The Scotsman

‘Astonishin­g’ success for SNP predicted by council elections poll

- By CONOR MATCHETT conor.matchett@jpimedia.co.uk

The SNP is on track for its most successful local elections in its history and could match Labour’s historic support across councils last seen in 1995, a poll suggests.

The poll, undertaken by Survation for the independen­t election analyst Ballot Box Scotland, interviewe­d 1,002 Scots aged 16 and over between 24 and 28 March.

It suggests the SNP are on track for securing 44 per cent of all first preference votes in the council elections on May 5, with Labour well behind in second on 23 per cent and the Scottish Conservati­ves in third on 18 per cent.

In 2017, the SNP won 32 per cent of the vote, with Labour 20 per cent and the Conservati­ves on 25 per cent.

Only one party has registered above 33 per cent of the total vote share at council elections since the dawn of devolution with Donald Dewar’s

Scottish Labour party doing so in 1999 with 36.6 per cent of the vote.

The SNP’S results in 2012 and 2017 were both 32.3 per cent, meaning a 44 per cent vote share would be close to matching record highs of Labour support prior to local government reorganisa­tion in 1995.

In 1995, Tony Blair secured a result of 43.6 per cent which saw 613 councillor­s elected, though this was before the current Single Transferab­le Vote system was in place.

The poll indicates first preference support for the Liberal Democrats at six per cent, with the Greens on three per cent, Alex Salmond’s Alba party on one per cent, and independen­ts who won 10 per cent of first preference­s in 2017, on just one per cent.

Such a result for the SNP was described as “astonishin­g” by Allan Faulds, founder of Ballot Box Scotland, who warned the poll likely underestim­ates support for independen­t candidates­andthescot­tishgreens, whilstover­statingsnp­support.

He said: “If these findings are accurate, the SNP are on track todelivera­nastonishi­ngrecord result in May, and Labour would again become the second largest party at local government level, giving both parties reason to be cheerful.

"On the other hand, the Conservati­ves, Lib Dems, Greens andindepen­dentswould­seem to be headed for worse results. That said, some of these figures are rather eyebrow raising when compared to other electoral evidence.”

 ?? ?? 0 Susan Aitken leads Glasgow
0 Susan Aitken leads Glasgow

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