government.

Notice the big difference in the sizes of the orange-coloured columns. In the North-East, no seats at all would fall on a 5% UNS, while in the East Midlands 11 seats would fall. Our own Nick Palmer’s place on the battleground is noted (NP on the graph). The red 10% bands broadly follow this pattern too (apart from the North West, which has a surplus of seats in the 5%-10% band)

What would be the optimum swing pattern for the Tories across the regions?

It should be intuitively obvious that to maximise their gains the Tories should hope for a relatively low swing in the North-East and a relatively high swing in the East Midlands, with swings rising across the graph from left to right. In other words, swing perfectly correlated to the number of marginal seats in each region. For example, in the North-East it makes no difference whether the Tories get a 5% swing, or no swing at all - no seats will fall, whereas in the marginal-rich East Midlands an extra 5% swing would deliver another 7 seats on top of the 11 UNS gains.

How likely is it the regions shown on the graph will magically line-up in ascending order of swing? Those familiar with permutations will realise the answer is 11!:1 due to chance alone.. (or about 1 chance in 40 million…..) In other words, so unlikely it’s laughable…

But, the swing would not have to be perfectly correlated for the Tories to derive some benefit….. So long as it was broadly increasing left to right - even if a few regions bucked the trend - the Tories might make some gains over and above UNS. How many? That is very difficult to answer algebraically - there are too many constraints and permutations. The method I have used is to run thousands of simulations, generating thousands of random regional swings, subject to differing levels of constraints.

What constraints? Well, not all swing patterns are equally likely. Despite regional differences, the nation still broadly moves as one. London is not going to swing 10% to the Tories while the North West swings 10% to Labour. Or even 5% in opposite directions. Such divergences have never occurred in a British General Election, and there is no evidence things are about to change dramatically.

Two common measures of dispersion are Range and Standard Deviation. Range is simply the gap between the highest and lowest regional swing, and standard deviation is an overall measure of how different the swings are from one another. If every region followed the UNS both the range and deviation would be 0, and there would be no regional seat bonuses. Here is a table of these statistics over recent elections.
crosby-sd.JPG

One thing to notice is that the past two elections have been significantly more uniform than previous elections, with about half the range and standard deviation exhibited during the period 1987-97. Why that is I’m not sure, nor can I predict whether it will continue that way or reverse. I don’t have the stats prior to 1983, but the consensus is elections were relatively uniform until the 1980s.

The model uses the maximum range and standard deviation thus far exhibited in a British general election, with increments up to these levels. Thousands of random swings have been generated within these constraints, and the net seat difference summed across the regions. If ever there was a case of swings and roundabouts, this is it!

In all tests the average net bonus is close to zero, and 95% of results show a difference of less than plus or minus 6 to 11 seats, depending on the range and deviation selected. The higher the deviation and/or range the slightly larger the maximum potential bonus or penalty.

The 95% range of results can be interpreted as a confidence interval. In other words, only about once in every 80 years might we expect a party to obtain a regional swing differential in excess of 11 seats, and the odds indicate it will be considerably fewer. For example, John Curtice calculated that the Tories only obtained a 2 seat bonus in 2005. In 1992 Labour obtained a 5 seat bonus due to regional swings.

A political party clearly does not have the power to force the regions to swing in a way that best suits them. Such outcomes are determined by long-term trends, third-party performance, differential turnouts and a huge amount of randomness. But, as posters have noted, there is a hint the Tories have at least one data-point in the right place. In Scotland the swing will in all probability be below average next time. But look at “next-door” Wales. The long-term trend there is in the Tories’ favour. So if Wales swings above-averagely, that would largely cancel out the benefit obtained in Scotland.

Looking at the top end of the scale, the East Midlands, North West and West Midlands would pay rich dividends if the Tories could boost their performance here. Unfortunately, for the past three elections they have all swung nearly identically to the nation as a whole, and previously when they have diverged it has been in opposite directions! Again, the natural tendency is for variations to cancel out.

crosby-2.JPG

crosby-3.JPG

So the answer to our question seems to be. Yes, regional swings might help the Tories a bit, but they largely cancel out, and are insignificant in the overall context. Perhaps 5 seats may be attributable to regional swings next time.



h1

Tory YouGov lead back at 16%

Saturday, April 12th, 2008

16-daves.JPG

    Cameron’s party hits 44% - the highest since the Thatcher years

A new YouGov poll for tomorrow’s Sunday Times puts the Tories at 44% the second highest share in any poll since the Thatcher years. The headline with figures the changes on the last survey from the pollster a fortnight ago are:- CON 44%(+1),: LAB 28%(-1): LD 17%(nc).

This poll equals that which Tony Blair got in his landslide victory in May 1997 and the margin is in excess of what Labour got at that general election.

The position is consistent with recent ICM surveys though the other pollsters, Ipsos-MORI, Populus and ComRes have been producing much lower figures.

Other surveys are possibly due out tonight including one for the London Mayor.

I will be out all evening so this is the Saturday night polling thread.

UPDATE 2220: An Mori poll in the Observer on the London Mayoral Election has Boris ahead of Ken by 51% to 49% after the second preferences have been distributed. This is the third pblic poll that the pollster has carried out on the election and is the first to have Ken behind. In February a Labour private survey by the firm had Livingstone 2% ahead as did a Unison sponsored poll last week.

It was the leak of this poll, I believe, which led to the big move back to Boris on the betting markets.

Latest mayoral betting is here.

Mike Smithson