From the Scottish independence referendum to the
European Parliament elections, it's been a big year for politics - here
are five trends that stood out
1. Labour and the Conservatives became almost tied in voting intention - and the Greens and Lib Dems actually did
In aggregate of YouGov's daily voting intention polls Labour started
the year with a six point lead over the Conservatives, and ended it with
a one point lead. Meanwhile, the Greens started as a party with only 1%
more support than the BNP and finished as Britain's fourth most popular
party - tied with the Lib Dems.
2. The Scottish National Party stole Labour's lead in Scotland
During September's Scottish independence referendum campaigning the
SNP moved five points ahead of Labour in Scottish voting intention.
Their lead continued to grow until November, when they were 18% clear of
Labour, and sustained into December, when Jim Murphy was appointed as
Scottish Labour's new leader.
3. Perceptions of the economy peaked, and began to dip
In August perceptions of the economy were at their best since 2010,
with 28% saying the economy was in a good condition and 36% saying it
was bad (the worst rating to date was in December 2011, when 2% said the
economy was performing well and 86% said it was doing badly). However
since the summer perceptions have been on the wane, accompanying bad
news on borrowing and downward revisions to growth figures.
4. Immigration became the most important issue
From May to December immigration was seen as the most important issue
facing the country, except for on three occasions when it was tied with
the economy. Although immigration began to narrow the gap at the end of
2013, 2014 is the first year since 2010 when the economy has not been
the top issue; immigration had an average lead of one point over the
whole year, compared to a deficit of 18 in 2013 and 32 in 2012.
5. And Ed Miliband's leadership ratings reached a new low
At the end of October one poll registered Ed Miliband (-55) as less
popular than Nick Clegg (-54). The Labour leader's December average was
-53, down 18 points from his January average of -35. Ed Miliband's high
point was in October 2012, when his average approval (-14) was better
than David Cameron's (-20).
Originally posted here >>>
https://yougov.co.uk/news/2014/12/28/5-public-opinion-trends-2014/
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