Issue link: https://maltatoday.uberflip.com/i/1162794
05.09.19 6 FOREIGN NEWS COUNTDOWN TO BREXIT 56 DAYS TO GO What the outcome of a general election could be, according to latest polls AFTER a showdown between prime minister Boris Johnson and MPs op- posed to a no-deal Brexit, the UK ap- pears on course for an election in a mat- ter of weeks. Much parliamentary action will now play out to determine exactly when the vote will take place. e Government remains eager to ensure the UK's exit from the EU by 31 October. Opposi- tions parties are eager to ensure this does not happen in a no deal scenar- io. But developments at Westminster mean an election at some point soon is almost certain. e key question, there- fore, what might the outcome of such an election be in such unpredictable times? An analysis of the results across 138 polls conducted between 4 November 2018 and 22 August 2019 was carried out in the UK. All polls contain a combination of in- formation and noise, the latter resulting from errors in sampling, in interview- ing and in other factors which are an inherent part of survey methodology. By "pooling the polls" the figure max- imises the information and minimises the noise because the samples are very large and rogue polls which happen by chance do not dominate the picture. Conservatives and Labour Both Conservative and Labour sup- port declined markedly in the run-up to the European parliament elections on May 23. Since then, Conservative for- tunes have partially revived, but party support is only in the low 30% range – nearly 10% less than its vote in the 2017 general election. Labour is in even worse shape, lan- guishing in the low to mid-20s. Polls on voting intentions go back as far as the 1930s, but it is safe to say that such a car crash in support for both major parties has never been seen before. So we are in uncharted territory. e major parties' poll numbers indi- cate that, in a two-party contest, the ap- parent "Boris bounce" in Conservative vote intentions would very likely deliver a majority in the House of Commons. One important reason why Labour has fallen so far behind is the large decline in Jeremy Corbyn's popularity since the 2017 general election. His approval rat- ings then were around 45%. But by Au- gust this year they had fallen below 20% and are now very stable from one poll to the next. A large majority of voters appear to have reached the conclusion that he is not up to the job of being prime minister. Negative public feelings about Corbyn are bound to be a drag on his party's efforts to close the gap with the Conservatives. Lib Dem threat e real problem for the Conserva- tives is not Labour but the continuing popularity of the Liberal Democrats and the Brexit Party. e Liberal Dem- ocrats are now consistently polling in the high teens – twice what previously had been typical. In the 2015 general election, the Liberal Democrats' vote collapsed and the Conservatives took 27 seats from them. While the Liberal Democrats recovered a little in the sub- sequent 2017 general election, they still only had 12 MPs. e situation has now completely changed. If the current surge in Liberal Democrat voting intentions holds, there is a good chance that the party will win back all of the seats it lost to the Con- servatives in 2015. In addition, the Lib Dems are likely to win extra seats from disgruntled Conservative Remainers who will defect in response to the Con- servative's hard-line stance on Brexit. It is true that the Liberal Democrats will take votes from Labour as well as the Conservatives, but the policy dis- tance between the Lib Dems and Labour on relations with the EU is now much smaller than it is with the Conserva- tives. e danger for the Conservatives is that Remainers are likely to vote tac- tically as a result, supporting the Liberal Democrats in seats in the West Coun- try, for example, and Labour in seats in the North-East and Merseyside. What of the Brexit Party? ere is a narrative which suggests that Brexit Party support will collapse in a forthcoming election much like UKIP's did in 2017. But this ignores a key difference between Brexit Party and Conservative supporters. In our nation- al survey conducted shortly after the European elections, 78% of Brexit Party identifiers wanted to leave the EU with no deal. is compared with only 46% of Conservative identifiers who wanted this outcome. In a rally in London Nigel Farage com- mitted his party to no deal. He was quick to point out that Johnson had vot- ed for eresa May's agreement when it came up for a third time in parliament – and was therefore not to be trusted. e prime minister is taking a very hard line against Conservative rebels by threaten- ing to remove the whip from them, but at the same time he is arguing that he wants a deal with the EU – something which is an anathema to the Brexit par- ty supporters. is lack of trust in the prime minis- ter to deliver a no-deal Brexit puts him in a tricky situation – he needs most of the Brexit Party supporters to produce a no-deal outcome. Given his insistence that he is still seeking a deal with Brus- sels, Johnson is unlikely to win Brexit Party voters until there is actually a no- deal Brexit. e Brexit Party will not take seats in a snap election, but it could easily stymie the Conservatives' chances of winning. e prime minister has had to seek an early election since the alternative was to stagger on without a majority and with parliamentary action to stop a no-deal Brexit becoming a reality. e campaign hasn't formally begun yet, but the posturing is underway. e out- come, though, remains very difficult to predict.