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Voting intention and political views poll for The Independent published 2 June 2010
Date Published: 03 Jun 2010
Categories: Energy | Media | Politics | Public and communities | Technology & Telecoms | UK
Description
Public opinion is split on whether a coalition government is better for Britain than an outright win and voters are unsure what the Liberal Democrats stand for since the formation of the coalition, according to a ComRes poll for The Independent.
The poll shows 65% of people agree it is difficult to know what the Liberal Democrats stand for since they joined the coalition with the Conservatives and three quarters (72%) agree that the political horsetrading which followed the inconclusive General Election result showed that an outright win is much more desirable than a hung parliament
The survey also shows public opinion has shifted little since the general election, but the Liberal Democrats have lost some ground and Labour has gained a little.
Conservative 37% (-1 since last ComRes poll for the Independent on Sunday)
Labour 33% (-1)
Liberal Democrats 21% (-)
Others 9% (+2)
ComRes also asked about attitudes towards first-past-the-post and the coalition government:
The first-past-the-post system for elections to the House of Commons should be replaced by a system that reflects more accurately the proportion of votes cast for each party.
Agree 78%
Disagree 18%
Britain is better off with a coalition government that it would have been if either the Conservatives or Labour had won the election outright.
Agree 45%
Disagree 43%
Now that they have joined a coalition with the Conservatives, it is difficult to know what the Liberal Democrats stand for
Agree 65%
Disagree 29%
The political horsetrading which followed the inconclusive General Election result showed that an outright win is much more desirable than a hung parliament
Agree 72%
Disagree 24%
Methodology Note: ComRes telephoned 1000 GB adults between 28th and 31st May 2010. Data were weighted by past vote recall.
The poll shows 65% of people agree it is difficult to know what the Liberal Democrats stand for since they joined the coalition with the Conservatives and three quarters (72%) agree that the political horsetrading which followed the inconclusive General Election result showed that an outright win is much more desirable than a hung parliament
The survey also shows public opinion has shifted little since the general election, but the Liberal Democrats have lost some ground and Labour has gained a little.
Conservative 37% (-1 since last ComRes poll for the Independent on Sunday)
Labour 33% (-1)
Liberal Democrats 21% (-)
Others 9% (+2)
ComRes also asked about attitudes towards first-past-the-post and the coalition government:
The first-past-the-post system for elections to the House of Commons should be replaced by a system that reflects more accurately the proportion of votes cast for each party.
Agree 78%
Disagree 18%
Britain is better off with a coalition government that it would have been if either the Conservatives or Labour had won the election outright.
Agree 45%
Disagree 43%
Now that they have joined a coalition with the Conservatives, it is difficult to know what the Liberal Democrats stand for
Agree 65%
Disagree 29%
The political horsetrading which followed the inconclusive General Election result showed that an outright win is much more desirable than a hung parliament
Agree 72%
Disagree 24%
Methodology Note: ComRes telephoned 1000 GB adults between 28th and 31st May 2010. Data were weighted by past vote recall.
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