Monday, March 14, 2022

Alba Ahoy! New pro-indy kid on the block continues to register with 2% of the list vote in latest Savanta ComRes poll

At long last, we have the datasets from the Savanta ComRes poll commissioned by The Economist, and some of the lingering questions can be answered.  Firstly, the all-important fieldwork dates.  The poll was conducted between the 24th and 28th of February, meaning it coincided with the first five days of the war in Ukraine.  That may be a positive sign, because there's always a danger that a major international crisis could dampen support for independence, and yet the poll produced a 49% showing for Yes, which is relatively good when you bear in mind that ComRes have typically been on the No-friendly end of the spectrum in recent times.  That said, most people tend to complete online polls on the day they are sent the link, which presumably means most responses will have been collected on the 24th - the very first day of the invasion.  Given that the sheer scale of Russia's actions came as a bolt from the blue, it may well be that it took the public a certain amount of time to truly 'process' what was happening - and if so, we may not really know the effect of the war on support for independence (if any) until the next poll appears.

The Yes vote is sky-high among the younger age groups, at 79% among 16-24 year olds, and 73% among 25-34 year olds.  You have to go up to the 55-64 year olds to find the first age group that is narrowly opposed to independence, but as usual, the real backbone of the slim overall No lead in the poll is the over-65s, who break 3-1 against self-government.

The unionist media's reporting of the poll gave the impression that there was no great public appetite for an early independence referendum, which made me wonder if the questions had been framed entirely neutrally.  You won't be surprised to hear that they weren't. The question that asked about the timing of a referendum offered six options - in the next year, in the next two years, in the next five years, in the next ten years, longer than the next ten years, and never.  On the principle that people without strong feelings tend to hover towards the middle options, they were effectively being guided towards the five year and ten year responses.  For my money, you'd have got a far more meaningful result by simply asking a binary Yes/No question on the Scottish Government's stated timetable of late 2023.  The good news, however, is that just 23% of respondents think a second independence referendum should never be held, and there is an absolute majority (55%) for holding it at some point within the next decade.

There's a question that asks about "which conditions should be placed on a new independence referendum".  That's seriously dodgy, because it implants the notion in respondents' heads that it's somehow obvious that there should be conditions.  Importantly, however, there is opposition to the suggestion that Westminster's agreement should be a condition.

There's a downright peculiar question about the extent to which the Scottish Government's plans for a referendum make respondents feel "anxious" or "relieved".  If anxiety was going to be mentioned at all, I'd have thought the more natural two poles are "anxiety" and "excitement".  There can't be all that many Yes supporters whose first reaction to the genuine calling of a referendum would be "oh gosh I'm so relieved".

The poll also contains Scottish Parliament voting intention numbers...

Constituency ballot:

SNP 47% (-)
Labour 22% (-)
Conservatives 21% (+2)
Liberal Democrats 8% (-)

Regional list ballot:

SNP 34% (-4)
Conservatives 21% (+3)
Labour 20% (-)
Greens 14% (+2)
Liberal Democrats 8% (-1)
Alba 2% (-)

Across all polling firms, there have been ten polls with Holyrood voting intention numbers since the election last May.  Of the first eight, only one had Alba above 1% on the list vote, whereas this is now the second in a row to have them on 2%.  So that could be a positive sign with the local elections fast approaching. (Having said that, three of the first eight polls were conducted by Panelbase, who literally don't even allow respondents to give a preference for Alba!)

34% is the lowest list vote for the SNP in any poll since May, but that can perhaps be mostly explained by the good showings for both Alba and the Greens - the latter's 14% is unusually high.  What is a little troubling, though, is that there may be signs of a Tory bounceback on both ballots.

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10 comments:

  1. Yeah that spike in support for the Tories leaves me incredulous. Those quizzers obviously dont use electricity, gas or drive cars. That or the poll was weighted in favour of the Ultra Rich.

    I wonder if spikes in the Tory vote correspond with spikes in the Green Vote as well.

    I have steam coming out of my ears as I just had to fill up my wee chuggy with petrol. Meanwhile Oil Company profits are ballooning and our Great Leaders are doing nothing to stop the shameless greed.

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  2. Nasty WGD numpty Dr Jim caught lying again. He says Salmond was " slung out" of the SNP. Now Sturgeon's gang may have decided to try and put him in jail and wipe him from SNP history but Salmond resigned from the SNP. He was NOT slung out.

    Dr Jim like so many of the numpties are so full of bile they bend the truth to suit their own delusional beliefs.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Talking about WGD liars the proven liar Irish Skier says the -4% for the SNP Regional list vote is within the range of statistical error. Now unlike Skier who claims to have multiple careers and is an expert in everything I do not consider myself all that knowledgeable on polling methodology but I always thought the range was plus or minus 3 so is the French Skier lying again?

      PS It won't be long before Skier self ids as a Ukrainian Skier and tells us Dynamo Kiev was always his favourite football team.

      Delete
  3. A lot of elderly people moving from England to Scotland.

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  4. The WGD numpty Dr Jim's take on the poll is as follows:

    Its a fix other than the bit that says Nicola is brilliant.

    Jimbo says: "They must've worked very hard on stitching this weird poll up,...." but the good personal rating for Sturgeon has not been stitched up according to Jimbo. That is how a WGD numpty resolves the problem that the great leader Sturgeon has not got Yes up to >60%.

    The alternative possibility, and it is one that numpties will not even consider, is that Sturgeon spends more time promoting herself than promoting Scottish independence. It is the possibility, that in my opinion, is more likely.

    The great leader is great at promoting herself by using her pals in the Britnat media but Scottish independence - nae chance.

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  5. ANOTHER HIT JOB

    Sturgeon does one on Salmond.

    Small does one on SGP.

    Now Kavanagh does one on Sillars.

    A leader of the independence movement has to show leadership and above all maintain unity. Sturgeon has not just failed but has actively worked to destroy this previous unity.

    After more than 7 years as FM Sturgeon should just clear off and take Kavanagh, Small, Robertson, all the alphabetties and the National with her and never show their faces again in Scotland.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. "Now Kavanagh does one on Sillars."

      I've said this before and I'll say it again. Sillars is not a supporter of independence. He has not been for quite some time. Stop treating him as if he was on our side.

      Whatever else you may think of the man, Kavanagh is right on the money with this one.

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    2. Stravaiger - my comment related to the lack of unity in the independence movement, Sturgeons lack of leadership and her responsibility for the situation.

      " Stop treating him as if he was on our side." I have NEVER mentioned Sillars before and I never commented in my post above on whether I thought he supported independence right now. So your comment is misplaced. If you have info that says Sillars does not support independence then good for you it doesn't mean my comment Kavanagh does one on Sillars is inaccurate.

      Delete
  6. Alasdair Allan, SNP MSP turns up on Wednesdays Debate Night programme. Allan was one of the SNP MSPs on the Inquiry who seemed to forget it was an inquiry into the actions of Sturgeon and took it upon himself to try and rerun Salmond's criminal trial. Now as a I thought he came across as a snivelling Sturgeon boot licker during the Scottish Parliament Inquiry in to the unfair, unlawful and tainted by bias actions of Sturgeon and her government I thought I would see what he does in the programme to promote Scottish independence. The answer is nothing - a referendum is supposedly on the horizon and this guy does absolutely nothing to promote independence. There were plenty opportunities.

    A perfect example of SNP politicians - big on loyalty to Sturgeon - low on talent - low on interest in Scottish independence - low on integrity - low on passion for Scottish independence.

    VOTE ALBA FOR SCOTTISH INDEPENDENCE

    ReplyDelete
  7. St Paddy's Day Comp.: identify the source of this creme de la creme de menthe commentary:

    "Aye, there are not many people in the world that dislike the Irish. They tend to come from just one country. And it’s not Scotland.

    Anyhoo, all the best from that side of the family.

    ‘Irish skier’

    —-
    *Or other nationalities that are not British. Like French"

    ReplyDelete