Earlier this week the results of the National Student Survey (NSS) 2020 were released.
The survey was fielded during a difficult academic year for universities. The University and College Union (UCU) initiated industrial action as part of a long-running dispute over pay, pensions and working conditions. UCU members in dozens of institutions went on strike in November/December 2019 and February/March 2020. The second period of strikes was curtailed as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, but fieldwork for the NSS (which had begun on the 6th January) continued uninterrupted, closing on the 30th April 2020.
In this post, we combine…
The dispersion of the Remain vote between multiple competing parties created strong incentives for coordination in the 2019 election. Three “Remain” parties (the Liberal Democrats, the Greens, and Plaid Cymru) were able to coordinate at the elite level, agreeing a joint candidate in 60 seats, but this coordination was limited in comparison to the Brexit Party’s decision to stand aside in Conservative held-seats and recommend a tactical pro Conservative vote in 100 more seats. In order to fill this “coordination gap”, several websites offering tactical voting advice sprung up. Here, I review those sites and their effects.
It's not possible…
Yesterday’s general election was the first December general election since 1923. Although there was no significant snowfall, the weather was pretty dreich across much of the country. This wet weather led to concerns about turnout being lower than it might otherwise have been, had the election been held in the spring.
Turnout in the election was down, despite changes to the electoral register which ought in theory to have boosted turnout by removing duplicate entries and deceased voters. …

Earlier this morning (Wednesday 11th September), the Inner House of the Court of Session ruled that the prorogation of Parliament, which took place on Tuesday morning, was unlawful. All three judges agreed.
The decision follows a previous ruling by a Division Court of the High Court of England and Wales, composed of the Lord Chief Justice, the Master of the Rolls, and the President of the Queen's Bench division.
The unexpected decision from the Court of Session now presents the Supreme Court with an almighty headache. …
In 2016 I produced estimates of how each Westminster constituency had (probably) voted in the UK's EU membership referendum.
These estimates were necessary because the referendum was counted at the local authority level rather than the Westminster constituency level.
The 2019 European Parliament elections were also counted at local authority level, and so I have carried out the same remapping exercise.
You can find these estimates at this Google Sheet. A short writeup is also available. Replication materials are here.
If you are using these estimates, please remember two things.
Earlier this evening the Prime Minister made a speech on Brexit.
The speech — billed this afternoon as an "appeal to the nation" — contained no new information, no new proposals, and no indication as how to the UK might reach an agreement with the EU, and thereby avoid a disorderly Brexit.
Instead, the speech revealed more about how the Prime Minister views Parliament — as the home of “political games and arcane procedural rows”.
There was, in the late nineteen nineties and early two-thousands, a debate in the study of British politics as to whether the British system was…
tl;dr version: Agreement requires uncertain cross-party agreement and very good whipping

At present, betting exchanges imply that the probability of the UK exiting the EU without a deal is around 24%.
That’s about the same as the probability of the average Bundesliga game ending in a draw.
That is already a very high figure for what many people would regard as a very bad outcome.
I worry because I think that figure of 24% is too low. I think the figure is closer to 40%; colleagues whose opinions I greatly respect place it higher at 60–70%.
These numbers are subjective…
Next Tuesday, MPs will vote on the government’s proposed Withdrawal Agreement (WA).
When they vote, MPs will have to weigh several different factors.
One of those factors is public opinion — and more particularly, opinion in their constituency.
According to the polls, the government’s deal is the worst form of Brexit — except for all the others.
Some have tried to use public opinion to persuade MPs.
“Vote down the deal”, they say, “else you might lose your narrow majority”.
But does that claim really work? …
Parliamentary elections will be held on Sweden on Sunday.
Because the party has grown in support, and because some party activists are racists and Nazi sympathisers, people are concerned about the possibility that the Sweden Democrats will top the poll.
How likely is this? I can think of three ways of quantify how likely this is.
First, we can look at averages of polls, and assume that polls work like they are supposed to work in the textbooks. …
Constituency Labour parties in Vauxhall and Birkenhead have expressed no-confidence in Kate Hoey and Frank Field respectively.
The proximate cause was a vote on an amendment to the government’s Trade Bill (New Clause 18), where Hoey and Field, together with two other Labour MPs, voted with the government against an effort to keep the UK inside the Customs Union under certain circumstances. Had these four Labour MPs followed the Labour whip, the government would have been defeated.
With some exceptions, people who support Brexit also support Hoey and Field in their campaigns against de-selection, and vice versa.
Independently of Brexit…

Professor of Politics, Royal Holloway