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Polls Apart: The 1997 UK Election: Accuracy of Predictions
Rosemary Bell
Law and Bills Digest Group
May 1997
Introduction
Among the winners of the British General Election on 1 May 1997 were
the British opinion poll companies. The five polls published on the morning
of election day correctly predicted a Labour victory. They also accurately
predicted the winning margin and the main parties' share of the vote.
By contrast, the 1992 British General Election had been a disaster for
the polling companies. On average, the four polls published on the morning
of the 1992 election put Labour 1% ahead of the Conservatives. The actual
result was a Conservative victory of 8%.
This Research Note looks at the performance of the opinion polls in
the 1997 election in the light of adjustments made to polling methods
as a result of the 1992 experience.
The 1992 Experience
Polling organisations in the UK were considerably embarrassed by their
inability to accurately predict the results of the 1992 election. The
four polls published on the morning of the 1992 election showed average
support for the Conservatives at 38% (compared with the actual result
of 42%), Labour at 39% (34% actual) and 19% for the Liberal Democrats
(18% actual).
A two year inquiry by the pollsters' own organisation, the Market Research
Society of Great Britain, concluded that four factors had contributed
equally to under-estimation of the Conservative vote:
- with quota sampling, the sample of people chosen for interview should
accurately reflect the socio-economic composition of the population
as a whole, but the 1992 samples were skewed too much towards traditional
Labour voters;
- those who intended voting Conservative were more reluctant to be interviewed
or to say how they would vote than Labour voters;
- there was a late swing to the Conservatives between the final interviews
and the act of voting; and
- Labour voters failed to go to the polls, either because they were
in safe seats or because they had kept themselves off the voting register.
Since 1992 all the main polling companies have made significant, though
different, changes to the way they conduct their polls. As a result, there
are now important differences between the companies in the methods used
to carry out opinion polls.
- Three companies (MORI, NOP and Harris), have decided to stick with
quota sampling but to increase the number of white-collar workers which
their interviewers must seek to interview. In this way they hope to
interview a more representative sample of the British population. NOP
also looks at how its respondents say they voted in 1992. If the company
finds that too many claim to have voted Labour, they weight their results
to reduce the proportion appropriately.
- Two other companies (Gallup and ICM) have gone much further, partly
or wholly switching from quota to random sampling. Equally significant,
they now interview over the telephone rather than face-to-face. The
difference that the new methods can make was dramatically illustrated
in January 1997 when Gallup changed from quota to random sampling. Using
quota sampling Gallup's polls had shown Labour with a lead of 37 points.
Its new telephone-based, random-quota sample reduced that to 18 points.
The 1997 Experience
Given the performance of the polling organisations in accurately predicting
the results of the 1997 election (see Table 1), it would appear that the
changes in polling methods introduced after 1992 have been successful.
While there appears to be some overestimate in the Labour vote (up to
6% in the case of the NOP poll), on average the final opinion polls predicted
a level of support for Labour that is just within the 3% error margin
associated with polls of this sample size. The performance of the polls
in predicting support for the Conservatives was much more accurate, the
average being only 0.6% from the actual result even though there was a
5% spread in the range of individual estimates.
One way to measure the accuracy of opinion polls is to calculate what
can be referred to as the 'average error' of the poll. The average error
is the average of the sum of the differences between the predicted result
and the actual result for each party. Using this measure, the average
error for the opinion polls in 1997 was 1.3%, with the ICM poll the most
accurate and the NOP poll the least accurate. By way of contrast, the
average error for the polls at the 1992 election was 3.15%.
Table 1 Last Poll Before 1997 Election
| Poll
| Lab
| Cons
| LibD
| Others
| Average Error |
| Gallup
| 47
| 33
| 14
| 6
| 2.1
|
| MORI
| 47
| 29
| 19
| 5
| 2.2
|
| NOP
| 50
| 28
| 14
| 8
| 3.3
|
| Harris
| 48
| 31
| 15
| 6
| 1.8
|
| ICM
| 43
| 33
| 18
| 6
| 1.2
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Average
| 47.0
| 30.8
| 16.0
| 6.2
| 1.3
|
| Election Result
| 44.4
| 31.4
| 17.2
| 7.0
|
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Source: Association of Professional Opinion Polling Organisations
Consistency of the Polls over the 1997 Election Campaign
The graphs above indicate party support as shown by the opinion polls
over the Election campaign. Most polling companies started with Labour's
share of the vote above 50%, gradually reducing to between 47% and 50%.
Only the ICM poll consistently predicted that Labour would receive a lesser
vote. Its poll of 23 April, published in the Guardian newspaper,
predicted that Labour (at 42%) was only 5 points ahead of the Conservatives.
Support for the Conservatives was consistently predicted by the opinion
polls at around 30%, rising slightly at the end of the campaign. The ICM
poll of 23 April is again out of step in predicting a sudden and unsustained
increase in support for the Conservatives to 37%. Support for the Liberal
Democrats as predicted by most of the polls was below their final election
result of 17.2%.
Conclusion
Compared with their predictions for the result of the 1992 British Election,
in 1997 the opinion polls got it right. The ICM poll, despite appearing
to be out of step with the other polls during the campaign, was the most
accurate in predicting the final result.
Sources
Association of Professional Opinion Polling Organisations, http://www.mori.com/election/result.htm
Another useful website is University of Keele, Dept of Politics, http://www.keele.ac.uk/depts/po/ge97.htm
John Curtice, 'What future for the opinion polls? the lessons of the
MRS Inquiry', in British Elections and Parties Yearbook 1995, ed.
Colin Rallings et al, Frank Cass, London, 1996: 139-56.
Robert M. Worcester, 'Lessons from the electorate: what the 1992 British
General Election taught British pollsters about the conduct of opinion
polls', International Social Science Journal, vol. 47(4), Dec.
1995: 539-52.

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