Do you want to discuss boring politics? (123 Viewers)

Mucca Mad Boys

Well-Known Member
Hideously expensive to pay some of the worst state pensions in Europe

Pensions aren’t sustainable in the rest of Europe either because our tax base is shrinking whilst our population is aging. It’s a demographic time bomb for all of us.

UK pensioners also don’t need to pay into mandatory health insurance funds like their European counterparts. There’s also benefits like heating allowance, free bus passes, TV licenses and so on. It all adds to the costs.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
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This election will be closer than everyone thinks, the polls have narrowed from a Labour lead of 20 points 12 today.

If Starmer makes the same mistake as May in 2017 by trying to win an election with no real policies, he could mess up big time and perhaps squander a majority.

I won’t vote Labour, but it’s time the Tories get kicked out to reinvent themselves.

Polls will narrow but this outlier has always been the lower pollster for Labour. They do some jiggery pokery around don’t knows and assume people will change so it’s already pricing in the polls closing, it’s not actually evidence of the polls closing yet if that makes sense. If their model is right (and it hasn’t been so far) then it should stay the same while other polls tighten.
 

Mucca Mad Boys

Well-Known Member
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Polls will narrow but this outlier has always been the lower pollster for Labour. They do some jiggery pokery around don’t knows and assume people will change so it’s already pricing in the polls closing, it’s not actually evidence of the polls closing yet if that makes sense. If their model is right (and it hasn’t been so far) then it should stay the same while other polls tighten.

How do you know their model hasn’t been right so far?

As I say, the election has only just been announced. There’s been no manifestos, no debates so a lot will change. So I wouldn’t take any poll(s) as gospel.

The 20% poll lead for Labour in recent weeks is more of an indication of how dissatisfied the public our with this government. There isn’t that enthusiasm for Starmer this time around as it was for Blair in 2017.

My personal opinion is that Starmer and Labour will campaign badly but still win the election. Parallel to May in 2017.
 

fernandopartridge

Well-Known Member
Pensions aren’t sustainable in the rest of Europe either because our tax base is shrinking whilst our population is aging. It’s a demographic time bomb for all of us.

UK pensioners also don’t need to pay into mandatory health insurance funds like their European counterparts. There’s also benefits like heating allowance, free bus passes, TV licenses and so on. It all adds to the costs.
There is no dependency on tax to pay for pensions in the UK. There is in an individual state in the Eurozone.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
How do you know their model hasn’t been right so far?

As I say, the election has only just been announced. There’s been no manifestos, no debates so a lot will change. So I wouldn’t take any poll(s) as gospel.

The 20% poll lead for Labour in recent weeks is more of an indication of how dissatisfied the public our with this government. There isn’t that enthusiasm for Starmer this time around as it was for Blair in 2017.

My personal opinion is that Starmer and Labour will campaign badly but still win the election. Parallel to May in 2017.

If he does a May in 2017 he won’t win.

I know their model hasn’t been right so far because it’s not been tested so it can’t be. It’s a guess basically.

This poll in particular is MoE movement with field work before any policy announcements. It’s basically saying the same as every single poll so far: not much is moving.
 

fernandopartridge

Well-Known Member
What assumptions do the pollsters make about turnout? For example, it is assumed that turnout is consistent regardless of intention or is it assumed that don't knows are probably less likely to vote?
 

skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
Only to supposedly bar her from standing. What a way to treat the first black female MP.
Sounds that way. Apparently the investigation into her was concluded in December. If you were being cynical you’d say that they were running the clock down hoping that she walks away from politics but have been caught out with the shock GE
 

SBAndy

Well-Known Member
Only to supposedly bar her from standing. What a way to treat the first black female MP.

Could she not just leave the party and stand? Or would that not play well optically for her?

Genuine questions by the way - not familiar with how candidate selection etc works.
 

Ian1779

Well-Known Member
Could she not just leave the party and stand? Or would that not play well optically for her?

Genuine questions by the way - not familiar with how candidate selection etc works.
I don’t know to be honest. If they are going to stop her running for Labour at least have the decency to tell her so she can either choose to step down, or run as an independent. I imagine she’d do well if she ran on her own, whether it’s enough to take the seat I don’t know.

If Starmer can’t even treat his own MP’s with decency, it doesn’t bode well for the rest of us.
 

chiefdave

Well-Known Member
Could she not just leave the party and stand? Or would that not play well optically for her?

Genuine questions by the way - not familiar with how candidate selection etc works.
You would imagine the reason its been left this long, when it was decided months ago and they were probably hoping to hold out until the deadline passed, is so she doesn't have time to organise an independent campaign that she would more than likely win.

Obviously won't move the dial in the polls at all but very shoddy treatment from Starmer and Labour even if you ignore the fact that he's clearly been lying in interview after interview when asked why it was taking so long.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
What assumptions do the pollsters make about turnout? For example, it is assumed that turnout is consistent regardless of intention or is it assumed that don't knows are probably less likely to vote?

Varies by pollster. But generally they’ll weight by what they can. Say if they know Tories are more likely to turn out or whatever they’ll price that in.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Genuinely surprised she’s been reinstated. Spent most of her time taking shots at Labour and her racism was far more overt than Corbyn’s. That’s her prerogative but a bit surprising she’s been allowed back in. Can’t see her being allowed to stand.
 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
Well I believe in wealth redistribution so who and where not as important as getting something. Anything. We’ve had virtually nothing since 2010. Get that back then we can worry about if it’s the right type of growth.

Mostly housing and transport are needed IMO so where the growth is doesn’t matter so much because people can more easily get to it or live by it.
But we've had growth (albeit small growth) yet people are getting poorer overall. So it already shows that growth does not mean everyone gets something. Just because that growth figure goes up doesn't mean the poorer will get any of it. And if they don't it makes their situation a lot worse.

Where growth occurs is absolutely fundamental to its importance as a KPI.
 

rob9872

Well-Known Member
Genuine questions, not canvassing, if anyone knows how polls work, i have a bunch of questions, so thx in advance.

Everyone arguing about which poll is correct, have any of you ever been asked in a GE poll for your opinion? I certainly never have nor any of my close family or network, so wondered how data is gathered.

If we assume it's not general public in the street, do we know if one group of people from any side are more or less honest with sharing their intentions?

If it's always the same people we gauge from who send in data, how likely are they to change at all and flip-flop more than once in six weeks and are they more or less likely to vote a particular bias on the basis they are already engaged and interested in politics versus the large swathes who either aren't fussed, vote because they should or don't bother at all.

Do we know that they represent a particular demographic fairly by age, race, sex, region or ant other factor.

Imo would need to be min 10k people on each to be diverse enough to draw conclusions at which level you'd assume by now I'd come across someone's who had been asked.
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
But we've had growth (albeit small growth) yet people are getting poorer overall. So it already shows that growth does not mean everyone gets something. Just because that growth figure goes up doesn't mean the poorer will get any of it. And if they don't it makes their situation a lot worse.

Where growth occurs is absolutely fundamental to its importance as a KPI.

We have not had growth since 2008
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Genuine questions, not canvassing, if anyone knows how polls work, i have a bunch of questions, so thx in advance.

Everyone arguing about which poll is correct, have any of you ever been asked in a GE poll for your opinion? I certainly never have nor any of my close family or network, so wondered how data is gathered.

If we assume it's not general public in the street, do we know if one group of people from any side are more or less honest with sharing their intentions?

If it's always the same people we gauge from who send in data, how likely are they to change at all and flip-flop more than once in six weeks and are they more or less likely to vote a particular bias on the basis they are already engaged and interested in politics versus the large swathes who either aren't fussed, vote because they should or don't bother at all.

Do we know that they represent a particular demographic fairly by age, race, sex, region or ant other factor.

Imo would need to be min 10k people on each to be diverse enough to draw conclusions at which level you'd assume by now I'd come across someone's who had been asked.

These are fairly common misconceptions.

How data is gathered varies by pollster. Many used to use phone (missed out young people) or internet (misses older people) only, many use a mix.

Overall though the aim is to get a representative sample of people. Some make some female. Some young some old. Some rich some poor whatever variables analysis shows matter.

Your thought about needing 10k is a common one but actually the maths works out that at around 1k people the sample doesn’t get better results.

You can play with sample sizes here


and see what sort of confidence level you get but 1k will get you 95% confident basically. Now that’s not any 1k people. Thats a representative sample. So if there’s say 51% female voters then you need 510 females in the sample. Same for location, age, previous voting, etc.

Now obviously we could go “well they’ve got fewer left handed people” or “they’ve got fewer people called Rob” but we only care about variables that have been shown to correlate with voting intention.

Various pollsters will apply various weighting based on what their data says. For example “Labour voters stay home more often” or “Tory voters tend to come back late in the game” or whatever. There’s lots of well known issues with just asking people their opinions. People lie. People forget (it’s a well known phenomenon that people think they voted for the winner previously even if there’s evidence they didn’t). So there’s always some level of reweighting for this stuff.

Sometimes though not very often there might be a mistake in the samplingnor reweighting that leads to changes going forward. But generally we know they’re doing it right because polling is consistently very accurate.

As for your other questions. Generally it’s not the same people no. Though some like YouGov use a fixed group that they sample from (you can be part of a YouGov poll simply by signing up to their site).

The polls mostly say the same thing so it’s not really a matter of who is correct. What’s different as I posted in that graphic is that some ask slightly different questions or work with don’t knows differently.

So most will exclude don’t knows or assume they’ll vote with the rest. Some will ask a “squeeze question” which is basically “gun to your head you have to pick who do you pick”, JLL the one being mentioned right now not only do that but also try and account for known effects like the incumbents vote getting better the closer you get to election.

On the whole though the statistical basis for polling is very very sound. Lots of money is riding on the outcomes so there’s a big incentive to get it right. And by and large they do. Even famous “polling errors” (Trump, Brexit, etc) actually weren’t if you look at the polls. They were either margin of error, or actually right towards the end. There’s been some polling issues in the past but as an industry they mostly have fixed those.

Obviously if something happens thatsnwildly out of whack with what’s happened previously then some of the assumptions will be wrong. But generally these are quite small impacts.

Tl;dr: 1k people, if properly selected to represent the population, is enough to get an accurate answer with 95% certainty. And this is one of the most well tested pieces of science out there.
 
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skybluetony176

Well-Known Member
Latest yougov poll and a poll of polls



The poll of polls is probably about as accurate as you can get at this stage which hasn’t really changed in months and has consistently had Labour with a 20 point lead. Of course the polls can’t account for what people do when it comes putting a cross in the box. Only the exit polls can tell you that, at which point it’s too late and doesn’t really mean a lot as the result will be the result at that point. As Sam Coates points out Sunak will be worried about the polls, any polls showing a closing in the polls is so minimal its not worth getting excited about and is countered by a different poll showing the gap is widening.
 
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CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
Can’t see anything other than a solid Labour majority even with the large swing required (still 10s at Betfair for a hung parliament sick boy)

Sunaks not a great campaigner and he hasn’t given the NI cut and real term wage increases time to really benefit people.

He might’ve firmed up some of their traditional base but there’s no real vision for the rest of the country. Even though labours been light ish on this, they don’t look like making any massive campaign mistakes (look better prepared than Tories - bizarre when timing is Tories call) and without that, ‘change’ will likely be enough after 14 years inc coalition
 

shmmeee

Well-Known Member
Can’t see anything other than a solid Labour majority even with the large swing required (still 10s at Betfair for a hung parliament sick boy)

Sunaks not a great campaigner and he hasn’t given the NI cut and real term wage increases time to really benefit people.

He might’ve firmed up some of their traditional base but there’s no real vision for the rest of the country. Even though labours been light ish on this, they don’t look like making any massive campaign mistakes (look better prepared than Tories - bizarre when timing is Tories call) and without that, ‘change’ will likely be enough after 14 years inc coalition

No one gets credit for wage increases. Biden is finding this out as well. People assume if their wage went up it’s because they’re awesome and nothing to do with the govt.
 

StrettoBoy

Well-Known Member
A 30% reduction in house prices, which wont happen, would still make them unaffordable for many young people.

A 30% fall in house prices will plunge a lot of people into negative equity, with potentially disastrous consequences for them personally and for the wider economy.

The people who will be worst affected will be first time buyers - usually the younger generation - as they are the ones with mortgages which are a high percentage of the house value.
 

OffenhamSkyBlue

Well-Known Member
JL Partners are a Tory thinktank. They started out as Theresa May's research team. Wouldn't trust any of JLP's data for a balanced view, but to my recollection YouGov's polls haven't been particularly accurate either.

Thanks for the explanations about the methods used for polling, but i think the "silent majority" that they may well miss will have more impact than people recognise.
The polls were pretty accurate in 2019, but there were several previous elections where the polls as a whole were not a good guide to the result.
 

chiefdave

Well-Known Member
What an absolute mess they've made of the Abbot situation. Hope they're better at running the country than they are their internal affairs.

Peston reporting that there's been weeks of talks with the agreement that Abbot would be back in the party and then announce her retirement with the usual tributes and plaudits you'd expect for someone who has served as long as she had and led the way for other black MPs.

Instead someone has run off to the Times and leaked that she's been banned from standing in the election.
 

OffenhamSkyBlue

Well-Known Member
I'm trying to find out what Reform and the SDP stand for in more detail before i decide which way to chuck my X. TBH, i'd never really realised the SDP still existed, until i saw a candidate declared in my constituency. "The SDP is a patriotic, economically left-leaning, and culturally traditional political party" according to their website. The term "patriotic" is slightly troubling - does it mean they are a cross between Shirley Williams (one of the greatest politicians in my lifetime never to have led our country) and Tommy Robinson?
Must do research!
 

Mucca Mad Boys

Well-Known Member
But we've had growth (albeit small growth) yet people are getting poorer overall. So it already shows that growth does not mean everyone gets something. Just because that growth figure goes up doesn't mean the poorer will get any of it. And if they don't it makes their situation a lot worse.

Where growth occurs is absolutely fundamental to its importance as a KPI.

I do think one area that Liz Truss was fundamentally right on is the need to ‘go for growth’, her execution however, tragic.

People feel poorer because the tax burden is the highest it’s been since World War Two. Governments are spending too much and it’s us that foot the bill. The Tories talk about wanting to cut taxes yet have frozen the tax thresholds and when inflation is running close to 10% last year, that’s a massive tax hike in reality.

The housing market too has become dysfunctional on the Tories watch. Record low interest rates, a dysfunctional planning system, record highs of immigration coupled with failed house building targets has made the cost of a mortgage barely affordable.
If he does a May in 2017 he won’t win.

I know their model hasn’t been right so far because it’s not been tested so it can’t be. It’s a guess basically.

This poll in particular is MoE movement with field work before any policy announcements. It’s basically saying the same as every single poll so far: not much is moving.

In my unqualified view, people are just fed after 14 years of one party rule and just want an alternative. Compared to previous (post-war) Labour election winners; Atlee, Wilson and Blair, Starmer is a pretty weak politician and uninspiring. There is no real policy programme (yet) and in public it seems like he speaks in platitudes wishing to offend no one. Sunak does something v similar, regularly labels himself as a ‘Thatcherite’ to appeal to true blue Tories whilst in government hasn’t been Thatcherite at all - for better or worse.

Back to polling, there are some general rules and recent assumptions that may or may not be wrong:
1) Typical Tory voters have stayed away from local / by-elections and expect to come back for the GE
2) there’s an incumbency ‘benefit’ to the government/office holder come polling day
3) voters tend to ‘punish’ a party that is miles ahead in polls on election day. Would-be voters either stay at home or they vote for smaller parties (Lib Dem / Green / Reform)
4) the ‘shy Tory’ phenomenon
5) Higher turnout apparently tends to favour the Conservatives for whatever reason

These are v high level and of course have a margin for error. The major polls in the last 2-3 elections have been dead wrong on the scale of the victories.
 

CCFCSteve

Well-Known Member
A 30% fall in house prices will plunge a lot of people into negative equity, with potentially disastrous consequences for them personally and for the wider economy.

The people who will be worst affected will be first time buyers - usually the younger generation - as they are the ones with mortgages which are a high percentage of the house value.

Yeah, Im with Clint in terms of sentiment but the repercussions for many and the wider economy would be huge (people feel poorer, stop spending, economy unravels)

The solution is build a lot more houses than the net migration numbers require. Not happened for years, probably ever, though
 

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