So that's what I did yesterday, and I assumed that people were intelligent enough to understand that the "non-scientific" disclaimer still applied without me having to reiterate it every single time - but no. Instead I had to wade through a sea of drivel all evening along the lines of "what sort of polling 'expert' thinks that a self-selecting poll is meaningful, you've lost the plot James, but whatever keeps you busy, ho ho ho". Some of these were people who really should have known better. Lesson of the day: never expect an intelligent reaction, and always insert footnotes for numpties.
The poll initially followed a very similar path to the first poll, with Alba moving into a double-digit lead over the SNP and the Greens trailing far behind in third place. But no sooner had I provisionally declared Alba the winner before a sudden influx of thousands of votes pushed the SNP into a modest lead over Alba. The most likely explanation is that the second poll attracted a lot more retweets from SNP supporters than the first poll did.
So with around twice as many overall votes as the first poll, the results are not directly comparable, but what's interesting in both cases is the absolute numbers. Unlike many self-selecting polls, Twitter polls are restricted to one vote per account. OK, some people have multiple accounts or fake accounts, but it's reasonable to assume that most votes come from real, unique people. At time of writing, there have been 4656 votes, of which 32.6% were for Alba - so that's approximately 1518 Alba votes. It might surprise you to know that on a typical turnout, only around 80,000 real votes for Alba would be required to win eight seats (one in each region). So even my little Twitter poll has picked up roughly 1 in 50 of the voters that Alba would actually need.
None of this is to imply that the other 98% of the required votes are necessarily out there - but it's a useful reminder to look at absolute numbers, and not just percentages, before dismissing an exercise completely out of hand.
A number of people have mentioned being interviewed for a Panelbase poll with Wings-type questions, so we should have another real, scientific poll quite soon. It remains to be seen whether the full poll is for Wings or whether he asked for a few questions to be tacked on to someone else's poll, or to an omnibus poll.
Going by their latest outbursts, the Alba Party want the age of consent raised to 20. Apparently, they think that 19-year-olds are Alba adolescents, and 16-year-olds should be prosecuted if they have sex. I look forward to their next idea.
ReplyDeleteWhat would you like to see the age of consent reduced to, Mouse?
DeleteNo-one from ALBA has suggested changing the existing age of consent. You strike me as some woowoo nutjob trolling any and every space on the Internet where you see the word ALBA
This is a blog about politics, why don't you go back to wherever you came from and leave this to the grown-ups?
I look forward to your first idea.
DeleteOh, don't be so jejune.
DeleteIt's sickening what Wings is spouting at the moment
DeleteIt's all complete shite, designed to stir up fear, uncertainty and doubt - just to win a few extra votes for Alec - probably at the SNPs expense if people decide not to vote SNP on the constituency vote
Making the opinions of one organisation the opinions of a completely different organisation and making that the views of a third, completely different organisation is very jejune. Especially when it is all made-up. They make the Daily Mail look like the Morning Star.
Delete1+1+1 = 10896.3
And yes, if you buy their rhetoric they want the age of consent raised to 20. That is so socially-conservative it would be a world first.
It's very amusing though.
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ReplyDeleteDo you know when we can expect the next wave of opinion polls, please?
ReplyDeleteWell a new panelbase poll is due soon and the last one put ALBA at 6 seats, so it could put it at a similar amount or higher
DeleteMy instinct is that they may be doing well to tread water in the next polls. They keep getting impressive endorsements, but their press in recent days has been pretty terrible.
DeleteThanks. I find it strange that 6% gets you 6 seats but 5% gets you 0 seats. But then it is a strange voting system. Does Holyrood have the power to change the voting system?
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