That above was my gut feeling but it turns out there's some hard evidence for Tories out performing the polls in the run up to election!clv101 wrote: ↑08 Jan 2024, 21:42 I think the result will be a lot closer than the current polling suggests - but I still still a healthy Labour majority of ~50.
The reason for this is that I think the Tory campaign is going to be more effective than Labour's. It's going to be the most dishonest, manipulative, divisive, damaging campaign British politics has seen, but ultimately more effective for the Tories. Not enough to prevent a Labour win, but enough to prevent a 100+ majority landslide. A lot can still happen/change before we eventually get the election though.
These numbers were discussed on 'Rest Is Politics' podcast:
1979-83, poll leads six months before election Con +6%, but they won by 15% on election day. +9% shift to Con.
1983-87, poll leads six months before election Con +3%, but they won by 12% on election day. +9% shift to Con.
1987-92, poll leads six months before election Lab +5%, but they won by 7% on election day. +12% shift to Con.
1992-97, poll leads six months before election Lab +22%, but they won by 13% on election day. +9% shift to Con.
2010-2015, poll leads six months before election Con +1%, but they won by 7% on election day. +6% shift to Con.
Wow! Some have described this as a 'shy Tory' phonomina, but it's some pretty strong evidence for the Tories bettering the pollings results. However bad the polling is for the Tories, I think it's reasonable to assume they'll do ~10% better than suggested. Won't be enough to win, but will prevent collapse.