Don’t confuse votes with seats..

Don’t confuse votes with seats..

………and don’t confuse seats for votes. A consistent theme on Politicalbetting.com is that political gamblers should not confuse votes for seats. We’ve repeatedly pointed out that because of differing turnouts and the way the Westminster seats are distributed Labour can still win a Commons majority even if its vote slumps by 10% at the next General Election. But there’s another danger that was repeated by the Guardian in its main leader yesterday – do not confuse Labour’s healthy Commons seat…

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Flying blind in London…

Flying blind in London…

……………………………………….betting without the aid of opinion polls The next big political betting event – the London Mayoral Election – is less than six weeks away but there has been almost no polling information to guide punters and very little media coverage. Unlike in 2000 just one bookmaker is offering odds and there is a single, but lively, betting exchange market. When Ken Livingstone was first elected in 2000 he was taking on the Labour establishment and his fight made big…

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Are ICM’s Guardian polls including too many non-voters?

Are ICM’s Guardian polls including too many non-voters?

A big issue for political gamblers in the UK is how you do distinguish between the two polling organisations that were most accurate with the 2001 General Election and who both claim to be “Britain’s most accurate pollster” ICM and YouGov? Is ICM, the Guardian’s pollster, overstating what Labour will get at the General Election because it is giving too much weight to people who say they are not certain whether they will vote? This is a critical question for…

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Spread markets moves mean that the Tories could come top in England

Spread markets moves mean that the Tories could come top in England

The intriguing possibility of Labour winning the next General Election by a very small majority but with the Tories holding most seats in England is raised this morning by a further softening of the Labour position on the spread betting markets. The latest spreads are:- LAB 327-337 seats CON 243-253 LDs 52-57 Total seats in next House of Commons 646 Taking the mid-points in the spread a Labour total of 332 would give Tony Blair/Gordon Brown just nine more than…

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Why are women voters spurning Blair and Bush?

Why are women voters spurning Blair and Bush?

A big gap is opening up on both sides of the Atlantic between men and women over their support for the incumbent political leaders. Both Bush and Blair are supported more by men than women and in recent months this trend has become more pronounced. A BBC report this week quoted Deborah Mattinson, Opinion Leader Research as saying that many older female voters were disillusioned with the political process and the Labour government in particular. “Back in 1997 it was…

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How Charles Kennedy could be replaced

How Charles Kennedy could be replaced

Sunday’s telephone call by Charles Kennedy to the David Frost TV programme to say that he was definitely staying as Lid Dem leader has sparked more activity on the betting markets. This was not the move of a man confident of his position. In all the talk on Charles Kennedy’s future the question always arises as to what circumstances would lead him to go. No one can envisage the LDs doing what the Tories did to IDS last autumn. The…

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Monday Call – April 26 2004

Monday Call – April 26 2004

Last week’s calls proved to be reasonably robust in spite of new polls in both the UK and US. Please note that next week’s Monday Call will not be published until Monday evening because of the UK public holiday. Could both Blair and Kennedy be going before the General Election? There’s continuing speculation over the future of both the Lib Dem and Labour leaders that is attracting coverage and could be the focus of most betting activity. Our LAY call…

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A hung Parliament or Labour majority of 114 – which pollster do YOU believe?

A hung Parliament or Labour majority of 114 – which pollster do YOU believe?

Political gamblers seeking to call the next UK General Election are faced now with totally different pictures from the two opinion poll firms that were most accurate in predicting the 2001 General Election. On the one hand is YouGov that is suggesting a vote split that would lead to a hung Parliament with Labour 23 seats short of an overall majority. On the other there is ICM which is predicting a vote split that will lead to Michael Howard’s Tories…

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