Tag: opinion polls

YouGov puts Tories 19pts ahead

A YouGov poll for today's Telegraph gives the following figures:

Conservatives 45% (-3)
Labour 26% (nc)
Lib Dems 16% (nc)

 

 

Labour Outlook


Harris analysis of Labour Core Vote

The excellent ukpollingreport.co.uk carries an item on a Harris poll for the FT that looks at attitudes to the US and to the Labour Party.  This suggests that 13% of the electorate have always voted Labour, and of these 21% won't vote Labour at the next election.

What do people make of this?

(the Poll asks essentially the same question as Harris does)


A close look at the latest YouGov poll

All the press focused on was the Brown v Miliband ratings. But the real story was how we dropped back as soon as the public thought there was going to be a fight within Labour

YouGov gives the Tories a 24 point lead

A YouGov poll in Friday's Telegraph gives the following figures:

Conservatives: 47
Labour: 23
Lib Dems: 18

 

More details on the specifics and other questions asked over at Labour Outlook 


Tories 26% points ahead in latest poll

According to Mike Smithson over at PB.com You Gov are reporting a 26% lead for the Tories in their latest poll.

If true it will almost certainly result in further calls for Gordon Brown to change tack or indeed 'consider his position.'

More later...


Recovery?

The final three polls of 2007 showed Labour's ratings up by 3/4%:
YouGov L: 35% (+4) C: 40% (-3) LD: 15% (-1)
ComRes L: 30% (+3) C: 41% (+1) LD: 16% (-2)
ICM: L: 34% (+4) C: 39% (-2) LD: 18% (-1)

Whilst holiday season polls can't be relied on, there is no immediate boost in the final poll for the Lib Dems after Clegg's election. If nothing else, it would seem that absent of bad media headlines Labour's ratings are not staying at the sub 30% level and seem to be rising again.


Polls disaster

Recent polls have been a disaster for our party

Time for Labour to shrug off polling tyranny?

Appearance rules. That's how Brown's first 100 days were summed up by yours truly in Chartist's September/October 2007 edition. The risks are analysed today here by Simon Jenkins in the Guardian:

Brown and Cameron are also vulnerable. They have allowed the buffer institutions of democracy to atrophy. Their party members have been pushed below the salt, and blind - or at least Melbournian - loyalty has gone too.


Tory leads in ICM poll and BPIX poll!

A new ICM poll in the Sunday Telegraph shows support for the Tories at its highest level for 15 years.

Con 43% (+5)
Lab 36% (-2)
Lib Dem 14% (-2) 

'Gordon Brown hit by Tory poll surge':
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/10/13/npoll413.xml

John Curtice analysis: 'Poll signals a Liberal Democrats collapse'
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/10/13/npoll513.xml

Tory lead in MORI poll!

A new Ipsos MORI poll in this morning's Sun shows the Tories 3 points ahead of Labour.  To be honest I was expecting it to be a lot worse.  Thou I guess we will have to wait for more polls to see the full effects of the shambles of this last week.

Newspaper polls - a health warning

Any Labour PM trying to decide when to call an election should treat the published polls with extreme caution.

Conservatives narrow the gap in three polls

Three post Tory conference polls tonight:

YouGov C 36% L 40% LD 13
Populus C 36% L 39% LD 15
ICM       C 38% L 38% LD 16

Undoubtedly boosted by policy announcements and a generally well-received speech, the Tories have not overtaken Labour, and the Lib Dems are squeezed even more. Should return to a six or seven point lead for Labour in a few days, and we have yet to see what polling on the leaders shows. Crucially Labour's private polling in the marginals will probably decide whether Gordon calls and election next week or not.

Electoral Calculus: Labour majority 118

The Electoral Calculus website has just been updated with the September opinion polls, giving an immediate general election prediction of a 118 Labour majority. It is based on published national opinion polls, and the occasional Scottish poll, so is nothing like as accurate as private predictions based on swing constituency polls, but it's all we public can get to see. The website also has a nifty summary of recent opinion polls:

 opinion poll chart


MORI poll in the Observer

Tomorrow's Observer puts Labour on 41% (-1) the Conservatives on 34% (no change) and the Lib Dems on 16% (+2), others 9%.

YouGov poll puts Labour 11 points clear

Tonight's YouGov / Channel 4 poll conducted after Brown's conference speech puts Labour on 44% (up 5%), Tories on 33% (unchanged) and LibDems on a lowly 13% (down 3%).

Labour ahead by 11% in Channel 4/YouGov poll

Labour's lead has risen to 11 points after Gordon Brown's first conference speech as leader, according to Channel 4 News poll. The YouGov opinion poll, which began after Gordon Brown finished his keynote address yesterday, puts Labour on 44 points, eleven points ahead of the Conservatives on 33. The Lib Dems' support is squeezed further, to 13 points.

Aye aye cap'n: Labour grassroots are ready for an election

Labourhome.org's poll taken on the first day and a half of the party conference has produced the following results:

62% of the grassroots said Gordon Brown should call an election immediately, and 38% said he shouldn't.

When asked when they expected Gordon Brown to call the election (two choices were given - "now" and "co-incide with the Mayoral election in 2008" - 34% of the grassroots expect the Prime Minister to call the election now, and 66% expect him to call it in 2008.

56% of the grassroots believe we are ready for an election, whilst 44% said we weren't.

66% of the grassroots said they felt more able to campaign for the party since Gordon Brown became Prime Minister, and 34% said they weren't.


The poll had a sample size of 200 respondents and was conducted within a 16 hour timespan between Sunday and Monday. All respondents were Labour party supporters. Elected officials and people were for elected representatives were not included in the poll sampling.


ICM poll puts Labour 8 points ahead

Tomorrow's ICM poll for The Guardian puts Labour on 40% (up 1%), Tories on 32% (down 2%) and LibDems on 18% (up 2%). This is Labour's largest lead in an ICM poll since Cameron became Tory leader.

Telegraph poll: Labour 8 points ahead

Friday's Telegraph poll done by YouGov puts Labour at 41% (same as July), Tories on 33% (up 1%) and LibDems on 14% (down 2%).

LABOUR: 10 POINT LEAD OVER TORIES

More positive news today from the YouGov poll for the Sunday Times which puts Labour at 42% (up 2), Tories on 32% (down 1) and LibDems on 14%.

The lead is also Labour’s biggest with YouGov since November 2002, before the start of the Iraq war.

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