Forecasting election results is hard. Forecasting UK election results is even harder. Forecasting in 2015 will be harder still. Over the coming months, this blog will showcase a wide variety of academic research analysing the forthcoming UK general election, with a particular focus on those researchers who are trying to predict the election outcome. In the introductory post to the LSE’s new General Election blog, Jack Blumenau and Simon Hix outline some of the main challenges of forecasting elections within the complicated British electoral context and introduce some of the forecasters taking on this daunting task. They ask a simple question: Why are UK elections so hard to forecast
Who do you think will win in your constituency? Most citizens correctly answer this question, and gr...
Simon Hix and Nick Vivyan discuss polling predictions and the likelihood of a hung parliament. Pleas...
At 10pm on election day, the ballots will close, and the counting will begin. It may be many hours b...
Can citizens forecast the outcome of the UK election? In this post, Andreas Murr presents the result...
The assumptions behind various election forecasting models lead to different central predictions for...
Are ordinary citizens better at predicting election results than conventional voter intention polls?...
Last Thursday, the UK went to the polls. While different parts of the country voted in different ele...
When assessing election forecasts, two important criteria emerge: their accuracy (precision) and lea...
This article introduces and reviews a set of twelve academic forecasts of the 2015 British general e...
This paper applies the Seats-Votes Model to the task of forecasting the outcome of the 2015 election...
We consider two criteria for evaluating election forecasts: accuracy (precision) and lead (distance ...
In this post, Tony Travers uses historical data from local elections to analyse the chances of a Lab...
We describe a method for forecasting British general elections by combining national and constituenc...
This paper discusses a new probabilistic forecasting method that was designed for the 2015 British g...
Each month, the team from electionforecast.co.uk compare new constituency polls as they are released...
Who do you think will win in your constituency? Most citizens correctly answer this question, and gr...
Simon Hix and Nick Vivyan discuss polling predictions and the likelihood of a hung parliament. Pleas...
At 10pm on election day, the ballots will close, and the counting will begin. It may be many hours b...
Can citizens forecast the outcome of the UK election? In this post, Andreas Murr presents the result...
The assumptions behind various election forecasting models lead to different central predictions for...
Are ordinary citizens better at predicting election results than conventional voter intention polls?...
Last Thursday, the UK went to the polls. While different parts of the country voted in different ele...
When assessing election forecasts, two important criteria emerge: their accuracy (precision) and lea...
This article introduces and reviews a set of twelve academic forecasts of the 2015 British general e...
This paper applies the Seats-Votes Model to the task of forecasting the outcome of the 2015 election...
We consider two criteria for evaluating election forecasts: accuracy (precision) and lead (distance ...
In this post, Tony Travers uses historical data from local elections to analyse the chances of a Lab...
We describe a method for forecasting British general elections by combining national and constituenc...
This paper discusses a new probabilistic forecasting method that was designed for the 2015 British g...
Each month, the team from electionforecast.co.uk compare new constituency polls as they are released...
Who do you think will win in your constituency? Most citizens correctly answer this question, and gr...
Simon Hix and Nick Vivyan discuss polling predictions and the likelihood of a hung parliament. Pleas...
At 10pm on election day, the ballots will close, and the counting will begin. It may be many hours b...