News

British Election Study on the Westminster Hour
Listen to Professor Jane Green and Dr Steve Fisher being interviewed for the Westminster Hour, BBC Radio Four, on 7 December, ahead of our British Election study event in Westminster on 9 December. Both will be presenting their research findings using BES data, along with…

What the BES suggests about constituency variation in party performance, by Stephen...
Where parties win votes at the next general election will matter as well as how many they win. Recent opinion polls suggest that since 2010 the Conservatives have suffered a small set back and Labour have made a correspondingly modest recovery. Much more dramatic has…

Watch the trailer for our new film
Watch the trailer for our new film ‘The British Election Study: Understanding British Democracy’, now available on YouTube ahead of its launch on December 9. Funded by the School of Social Sciences at The University of Manchester, some of Britain’s top academics and journalists in…

None of the above: the role of non-voters in General Election 2015...
Where does a party find extra votes? It’s one of those simple questions about politics and elections that sadly doesn’t have a simple answer. One place to find new supporters is among the backers of other parties. I wrote something about that here. In summary, neither…

British Election Study 2014 Expert Survey Data Released
The BES is pleased to release the first BES Expert Survey. 93 academic experts placed political parties on ideological scales and attitudinal dimensions between April-May 2014. These data can be directly compared to question responses in the BES voter surveys. The data and codebook of the…

Where, if anywhere, will Liberal Democrat votes go in the 2015 General...
The Liberal Democrat conference is in full swing. What is the scale of their challenge? Current opinion polls point to the Liberal Democrats being ‘wiped out’ in the 2015 general election. The Liberal Democrats are currently polling at around 7% (YouGov, October 2014), while in April…

Do party conferences matter? Why the die may be cast for Ed...
There is an inevitable amount of attention on political party conferences, and as Labour’s conference comes to a close and the Conservative conference begins, people will be wondering if they will make a difference. Conferences are important signals of policy commitments and intent. But the…

If politicians want love, they should get a spaniel, by Phil Cowley
The claim that whilst people don’t like politicians as a species they do like their own MP has now become a political truism. You hear it a lot from some MPs, for whom it has become a bit of a comfort blanket; battered by years…

BES September 2014 Annual Report
On Saturday 13th September Professor Ed Fieldhouse gave an overview of the activities and achievements of the British Election Study during its first year, addressing the British Election Study report meeting at the recent Elections, Public Opinion and Parties annual conference in Edinburgh (audience pictured…

“Almost 70% of people know the name of their MP”, by Professor...
Almost 70% of people know the name of their MP, according to the British Election Study. What percentage of people know the name of their MP? One recent survey by the Hansard society found the figure was down as low as 22%. That was the…