A little-reported result of the 2015 general election was a substantial reduction in the number of marginal seats, and a consequent increase in the number of very safe ones for both the Conservatives and Labour. Ron Johnston, Charles Pattie and David Rossiter explore the implications of those changes for the forthcoming election. Will May get the landslide the polls suggest
Theresa May will today become the Prime Minister, following the decision of Andrea Leadsom to abando...
Ron Johnston, Charles Pattie and David Rossiter consider the background to and likely electoral cons...
Stuart Wilks-Heeg looks at the role of marginal seats in this election. The related paper ‘A tale of...
It is currently likely that no party will be a clear winner in next May’s General Election. What is ...
Few analyses of the election result have got beyond the headline outcome and started to unpick the d...
In the aftermath of the 2016 Brexit vote, UKIP seems to have lost much of its original purpose and i...
The Liberal Democrat surge puts us into new territory in forecasting how the 2010 Parliament will lo...
Britain has voted for a hung parliament. The Conservatives’, and particularly Prime Minister May’s, ...
With the General Election barely three weeks away, there is some mounting evidence that the race is ...
Last week, a group of academics gathered at LSE to discuss a variety of forecasting models. In this ...
We analyse the results of British general elections from 1950 to 2015. In our model, voting is both ...
In this post, Tony Travers uses historical data from local elections to analyse the chances of a Lab...
A clutch of recent polls suggest that UK voters remain quite volatile in their views, with some givi...
In the second of our election prediction briefings we observe that the latest poll of polls show a c...
No party emerges with much credit from the general election, writes Robin Pettitt. Theresa May is di...
Theresa May will today become the Prime Minister, following the decision of Andrea Leadsom to abando...
Ron Johnston, Charles Pattie and David Rossiter consider the background to and likely electoral cons...
Stuart Wilks-Heeg looks at the role of marginal seats in this election. The related paper ‘A tale of...
It is currently likely that no party will be a clear winner in next May’s General Election. What is ...
Few analyses of the election result have got beyond the headline outcome and started to unpick the d...
In the aftermath of the 2016 Brexit vote, UKIP seems to have lost much of its original purpose and i...
The Liberal Democrat surge puts us into new territory in forecasting how the 2010 Parliament will lo...
Britain has voted for a hung parliament. The Conservatives’, and particularly Prime Minister May’s, ...
With the General Election barely three weeks away, there is some mounting evidence that the race is ...
Last week, a group of academics gathered at LSE to discuss a variety of forecasting models. In this ...
We analyse the results of British general elections from 1950 to 2015. In our model, voting is both ...
In this post, Tony Travers uses historical data from local elections to analyse the chances of a Lab...
A clutch of recent polls suggest that UK voters remain quite volatile in their views, with some givi...
In the second of our election prediction briefings we observe that the latest poll of polls show a c...
No party emerges with much credit from the general election, writes Robin Pettitt. Theresa May is di...
Theresa May will today become the Prime Minister, following the decision of Andrea Leadsom to abando...
Ron Johnston, Charles Pattie and David Rossiter consider the background to and likely electoral cons...
Stuart Wilks-Heeg looks at the role of marginal seats in this election. The related paper ‘A tale of...