Tonight's polls still place us firmly in hung parliament territory. Neither Labour nor the Conservatives doing particularly well based on universal national swing. YouGov still has the Lib Dems leading - and further increasing their lead, which within the margin of error could actually put them ahead in terms of votes.
YouGov for The Sun
- Conservative - 31% (-2)
- Labour - 26% (-1)
- Liberal Democrat - 34% (+3)
- Others - 9% (nc)
Based on UNS
- Conservative - 228 seats (+30)
- Labour - 246 seats (-110)
- Liberal Democrat - 143 seats (+81)
- Others - 33 seats (+3)
Hung Parliament - Labour 80 seats short
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Populus for The Times
- Conservative - 32%
- Labour - 28%
- Liberal Democrat - 31%
- Others - 9%
Based on UNS
- Conservative - 236 seats (+38)
- Labour - 273 seats (-83)
- Liberal Democrat - 110 seats (+48)
- Others - 31 seats (+1)
Hung Parliament - Labour 53 seats short
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Angus Reid for PoliticalBetting.com
- Conservative - 32% (nc)
- Labour - 23% (-1)
- Liberal Democrat - 33% (+1)
- Others - 12% (nc)
Based on UNS
- Conservative - 257 seats (+59)
- Labour - 210 seats (-146)
- Liberal Democrat - 150 seats (+88)
- Others - 33 seats (+3)
Hung Parliament - Conservatives 69 seats short
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I think the thing to take into account at this point is that we're seeing some grim predictions for the Tories who look like they're not due to gain many seats. However, of course, universal national swing is only good enough as it's a uniform prediction. I still think regional factors and the desire to vote out Labour in some parts of the country will give the Tories a better showing, even if the Lib Dems manage such a high vote share.
But, I think the nail has well and truly been hit on the head by our Lukey (and many others) that believe Nick Clegg won't be able to sustain such a positive poll lead. Having said that, many people said that by Saturday or Sunday we'd begin to see them return to low 20s. I do think that Nick Clegg's positive performance on the first debate has shown people that there IS an alternative to the main two parties and they're reflecting that based on voting intention.
The second debate will be interesting because now, like Cameron, commentators are bringing Clegg down saying that he has the most to lose and will inevitably take a dent in the polls even if he puts in a decent performance. Though, with the feelings of the voting public at the moment, talking down the Lib Dems may make them further want to give them support - or of course people may realise that they don't like the policies and the novelty could wear off. The key will be whether Cameron and Brown decide to argue, because again that could be seen as a turn off and only further goes to underline Nick Clegg's idea that neither the Tories or Labour can offer change.
Veeeeeeery interesting.