Jobs & Education0 min ago
Voter Turnout
Do you think turnout will be low for the election, and who would benefit if it is low?
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by Hopkirk. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ."and the prospect of a Labour Government under Keir Starmer is frightening"
I think you're in the minority if that's what you believe Naomi.
On the political Keir's Labour party seem to me to be on the centre of the current political spectrum - to the right of the Liberals , well to the right of Greens and SNP, and only a hair's breadth to the left of the Tories.
Of course the current version of Labour could just be a Trojan horse, but there's litte evidence of that. (The Unions have been very quiet though)
Turnout is usually low when no change is expected. There will be change this time so I expect a healthy turnout.
In 2019 turnout was 67%. The highest turnout was 80% and resulted in a change of party in that seat. The lowest turnout was 50% with that seat held by the incumbant.
A lot of seats will change hands after tomorrow. And voters will come out if they know their votes will make that happen.
The weather forecast is for some dry weather and temperatures are OK, so that always helps.
Apathy always helps the incumbant, and the mood is not to keep the status quo.
The last low turnout was in 2001, turnout fell to 59.4%, its lowest level since 1918 and down 12 percentage points compared with 1997. That favoured the incumbant, the Labour party.
2019* we had 67% turnout, and I expect similar tomorrow.
* We voted in December but turnout was only slightly down on 2017.