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polls into seats
17 May, 2019

Hanbury Strategy for Politico -  10 - 13 May 2019

London4Europe Committee Member Michael Romberg works out what the opinion poll findings for the European Elections in London mean for seats. Remember: it’s just a poll – a snapshot that comes with a significant margin of error. The margin is bigger than usual because London respondents are just a small subset of the overall sample.

 

Data Source:  Hanbury Strategy for Politico - fieldwork 10 - 13 May 2019   -  90 replies in London,  excluding won't vote/ don't know/ won't say  (unknown % of unadjusted London sample).

 

 

TABLE 1: This table takes the opinion poll findings and turns them into seats using the D’Hondt method (read more about that here). Seats won in each round are shown in bold. Poll numbers are then adjusted for subsequent rounds of seat allocation.

  

 

Brexit

UKIP

Con

Labour

Change

Green

LD

Other

Poll

19 0 15 40 8 4 14 0

1

19 0 15 40 8 4 14 0

2

19 0 15 20 8 4 14 0

3

19 0 15 13.3 8 4 14 0

4

9.5 0 15 13.3 8 4 14 0

5

9.5 0 7.5 13.3 8 4 14 0

6

9.5 0 7.5 13.3 8 4 7 0

7

9.5 0 7.5 10 8 4 7 0

8

9.5 0 7.5 8 8 4 7 0

Total

2 0 1 4 0 0 1 0

 

Notes

Brexit = Farage’s Brexit Party

Change UK, formerly The Independent Group of MPs

LD = Liberal Democrats

 

CAVEATS

  • It’s a poll. A snapshot in time. People’s views change. If “don’t know/ won’t say” is large, then their views could swamp small differences between parties once they decide.
  • European elections normally have low turnout. Differential turnout amongst supporters of different parties could affect the result compared with a poll. Different polling companies have different methodologies for adjusting for turnout.
  • The definition of “London” in the poll may not match the London constituency for the election.
  • Polls come with a margin of error. On the highest level figures asking a question of the whole sample a rule of thumb is that polls come with a margin of +/- 3 percentage points (so 45% think this might be anything in the range 42%-48%). London figures are normally a small subset of the poll so the margin of error is larger. A good overall sample size for a poll is 2,000 or so.
  • My calculations are on rounded numbers and that might introduce an error when results are close.

 

TABLE 2: this table works out a counterfactual allocation of seats if the Remain parties had joined on a single platform. The calculation assumes that the vote for the platform would be the sum of the votes for the individual parties. That would not be the case in real life – there are arguments for saying that a platform might do better or that it would do worse than the sum of the parties.

In the case of this poll a common Remain Platform would have increased the total seats won by the various parties/ platform by one. 

 

 

Brexit

UKIP

Con

Labour

Remain

Other

Poll

19 0 15 40 26 0

1

19 0 15 40 26 0

2

19 0 15 20 26 0

3

19 0 15 20 13 0

4

19 0 15 13.3 13 0

5

9.5 0 15 13.3 13 0

6

9.5 0 7.5 13.3 13 0

7

9.5 0 7.5 10 13 0

8

9.5 0 7.5 10 8.7 0

Total

1 0 1 4 2 0

 

Remain = sum of poll results for Change UK, Green and Liberal Democrats