The Scotsman

Scottish Tories take polling hit ahead of party conference

- Alexander Brown

The Scottish Conservati­ves have slipped to their lowest vote share in the polls since Liz Truss was Prime Minister as they gather for their party conference starting today.

New polling by Survation, for communicat­ions agency Quantum Communicat­ions, has the Tories on just 15 per cent, compared to the SNP on 38 per cent and Scottish Labour on 33 per cent.

This has seen a two-point bounce for the SNP, with Labour dropping a point. The poll also put the Scottish Lib Dems on 8 per cent of support.

The survey found significan­t regional variations across Scotland, with the SNP commanding a 22-point lead in the north-east – where a debate about a windfall tax on fossil fuel energy giants is raging. Labour was ahead in west Scotland, as well as in central Scotland and the Highlands and islands, according to the poll subsamples.

Survation polled 1,043 adults aged 16 and over in Scotland between February 14 and 20, covering the period of Scottish Labour’s conference in Glasgow. This weekend it is the Tories’ turn to hold their conference, which is taking place in Aberdeen.

But the party’s national share of the vote is now at the level last recorded by the same pollster in September 2022. In the north-east, the regional sub-sample puts the SNP on 47 per cent, Labour on 25 per cent, and the Conservati­ves on 16 per cent.

In contrast, in west Scotland, Labour is ahead on 37 per cent, with the Nationalis­ts on 31 per cent.

Quantum Communicat­ions co-chief executive Alan Roden, who is a former communicat­ions director with Scottish Labour, said: “This year’s general election is not a foregone conclusion, but it appears to be a two-horse race when it comes to winning most seats.

“The SNP will be buoyed by the findings, with the party focused on appealing to voters in the north-east and defending [SNP Westminste­r leader] Stephen Flynn’s Aberdeen seat. But Labour’s lead in parts of the Central Belt is significan­t, suggesting there won’t be a uniform swing across Scotland – and many SNP seats in densely populated urban areas are vulnerable.”

 ?? PICTURE: JEFF J MITCHELL/GETTY IMAGES ?? Stephen Flynn’s Aberdeen seat could be safe following a rise in support for the SNP in the north-east of Scotland
PICTURE: JEFF J MITCHELL/GETTY IMAGES Stephen Flynn’s Aberdeen seat could be safe following a rise in support for the SNP in the north-east of Scotland

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