The election has officially begun and so Politically Uncorrect returns to the field of election prediction. The big questions being asked this round:
How big will the NDP majority be? (as it would take an act of God for them to lose, and maybe not even then)
Will the Greens and Conservatives be able to elect MLAs?
How many independents will be elected?
Right now, the best short answers to those questions are landslide, yes, and two, in that order.
Without further ado, the solid numbers:
New Democrat 45-49% [median 46.8] 55-70 seats [median 62]
Liberal 27-31% [median 29.0] 12-28 seats [median 20]
Conservative 10-13% [median 11.7] 0- 4 seats [median 1]
Green 9-12% [median 10.5] 0- 1 seats [median 0]
Other 1- 3% [median 2.0] 0- 4 seats [median 2]
The Conservatives have some strength in the BC Interior and if their slate of candidates includes some credible names in the interior there are a few seats where they could factor in. I'm particularly looking at the BC Peace and the Southern Interior where they placed respectably last election.
The Greens also have potentially enough concentrated support on the South Island to have a shot, given Elizabeth May and Donald Galloway's performances there, but translating federal to provincial support is somewhat of an enigma.
There are 4 strong independent candidates with a chance of winning their seats but with NDP support as strong as it is now they may not all be elected. I'll need to see how good their personal followings are before tweaking the projection.
As for the main result, Politically Uncorrect projects an NDP MAJORITY of 39.
No comments:
Post a Comment