Opinion Poll for the London Mayoral, London Assembly and London Region European Parliamentary Elections, 2004
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner. The aim of the research was to analyse voters' political preferences in London. The objectives of the research were: to monitor the performance of two new electoral systems in London, the 'Supplementary Vote' and the 'Additional Member System' to analyse the extent to which voters 'split tickets' across political parties, both in the party and candidate vote for the assembly and in the first and second preference vote for the London Mayor to explore the likely effects of voter behaviour on London's party system, and the wider implications for regional patterns of party support in England to examine differences in voters' attitudes towards parties and individual candidates, through analysis of opinion poll simulated voting results and attitudinal responses to explore the preferences of non-voters in the London elections, through examination of the responses to ballot papers of non-voting respondents Two previous studies conducted by researchers from University College London on the 2000 London Mayoral elections are also held at the UK Data Archive (UKDA): the London Mayoral Election Study, 2000 (held under SN 4443), and the London Mayor and Assembly Re-run, 2000 (SN 4419). Main Topics: Topics covered include voting intention, voting behaviour, and a range of social, political and electoral issues associated with London, the European Union and local elections. Demographic details were also gathered from each respondent.
| Item Type | Dataset |
|---|---|
| Publisher | UK Data Service |
| DOI | 10.5255/UKDA-SN-5277-1 |
| Date made available | 24 November 2005 |
| Keywords | political behaviour and attitudes, elections, economic activity, educational background, electoral issues, electoral systems, employers, employment, ethnic groups, gender, home ownership, households, housing tenure, income, local government, local government candidates, marital status, mayors, national identity, occupations, police services, political allegiance, political interest, political issues, political leaders, public expenditure, public transport, road traffic, spouse's economic activity, spouse's occupation, supervisory status, trade union membership, voting behaviour, voting intention, age, asians, attitudes, black people, british political parties, children, cultural identity, decentralized government, democracy |
| Temporal coverage |
From To 10 January 2004 14 January 2004 |
| Geographic coverage | England |
| Resource language | Other |
| Departments | LSE > Academic Departments > Government |
Explore Further
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Dunleavy, P.
(2005). Facing up to multi-party politics : how partisan dealignment and PR voting have fundamentally changed Britain’s party systems. Parliamentary Affairs, 58(3), 503-532. https://doi.org/10.1093/pa/gsi049 (Repository Output)