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UK Election Opinion Poll 2015: These charts show how the SNP will hold the balance of power after the general election, UK election Opinion poll, UK opinion Poll 2015, UK Polling Report, Election Forecast UK, Business Insider UK, Populus/Hanover

UK Election Opinion Poll 2015: Charts show how the SNP will hold the balance of power after the general election

uk election 2015 opinion poll

As General Election fever grips Westminster there will be countless discussions on what the next government will look like, with neither Labour nor the Conservatives looking set to gain an outright majority. But the story behind the headlines is the surge in support for the Scottish National Party.

Following defeat in the Scottish independence referendum the outlook appeared to be grim for the SNP, a party for which independence was its founding principle. I was certainly among the doubters. In the weeks that followed, however, the party's membership surged by over 60%, leaving the naysayers scratching their heads.

And now the party looks set to hold the balance of power at the next election.

Here's how the SNP became the most important story of the 2015 General Election.

Following the Scottish independence vote, support for the SNP in Scotland began to surge, while support for Labour fell equally sharply.

UK Polling Report

UK Election Opinion Poll 2015

Survey Agency

Survey End Date

CON (%)

LAB (%)

LD (%)

SNP (%)

UKIP (%)

SNP Lead

YouGov/Times

2/2/2015

15

27

4

48

4

21

TNS/

2/2/2015

16

31

4

41

2

10

Ipsos-MORI/STV

1/19/2015

12

24

4

52

1

28

Survation/Daily Record

1/16/2015

14

26

7

46

4

20

Panelbase/Sunday Times

1/14/2015

14

31

3

41

7

10

Survation/Daily Record

12/18/2014

16

24

5

48

4

24

ICM/Guardian

12/18/2014

13

26

6

43

7

17

YouGov/Sun

12/11/2014

16

27

3

47

3

20

Survation/Daily Record

11/13/2014

17

24

6

46

5

22

Panelbase/Wings over Scotland

11/4/2014

15

28

3

45

7

17

YouGov/Times

10/30/2014

15

27

4

43

6

16

Ipsos-MORI/STV

10/29/2014

10

23

6

52

2

29

Panelbase/SNP

10/1/2014

18

32

5

34

6

2

Survation/Daily Record

7/8/2014

17

33

5

38

5

5

Survation/Daily Record

6/10/2014

15

32

5

40

6

8

Survation/Sunday Post

4/15/2014

16

36

6

36

3

0

Survation/Daily Record

4/7/2014

15

34

6

40

3

6

Survation/Daily Record

3/7/2014

15

36

5

38

3

2

Survation/Daily Mail

2/18/2014

17

33

6

38

4

5

Survation/Daily Mail

1/31/2014

16

39

6

30

4

-9

This not only threatens to wipe out Labour's hold of Scottish seats, but in doing so also poses a problem for whichever party is seeking to form the next government. A party requires 326 seats of the possible 650 for a majority.

Election Forecast UK

 

 

But those projections mask another very interesting trend.

Although the SNP has gained a lot of support in Scotland, if the projections from Election Forecast UK prove correct the SNP could achieve that number of seats with only 3% of the national vote.

 

Party

Low

Votes

High

Swing

Conservatives

29.40%

33.40%

37.30%

-3.50%

Labour

28.20%

32.20%

36.30%

2.50%

Liberal Democrats

10.70%

13.70%

16.90%

-9.80%

UKIP

7.60%

10.50%

13.60%

7.30%

Greens

2.40%

4.30%

6.50%

3.40%

SNP

2.60%

3.20%

3.90%

1.50%

Other

0.90%

2.20%

3.80%

-1.40%

Plaid Cymru

0.30%

0.50%

0.70%

-0.10%


 

Party

Low

Seats

High

Swing

Labour

242

283

331

25

Conservatives

236

281

321

-25

SNP

22

36

47

30

Liberal Democrats

18

27

37

-30

DUP

7

8

10

0

SDLP

1

3

3

0

UKIP

1

2

4

2

Plaid Cymru

0

1

2

-2

Greens

1

1

2

0

Other

7

8

10

0

Election Forecast UK

And here's what that means in practice - SNP voters will get more 'bang for their buck' in terms of seats per vote than any of the other mainstream parties. Indeed, on current projections they will have 5x better representation per vote than the average Liberal Democrat voter.

 

 

 

SNP votes

Business Insider UK

All of which means that there is now (roughly) a 45% chance of the SNP ending up as part of the next government, according to Populus.

 

General Election 2015 odds

Populus/Hanover
Quite a turnaround for what many considered to be a single-issue party only a few months ago.

Whether SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon chooses to do a deal with Labour could now make the difference between a functioning government or a return to the panicked days of the Callaghan minority government of the late 1970s. It is a situation that neither the Conservatives nor Labour would care to revisit. His government was famously brought down by a no confidence vote called by Margaret Thatcher, which was lost by a single vote.

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src:businessinsider

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