Opinion Polls, Exit Polls and Election Results

It has been quite an eventful week for voters either side of the English channel. In the United Kingdom, Keir Starmer’s Labour Party were victorious in the General Election, turfing out the Tories after 14 years of misrule, while in France a left-wing coalition managed against the odds to beat Marine Le Pen’s fascist National Rally into third place in their runoff election. In both elections tactical voting clear played a big role. In France many third-placed candidates of the centre or left stood aside to help defeat the Far Right. What happens now with regard to forming a government is anyone’s guess, even for people who know far more about French politics than me.

In the runup up to the UK general election, opinion polls had Labour much further ahead in terms of popular vote. As it turned out, however, Labour won 411 seats on a share of the vote of just 33.7% compared to the Conservatives 23.7% and a smaller number of votes than in 2019 when they won just 202 seats. The UK system is not proportional – and doesn’t pretend to be – so this kind of outcome is not surprising. Pundits have rightly pointed to the fact that the far-right Reform party got 14.3% of the vote which undoubtedly took seats from the Tories, but only managed 5 seats and that Labour profited greatly from the collapse of the SNP vote in Scotland.

There are other factors, however. One is that the turnout was 59.9%, well down on 2019 (67.35). That may well be partly due to voters generally not being enthused. But there may be more to it than that. The last time the turnout was below 60% in a UK general election was in 2001. In that year, Labour were miles ahead in the opinion polls so I suppose many Labour voters thought the result was a foregone conclusion and didn’t bother to turn out. It seems likely to me that there was a similar effect on the Labour vote this time. Rather than merely predicting the final result, opinion polls often influence it.

Another factor is that there may have been higher levels of tactical voting, especially with Labour voters switching to the Liberal Democrats to remove the Tory. That might account for why the LibDems did so well. Opinion polls play a role in this too. Yet another is that Labour lost several seats to Independents, standing against the stance on Gaza, and former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn won his seat standing as an Independent.

That brings me to the exit polls in the UK and France. Here the projections, the first released at 10pm on Thursday and the second at 9pm on Sunday:

Both are pretty accurate, but I’ve always been annoyed by the way the UK exit poll projection (left) is presented as a point estimate without any indication of the uncertainty (which must be considerable, especially for the smaller parties). The final results were Labour 411, Conservative 121, Lib Dem 72, Reform 5, SNP 9, Plaid Cymru 4, Green 4.

The French method of presenting the results (right) is much better in my opinion. In this case the results were 182, 168 and 143 respectively – all within the range presented.

I have to say that I greatly prefer the voting system used here in Ireland to those deployed in either France or the United Kingdom. Elections here are held under Proportional Representation (Single Transferable Vote) which seems to me a very sensible system. One ranks the candidates in order of preference; you can rank all the candidates or just some. In the system employed here in Ireland, votes are progressively reallocated in various rounds until one ends up with the top n candidates to fill the available seats. The STV system involves a quota for automatic election which is N/(m+1) + 1 votes, where N is the number of valid ballots cast and m is the number of seats in the constituency.  To see why this is the case consider a four-seat constituency, where the quota would be 20% of the votes cast plus one. No more than four candidates can reach this level so anyone managing to get that many votes is automatically elected. Surplus votes from candidates exceeding quota, as well as those of eliminated candidates, are reallocated to lower-preference candidates in this process. This system returns representatives with a local constituency connection but is also (approximately) proportional.

One problem with the First Past The Post system deployed in the UK is that if a Reactionary party (Reform) gets 5 seats while a Progressive party (Green) gets only 4, the former gets all the press coverage and the latter gets none..

P.S. I didn’t vote in the UK general election, but the four constituencies in which I lived before moving to Ireland (Cardiff West, Brighton Kemptown, Broxtowe, and Bethnal Green & Stepney) all voted in Labour MPs.

6 Responses to “Opinion Polls, Exit Polls and Election Results”

  1. Anton Garrett's avatar
    Anton Garrett Says:

    That the LibDems did so well shows clearly shows that they gathered a protest vote from centrist Tories sho couldn’t bear to vote for Labour or Reform.

    UK voting is nonlinear in terms of %age and seats, but the big anomaly was the LibDems getting 3.5 million votes and 72 seats, and Reform getting 4.1 million votes and 5 seats. Too many people feeling ignored is not a good thing – and I’d say that about the Left too, if necessary.

    I predict that great tensions will arise between government and people over energy policy during the life of this government.

    • telescoper's avatar
      telescoper Says:

      The LIbDems also took votes from Labour in seats where they were better placed to beat the Tories…

  2. John Simmons's avatar
    John Simmons Says:

    The tactical voting was very organised in this election particularly against the conservatives, with online links given to site(s) to show the party with best chance of removing the Tory in a particular constituency. There was also some local colour were for example against Truss there was a local Independent Tory picking up 6k+ votes, which was more than enough to remove her. This was rancour back to 2010 when the local conservatives didn’t want her as part of Cameron’s A-list candidate.

    This was biggest factor in low percentage of labour vote I think. The other was working class people were voting labour or reform, and it was fortunate that the labour vote was not dented enough for Labour to lose seats in many Northern areas.

    • Anton Garrett's avatar
      Anton Garrett Says:

      I thnk there was traffic in all directions. Many longstanding Labour voters who voted Tory in 2019, giving Johnson the breach in the red wall, reverted.

  3. Francis's avatar
    Francis Says:

    The exit poll forecasts have generally been very good – if you compare the poll results to the actual ones the only one that was really wrong was the Reform number of seats. I believe the only time it was seriously wrong was 1992, when everyone expected Labour to win but the Tories did.

  4. telescoper's avatar
    telescoper Says:

    It’s interesting that they didn’t do any exit polls at all in Northern Ireland.

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