Tonight brings word of the latest in the regular series of Norstat polls for the Sunday Times, and although the newspaper has buried the results of the independence question at the bottom of the write-up as if it's of no great significance, it certainly looks pretty significant to me. If I'm counting correctly, this is now the seventh Norstat poll in a row to show a Yes lead - and remember Norstat were one of the more No-friendly firms until a couple of years ago. To this day (as far as we know, anyway), they continue to weight by 2014 recalled vote, which is a huge disadvantage for the Yes side, who are nevertheless repeatedly coming out on top.
Yes 52% (+1)
No 48% (-1)
The Sunday Times are far more interested in the Holyrood voting intention numbers, which are a bit of a curate's egg for the SNP. Their own vote share has held up perfectly well, but a decline for Reform UK means that the unionist vote is no longer split as perfectly as it was, opening up the possibility that Labour and the Tories may take a few more constituency seats than previously expected and push the prospect of a single-party SNP overall majority further away.
Scottish Parliament constituency ballot:
SNP 34% (-1)
Labour 19% (+2)
Reform UK 15% (-4)
Conservatives 11% (+1)
Liberal Democrats 10% (+2)
Greens 8% (-)
Scottish Parliament regional list ballot:
SNP 30% (-)
Labour 17% (-)
Reform UK 15% (-4)
Greens 12% (+1)
Conservatives 10% (-1)
Liberal Democrats 10% (+3)
Seats projection: SNP 57, Labour 20, Reform UK 16, Greens 13, Conservatives 12, Liberal Democrats 11
That would obviously be a very comfortable pro-independence majority (70 for the SNP and Greens in combination, 59 for the unionist parties), but it would leave the SNP well short of their self-imposed target of a single-party majority. However, even if Reform's setback is indirectly bad news for the independence cause, I nevertheless find it strangely reassuring. Every time Paul Hutcheon has written an over-the-top headline about "Reform's campaign in total meltdown", I've thought to myself "it won't make the slightest bit of difference you know, nothing sticks to them", so it's a bit of a relief to discover (or provisionally discover) that the laws of political gravity do actually apply to Offord and Reform after all, and that if they run a shockingly bad campaign it does have negative consequences for them, just as it would for any other party.
There's still a month for them to put their house in order, and all they'd really have to do is work their way back to where they were fairly recently in order to help the SNP back into the 60s in the seats projection. Even if Reform don't recover, there's another very plausible get-out-of-jail-free card for the SNP, which is that the Greens plainly can't take 8% of the constituency vote when they're not standing in the vast majority of constituency seats. What would happen if, say, the SNP were to take half of their votes and Labour were to take one-quarter? The seats projection from this poll would then be: SNP 60, Labour 18, Reform UK 17, Greens 12, Conservatives 12, Liberal Democrats 10.
Still not a majority, but a bit closer to one, and it might be a slightly more realistic estimate of where the SNP stand right now.
John Curtice also makes the point in the Sunday Times piece that if the public become aware that Reform's support is falling away, that could encourage greater anti-SNP tactical voting for Labour and the Tories. There may be some logic to that, although there may also be a side-benefit for the pro-indy camp, because Reform are currently taking a non-trivial percentage of independence voters and we need as many of those people as possible back on the side of light if we're going to end up with a decent vote share on the list - which in practice may be just as psychologically important as the seats tally.
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My latest constituency profile for The National is Falkirk West.
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The graph on the Wiki page which tracks these things is encouraging. RefUK are in precipitous decline, Labour are levelling out after a long period of gradual reduction in support (ave c. 16%), the Tories are flatlining (10%), the LibDems are dwindling at a glacial pace (ave 9%). Only the SNP & the Greens are rising (c. ave 36% & 9% respectively).
ReplyDeleteAfter such a long period in office, the fact that support for the SNP is on the up (even if rather slowly) is a substantial achievement.
John Swinney appears to be addressing issues with party discipline and reputation (reference North Lanarkshire Council), while promising beneficial changes to government (reference bringing the expansion of out of control QUANGOs back in line). Whether it is these developments which register with political anoraks which are steadying the ship, or greater comparative dissatisfaction with alternatives which are behind the improving tend is immaterial.
The alternative governing coalition is Labour in a Reform-Tory straitjacket. This proposition is so unpopular that it may not even have the support of Labour, Reform or the Tories themselves, never mind the voting public.
DeleteSince the last Norstat poll, the SNP have had nothing but a full on media attack from the MSM, print and TV. It has weathered it well.
ReplyDeleteBumper, Lord Ashcroft Poll, Westminster voting intention, field work 26 - 30 March, sample population 5,447.
ReplyDeleteUK headlines; Three way tie (21%) between Tories, RefUK & Green. Labour trail on 17%, LibDems on a pitiful 9%.
Data tables are a bit messed up, but Scottish sub-sample (474) is:
Con 12%, Lab 13%, LibDem 7%, RefUK 13%, Green 16%, SNP 33%.
Electoral Calculus seat projection:
RefUK a massive 122 short of outright majority.
Con 175, Lab 33, LibDem 47, RefUK 204, Green 166, SNP 48, Plaid 8
just wait for the section 30 ...
ReplyDeletewait, whut?
Any information or best guesses as to where the missing 6% on the regional list has ended up?
ReplyDeleteWe can safely assume it's not Atlas, anyway. Could be a mixture of Restore Britain, Your Party, SSP, etc, etc.
DeleteOn the west coast just listening to Radio Clyde on the radio. Pro+ting Labour over Reform and downgrading the SNP
ReplyDelete. It’s not just the BBC is controlled by the Brit labour.
Pathetic post from anon@3:55pm.
DeleteGood to see Swinney making positive noises on independence, saying there could be a referendum in 2028, if the SNP win the Holyrood election.
ReplyDeleteYes, yes and yes!
ReplyDelete