The Jewish Chronicle

Why some polls could be failing to pick up extent of Jewish shift against Labour

- BY ABIGAIL LEBRECHT IN FIGURES

V WE LIKE to say ‘Two Jews, three opinions’, so polling is a delicate subject in our community. In 2019 this is highly pertinent — are pollsters representi­ng Jews? In pre-Corbyn times, this would not have mattered, with the Jewish vote reflecting national trends, but all has changed in these unpreceden­ted times.

“The chances of a Labour majority are as close to zero as it is possible to be,” said political scientist Professor Sir John Curtice last week. Beyond this view, pollsters are reluctant to make firm prediction­s about this election. So which polls should we believe and to what extent are they identifyin­g swings in Jewish constituen­cies against Corbyn’s Labour?

Traditiona­lly constituen­cies were predicted using local polling. These are expensive and error prone so they cannot predict tight results but they are good at identifyin­g local trends. For this election, Finchley and Golders

Green has been polled twice. In both polls Labour is out of contention in third place, with 21 per cent of the vote from Survation in October and 19 per cent by DeltaPoll in early November.

Recent single-constituen­cy projection has used a new statistica­l technique, MRP (Multi-Level Regression

and Poststrati­fication). Using MRP, YouGov predicted the 2017 hung Parliament. MRP supposes that voters behave more according to their demographi­cs than location. YouGov’s MRP success, correctly predicting 93 per cent of seats, led to its adoption by tactical voting initiative­s Best for Britain and Remain

0.5%

Proportion of Jews of total population of Great Britain

13%

Labour’s Finchley lead over Lib Dems according to recent data analysis

United. However, MRP models are difficult to build and can go wrong. Lord Ashcroft’s 2017 MRP predicted a large Conservati­ve majority. Factors that make or break MRP prediction­s include the polling data being reliable and large enough (YouGov asked 50,000 people) and the correct demographi­cs being chosen across the UK population. Two constituen­cies mispredict­ed by YouGov as Labour gains were Hendon and Finchley and Golders Green — apparently ‘Jewish’ was not a chosen demographi­c.

This isn’t surprising. Jews make up half a per cent of the UK population. The size and dispersion of the community makes it difficult for national polling to represent our views. Remain United (with a poll of just 6,000 people across the UK) and Best for Britain, with 46,000, will not have balanced their models for the Jewish vote. Their current prediction­s for the Labour vote in Finchley and Golders Green are higher than both recent constituen­cy polls.

Why use MRP then? The British Election Study suggests this is the most volatile British electorate in modern times. We can not rely on 2017 results to predict 2019 and require statistica­l techniques to fill in the gaps. However without “Jewish” as a factor, MRP will inflate the Labour vote in Jewish areas. In recent general and local elections, Barnet cast fewer Labour votes than every polling prediction. Since then, Barnet councillor­s, canvassers, members and two Jewish MPs have quit Labour. The EHRC is investigat­ing the party for antisemiti­sm. On December 13 we will see the full extent to which the Jewish community and its neighbours reject Labour. On present evidence MRP-based polls will fail to predict this and must be treated with caution in Jewish areas.

Dr Abigail Lebrecht is a Data Scientist who advised Best for Britain on their tactical voting initiative in 2017.

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