May. 7th, 2015

Exit polls

May. 7th, 2015 07:19 pm
davidn: (Jam)
http://www.bbc.com/news/election-2015-32633099

Cripes and gosh. The 2015 UK election coverage has just started and it’s incredible already - by law there, you can’t report on speculated results until the polls are closed, so the first we hear of the forecast is when the exit polls are released at 10pm BST.

The exit polls are completely different from everything all polls indicated in the run-up to the election. It was expected to be virtually a tie between the Tories and Labour at 280ish each with nobody ably to form a majority even with a two-party coalition. But instead, the Tories are predicted to get an unbelievable 316 seats - this puts them 10 short of a majority, and still able to form the coalition with the Liberal Democrats again (even though they’re expected to be ousted in a record-breaking fashion, going down to only ten seats). Meanwhile, Labour will be hammered down even further than they are already to 239 - a disaster for them.

The other big thing is the unprecedented SNP prediction - from having only a few seats at the last election, they’re now predicted to control Scotland. And I don’t mean get a majority of seats - I mean they are predicted to get every seat in mainland Scotland, with just the Orkney and Shetland islands to the north remaining in support of the Liberal Democrats. This would involve swings of up to 50% from the Labour incumbents.

The exit polls show such extremes that there are questions about whether they can possibly be right - either they’ll be the most inaccurate in UK history, or this will be the biggest election upset in UK history.
davidn: (prince)

This is incredible - people said that the SNP couldn’t be doing that well, but it’s been five hours, nearly half of Scotland has been declared and nobody else has got a seat yet, even in the ones that were solidly Labour last time. From six seats last election to commanding the country is remarkable. Does this mean the shock Tory gains will be true as well?

With Scotland’s confidence in rejecting the English parties, some commentators on Twitter are already speculating that this could be the last UK election that involves Scotland.

Map stolen from The Telegraph, sorry.

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