Banner

General Election Forecasts
Latest forecast for UK
June 7 2017
June 4 2017
May 29 2017
December 5 2015
October 20 2015
June 23 2015
May 7 2015 Result
May 6 2015
May 5 2015
May 3 2015
May 1 2015
April 28 2015
April 25 2015
April 19 2015
April 15 2015
April 12 2015
April 8 2015
Mar 31 2015
Mar 25 2015
Mar 13 2015
Mar 03 2015
Feb 11 2015
Feb 4 2015
Feb 2 2015
Jan 3 2015
Dec 1 2014
Nov 1 2014
Oct 1 2014
 
Scottish Parliament Forecasts
Latest forecast for Scottish Parliament
Apr 29 2015
Mar 17 2015
Nov 26 2014
Oct 1 2014
 
Welsh Assembly Forecasts
Latest forecast for Welsh Assembly
Mar 28 2016
Sep 24 2015
May 27 2015
Mar 20 2015
Nov 14 2014
 
More Maps
More Forecast, Election and Analysis Maps
More Maps
 

UK-Elect General Election Forecast, April 8th 2015.

Hung Parliament - Labour Lead (By 6) But Short By 48. SNP Forecast to have 48.

In the latest, detailed (top 3 parties in every constituency) UK-Elect forecast Labour are predicted to form the largest party by six seats, and the Scottish National Party is once more forecast to have the key role in deciding who will form the next UK government. Overall, the figure of 325 seats, the combined total for Labour + SNP MPs in this prediction, is just enough for an overall majority if the two parties can come to an agreement.

This is the second forecast made using the new, improved, UK-Elect v9.4 method which takes account of even more factors than previously. Among the inputs taken into consideration by this forecast were: national opinion polls, regional opinion polls (for Scotland, Wales and London), the candidates standing in each seat and whether they were the incumbent, and if so, whether they won that seat for the first time at the previous election, by-elections, constituency opinion polls by Lord Ashcroft (including those published on April 8th) and others (adjusted according to how many days ago the fieldwork was done), and the change in the regional and national polls since the poll fieldwork or by-election.

The UK-Elect "adjust target percentages for date" option was also set for this forecast, adjusting the percentages to represent what we currently expect to happen on May 7th, rather than just using the current poll percentages as a target. This option has the affect of adjusting the input opinion poll percentages to take account of what happened in many past elections as the date of the election approached - i.e. that the support levels for the parties returned part-way towards their previous totals. In current circumstances this favours the Liberal Democrats slightly and disadvantages UKIP and the SNP.

The GB percentages input for this forecast were Con 33.5%, Lab 33.5%, UKIP 13.5%, Lib Dem 9%, Green 5%. For Scotland the percentages used were SNP 45%, Lab 28%, Con 15%, Lib Dem 4%, UKIP 4%, Green 3%, for Wales the percentages used were Lab 40% Con 25%, UKIP 14%, Plaid Cymru 11%, Lib Dem 5%, Green 4%, and for London the percentages used were Lab 44%, Con 33%, UKIP 9%, Lib Dem 8%, Green 5% Other parties votes were not specifically set. Note that the final forecast percentages differ from the input percentages due to the methodology used (including adjusting for the number of days until the election) - e.g. the final UK target percentages used were Con 33.6%, Lab 33.2%, UKIP 12.9%, LD 9.8%, Green 4.8%.

UK-Elect special offer
Party Seats Change
Labour 277 +20
Conservative 271 -32
SNP 48 +42
Liberal Democrat 29 -27
UKIP 2 -
DUP 8 -
Sinn Fein 5 -
SDLP 3 -
Green 1 -
Plaid Cymru 3 -
Others 3 -3
Labour Short By 48 - Hung Parliament

See UK-Elect Latest Forecast for the UK-Elect 'Latest Forecast' page.

UK-Elect Election Forecast Maps
Forecast for Eastern England Forecast for Scotland
Forecast for Wales Forecast for UK
Forecast for London Forecast Gains
Click on image to enlarge. See also more maps.
 
Additional UK-Elect generated maps and screenshots
Forecast Losses Forecast 2nd Place UK - Coloured by most significant 'Swing To' percentage
Screenshot - start of a guided forecast Screenshot - Scottish constituencies Screenshot - configuring gains
Hover cursor over map for more information, click on image to enlarge

For detailed results (top 3 in every constituency) see:
UK-Elect - Detailed Constituency Forecasts

Notes: The forecast base was the 2010 General Election, although gains are compared with the current situation (April 2015). The forecasting was made using the new, enhanced, UK-Elect v9.4 method, on a separate regional basis for Scotland, Wales, London, and Great Britain, with many other factors taken into consideration, including the number of days until the election, by-election results, local constituency opinion polls, and the changes in the national poll percentages since the by-elections and constituency opinion polls. Incumbency support was enabled, and configured to take account of whether or not the incumbent was standing again or standing down, and they were standing again it also took into consideration whether they had won the seat for the first time at the preceding election. (This is because some academic studies have suggested that the incumbency effect is greater for first time winners.)

See UK Election Forecasting Theory, Techniques and Controversial Discussions and UK Election Forecasting - A detailed explanation of the techniques used by UK-Elect for more details of UK-Elect forecasting techniques.

UK-Elect v9.4 users will be able to reproduce the above forecast by doing a "Guided Forecast" and specifying the separate percentages for Scotland, Wales, London and the overall GB percentages. Note that the method used was the UK-Elect v9.4 method with all the default UK-Elect settings for that method enabled, but date-specific adjustments (adjusting the calculation target percentages depending on the number of days until the election) were used for this forecast.

Results from Northern Ireland are based on those of the last election and included for completeness only.

Suggestions and Corrections: UK election forecasts are sometimes very controversial. To notify us of any suggested change to this one, or to let us know of any part of it that is just dead wrong, please email us on support@ukelect.co.uk.

 

Subscribe to our forecast email updates here

 

270soft - where gaming gets political

Can you run the 2015 General Election campaign better than the professionals?
Yes! No - let someone else do it
 
270soft - where gaming gets political!
Limited time offer - 10% discount off 270soft games - use code UKEL-CIFV-KCSI
 

 

©Copyright 2015 UK-Elect