Always been the case, and although the pollsters claim to have factored it in, it is highly doubtful if they have called it right.To be fair, nobody was going to admit that they intended to vote Tory, were they?
Always been the case, and although the pollsters claim to have factored it in, it is highly doubtful if they have called it right.To be fair, nobody was going to admit that they intended to vote Tory, were they?
Isn't it the job of the pollsters to ensure that the right 'mix' is achieved in the first place?
I might be over-simplifying this (or being thick and missing the point) but surely that they failed to achieve this isn't earth shattering news?
Isn't it the job of the pollsters to ensure that the right 'mix' is achieved in the first place?
I might be over-simplifying this (or being thick and missing the point) but surely that they failed to achieve this isn't earth shattering news?
To be fair, nobody was going to admit that they intended to vote Tory, were they?
It would be interesting, but perhaps impossible, to know if the polls being published in the weeks prior to the election with a narrow Labour win looking likely actually had an effect one way or the other on the way people actually voted.
basically we've learned that a lot of Tory voters are busy people.