#electoral-trends

[ follow ]
UK politics
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 week ago

Small swings, high drama: why UK polls are less volatile than they seem in charts

The UK's political landscape shows limited polling changes despite perceived volatility, indicating a fragmented five-party system with stable underlying support.
fromAxios
4 weeks ago

How fired-up Texas Dems give Talarico a jolt toward November

In South Texas' mostly Hispanic Cameron County - which Trump won by nearly 6 points in 2024 as Republicans posted unprecedented gains among Latinos - 71% of the primary voters cast ballots for Democrats. Talarico won the county with nearly twice the votes Crockett received and more than three times what Sen. John Cornyn got in topping Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton in the county's GOP primary.
US Elections
fromThe Atlantic
3 months ago

A Cautionary Tale for Both Parties

In the 2024 presidential election, Donald Trump carried Tennessee's Seventh Congressional District by 22 points. Last night, in a special election to represent the district, the Republican Matt Van Epps won by only nine points, defeating the Democratic State Representative Aftyn Behn. Trump celebrated the outcome on Truth Social as a "BIG Congressional WIN," but the margin of victory in a deep-red district is ominous for Republicans. Van Epps underperformed Trump by 13 percentage points, a sign that the party is vulnerable heading into the 2026 midterms.
US politics
fromThe American Conservative
4 months ago

MAGA's 'Multiracial Coalition' Was a Mirage

Even after decades of mass immigration from the Global South, the red team has remained overwhelmingly white. Trump's voters in 2024 were 84 percent white, according to the comprehensive AP VoteCast survey of 120,000 voters. That's not much more diverse than Mitt Romney's 88 percent in 2012. Romney, you may remember, was hammered in the media for not winning minorities.
Right-wing politics
UK politics
fromwww.theguardian.com
11 months ago

Financial markets have become a bulwark against populist excesses | Phillip Inman

Electoral shifts indicate a widespread rejection of the status quo, yet caution is necessary to avoid destructive outcomes.
Financial markets respond strongly to political upheaval, posing limits on leaders' radical changes.
[ Load more ]