UKIP are still on the march in Wales, according to new polling.
UKIP are still on the march in Wales, according to new polling
The figures, collected by ICM for BBC Wales, show that when questioned how they would vote in the next General Election, 14 per cent said UKIP, up from the 7 per cent the party recorded in the last BBC Wales/ICM poll published for St David’s Day.
The findings also put Labour on 38 per cent (down 4); the Conservatives on 23 per cent (down 1); the Liberal Democrats down 2 to 7 per cent and Plaid Cymru on 13 per cent, down 1.
According to Cardiff University’s Elections in Wales blog, if these figures were replicated universally across the country, they would find Labour picking up two seats to add to the 26 they won in Wales in 2010.
These seats would see the party take Cardiff North from the Conservatives and Cardiff Central from the Liberal Democrats.
The Conservatives would retain their current total of 8 seats, with the loss of Cardiff North compensated for by picking up Brecon and Radnor from the Liberal Democrats. The Liberal Democrats would hold just one of their current three seats in Ceredigion whilst Plaid Cymru would remain as they are on three seats.
Whilst the figures aren’t anywhere near close enough for UKIP to entertain ideas of picking up a seat in Wales, the blog nevertheless has a warning for the other parties that ‘UKIP support clearly is reaching the sort of levels where they might plausibly make a difference to who does win some seats’.
But worryingly for Ed Miliband, his Scottish problem seen during last week’s referendum seems to be being matched by an increasing problem in making the gains in Wales the party would be hoping for next year.
As Professor Roger Scully of the Wales Governance Centre at Cardiff University explains on the blog:
“ICM’s findings reinforce the point, made previously on this blog, that Labour support in Wales has slipped considerably over the past 18-24 months. In the four polls conducted in 2012, Labour’s general election vote share was always at or above 50 per cent. Both the last two have had it below 40 per cent. Indeed, it is notable that while Labour across Britain as a whole is running generally well ahead of the 29.0 per cent vote share it won at the 2010 general election….in Wales Labour’s support level is now only 2 per cent points above that gained in 2010.
“Two years ago, Ed Miliband could have confidently looked forward to Wales delivering him several seat gains at the general election; now, Welsh Labour’s seat harvest looks likely to be much smaller. That is probably the most important single message to come out of the recent polls on general election voting intention here in Wales.”
In stark contrast to YouGov findings just last week which put support for independence at 17 per cent, the BBC/ICM findings carried out after Scotland’s vote finds support for Wales going it alone sitting at just 3 per cent.
49 per cent of respondents have called for more powers for Cardiff Bay; 26 per cent said the current powers the Assembly has are sufficient as they are; 2 per cent believe the Assembly should have fewer powers whilst 12 per cent believe the Assembly should be abolished outright.
6 per cent of those who replied to the survey either didn’t know or had views that didn’t match any of the options provided.
Declaring support for independence to be the lowest he’d ever seen, Professor Scully said of this bit of the poll:
“There has been a clear move towards supporting more powers, and some of the people who may have said ‘independence’ have gone in that direction.
“We’re getting close to a majority saying they want things to go further. There are also pretty low levels of support for abolition of the assembly – the extreme positions are losing out.”
Meanwhile the pressure on the UK parties to reform the controversial Barnett Formula which they pledged to keep in their famous vow to the people of Scotland will increase as a result of the poll’s findings on attitudes to funding Wales.
With the Holtham Commission of 2009 having concluded that Wales was under-funded using the formula to the tune of £300 million a year, the BBC ICM findings show 71 per cent of people in Wales believing that changes are needed “because Wales loses out” to Scotland.
Responding to the poll findings, Welsh First Minister, Carwyn Jones yesterday warned that the UK government’s response to Scotland’s vote could lead to the complete break-up of the Union within ten years.
Outlining his frustrations that David Cameron had decided that the issue of future powers across the UK should be dealt with through a Cabinet sub-committee rather than a UK wide convention involving all the devolved governments, Jones told BBC Wales Week In, Week Out programme:
“If they don’t get this right in future – you can see the Scots coming back, being unhappy.
“In order to avoid all this and to keep UK together we need to have proper constitution for next centuries to come and work out where powers will be.
“If that isn’t done my great fear will be that in 10 years time in Scotland we’ll be back with another referendum and the result may well be different. That’s the lesson the establishment need to learn.”
Ed Jacobs is a contributing editor to Left Foot Forward
160 Responses to “UKIP up and Labour continue to slide in Wales”
Leon Wolfeson
So, right, my comment was correct.
You’re just defending your fifth house money.
Leon Wolfeson
Of course you won’t take any external data, why, facts might come into it. No, you put your hands on your ears and continue onwards, wilfully ignorant.
For everyone else (since, unless you’re a hypocrite, you won’t read the following);
Streaming is harmful in education, as the data shows from countries like Finland. As you utterly oppose social mobility, and try and simply cut down on the fees you pay for your kids, and as you try and devalue people’s qualifications so you can pay them less.
You hate the kids, stop whining Labour did far too much for them – when in reality neither party has been any good on education for decades, preferring overtesting to learning.
Diggery Whiggery
No I’m saying a standardized quasi-centralized education system that is state owned and that pushes all competition to the fringes and excepts no differentiation, gives a s**t education.
I only have one house unfortunately.
Leon Wolfeson
Sure, your trust fund has the others. I don’t differentiate there.
And of course you oppose people not having to pay up front for education, as you try much harder for a system which actively punishes standing out and delivers a sub-standard “education” for massive amounts of cash, as you say s**t is far too good for the 99%.
Heck, you oppose any form of measurement of how badly your “system” world work, like any other third world nation’s, because “standards” are a dirty word eh? (Like…health and safety at work standards, etc.)
Rather than realising all the parties have failed repeatedly on education, and it’s time to look at i.e. Finland’s system and start putting education in the hands of the people who have been trained to educate, and who have the knowledge and tools to do so.
Guest
So not only do you need to use petty insults, you hear what you want – that even the moderate right magically must do as you say, and you won’t be happy with anything but smashing the borders shut on the British economy.