More voters are undecided as GE14 nears – Invoke
KUALA LUMPUR: There has been an increase in Malay, Chinese and Indian voters who are undecided over who to vote for in GE14, according to research outfit Invoke Malaysia.
Invoke said this was based on findings via surveys done over the past five months.
Its director and PKR vicepresident, Rafizi Ramli said yesterday about 50.7 per cent of Malay voters surveyed in a recent poll admitted to being undecided on who to vote for.
Comparatively, the survey found that 66.3 per cent of the Chinese community and 46.9 of Indian voters felt the same way, as of April 23.
“Those who have not made their decision on who to vote, or either kept their vote sentiments secret, these are the ones who are traditionally and categorically listed as fence sitters,” he explained.
Rafizi said the latest findings was an increase from another study done last year where back in December, only 34.6 per cent of Malay voters polled admitted to being undecided, while 43.9 per cent from the Chinese community and 26.9 per cent of Indian voters were on the fence.
“From all the polls we conducted, we found out the closer we got to elections, the more the voters are admitting they are on the fence,” he said.
“The spike in fence sitters got more apparent from February, when more members of both the Indian and Malay community admitted to being undecided,” he said.
He attributed the surge of undecided voters in February to the announcement made by the opposition coalition of their component parties joining forces to run together in GE14.
“There could have been a surge in support for the opposition in that period as it was when we announced our coming together, the manifesto, and our prime ministerial candidate.