BertramCooper
Banned
Are most of these major outlets reliable when it comes to Scottish political polling?
Do they have good track records?
Do they have good track records?
The massive amount of 'Don't Knows' at this stage is ridiculous. I actually would prefer to think these are 'Shy No' voters rather than the alternative, a complete failure of the democratic process with people going into a ballot box not knowing what they're doing.
It'll be decisively no with another 30 years of broken promises and shit thrown at us until we get another referendum. Then everyone forgets history and trusts Westminster again. Votes no and the cycle continues.These results are looking very comfortable for No, all things considered. It will be a massive fuck up by the pollsters if anything else happens on the day.
And I think it will - it'll never end up this close. People will be decisive, whichever way it swings.
This is basically unprecedented as a result so there's not too much to compare to - plus there aren't the traditional party lines here which are the bedrock of most polling. That's why they're all saying that these are unlikely to actually be *that* accurate.Are most of these major outlets reliable when it comes to Scottish political polling?
Do they have good track records?
They do, but all bets are off for this really. A lot of people who have never voted before, and a lot of people changing their mind constantly in polls. I have a gut feeling it's going to split a lot less evenly than the polls are showing.Are most of these major outlets reliable when it comes to Scottish political polling?
Do they have good track records?
Are most of these major outlets reliable when it comes to Scottish political polling?
Do they have good track records?
I have no basis for this but I imagine most don't knows will turn to no. If they've not been swayed by yes then they'd stick with the status quo. I could be completely wrong though.
I have no basis for this but I imagine most don't knows will turn to no. If they've not been swayed by yes then they'd stick with the status quo. I could be completely wrong though.
Not exactly comfortable with that lead, but will take it over the alternative!
There's a 3% margin of error in any one individual poll anyway isn't there? So looking at any one poll is pretty pointless. You need to average out a whole bunch of polls.
They do, but all bets are off for this really. A lot of people who have never voted before, and a lot of people changing their mind constantly in polls. I have a gut feeling it's going to split a lot less evenly than the polls are showing.
It's not always 3% - it depends on the sample size. The ICM poll which gave Yes an 8-point lead had a comparatively small effective sample size of just over 680 after weighting, which has a margin of error of 3.8%.
It'll be decisively no with another 30 years of broken promises and shit thrown at us until we get another referendum. Then everyone forgets history and trusts Westminster again. Votes no and the cycle continues.
Fuck politics
The result isn't even legally binding. It's more of a gentlemen's agreement that it won't be contested, lol.Has there been any talk about legal challenges should the result be extremely close?
This isn't a general election.Rather status quo than that snake oil salesman fucking up the country.
It'll be decisively no with another 30 years of broken promises and shit thrown at us until we get another referendum. Then everyone forgets history and trusts Westminster again. Votes no and the cycle continues.
Fuck politics
He speaks a good game. Would be great if that guy got into some kind of position of power where he could have implemented some of those ideas he has. Hmm..Good interview with Dimbleby and Brown on BBC just now.
Unless you put a dab on with Betfair apparently!
Edit:
It still surprises me how such a slash in sample size (1000->680) only results in an increase of 0.8% in the margin of error. I never was very good at statistics though.
This isn't a general election.
We have a choice between self determination and Tory "blood baths".
According to the BBC here:
Yep. Four and a bit trillion people in Scotland. Five hundred times the world population.
I bet they've all got postal ballots too.
Has there been any talk about legal challenges should the result be extremely close?
I would have thought logic dictates that if it's 50% + 1 to win, then only 50% is a loss? An awkward one, but Yes won't have won, so by default....?Just read an article on the BBC News website about this (sorry cba to find it again). Basically no, the result being close isn't grounds for a recount.
Also, unlike general elections where ties have been decided by coin flips in the past, there is no contingency for the extremely unlikely event of a dead heat.
Again there would be seperate elections.I'm well aware, I'll take the tories over nationalists.
Different weight class. Make it BorisIf it's a dead heat Cameron and Salmond should have to fight it out.
Everyone wins.
This isn't a general election.
We have a choice between self determination and Tory "blood baths".
Again there would be seperate elections.
Are you a Tory?
I'm trying to work out why you are so at ease with the Tories continuing to wreck things up here with no mandate at all in the entire nation.No, never voted tory, I'm more of a tactical voter; no hard affiliation.
And yes, I take my odds with the tories better than the nationalists.
I'm trying to work out why you are so at ease with the Tories continuing to wreck things up here with no mandate at all in the entire nation.
I'm trying to work out why you are so at ease with the Tories continuing to wreck things up here with no mandate at all in the entire nation.
Because he's personalised this to that 'effing snakeoil salesman'
This isn't a vote for salmond. That happens 2016Cos I trust Salmond even less.
If you like.
This isn't a vote for salmond. That happens 2016
This isn't a vote for salmond. That happens 2016
To be fair, nor is this a vote for David Cameron.
Indeed it isn't but the Tories are by nature the party of govt. so whether it's Cameron or Oxbridge Bot No 233 matters very little. They'll be in power without a mandate in Scotland destroying things we don't want destroyed.To be fair, nor is this a vote for David Cameron.
Indeed it isn't but the Tories are by nature the party of govt. so whether it's Cameron or Oxbridge Bot No 233 matters very little. They'll be in power without a mandate in Scotland destroying things we don't want destroyed.
HistoryHow are they the party of government when they haven't had a majority since 1992 and are the odds-on favourite to lose the next general election too?
Indeed it isn't but the Tories are by nature the party of govt. so whether it's Cameron or Oxbridge Bot No 233 matters very little. They'll be in power without a mandate in Scotland destroying things we don't want destroyed.
Labour don't exist. You're thinking of New Labour.Why do some of you see the only alternative to a current shit Tory government being nationalism? There's an election soon and I doubt the Torys will be in power afterwards. Labour has always been good to Scotland, no?
I know there's more pandas than Tory MPs in Scotland, but maybe we should campaign for and elect socialism for the entire UK together, rather than just Scotland.
I grew up near London and i have far more on common with working class Scots than i do with Westminster. I would hate to see Scotland go, and not only because it would give the Tory party a 50 seat head start.
History
Labour doesn't exist anymore beyond a name.Why do some of you see the only alternative to a current shit Tory government being nationalism? There's an election soon and I doubt the Torys will be in power afterwards. Labour has always been good to Scotland, no?
I know there's more pandas than Tory MPs in Scotland, but maybe we should campaign for and elect socialism for the entire UK together, rather than just Scotland.
I grew up near London and i have far more on common with working class Scots than i do with Westminster. I would hate to see Scotland go, and not only because it would give the Tory party a 50 seat head start.
What are the major cultural differences between Scotland and the rest of England that may be at play here?
I'm quite interested in the prospect of the right wing in Scotland. As someone mentioned before, it's the Tories rather than "the right" And there will inevitably come a new right wing party.