Britain | Poll post-mortem

How did pollsters do in predicting the British election?

The biggest miss since 1992

Predicted seat totals in the 2024 General Election are displayed onto the exterior of BBC Broadcasting House.
Photograph: Getty Images

THERE WAS no shortage of predictions about how Britain’s general election would pan out on July 4th. A huge amount of data gathered over the six weeks of the campaign—144 national polls in all, surveying a total of 622,000 people—pointed to one outcome: a Labour landslide. That outcome duly materialised: Labour’s haul of 411 seats gives it a working majority of 181 in the new Parliament, which began on July 9th. Even so, the polling firms did not cover themselves in glory.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Poll post-mortem”

How to raise the world’s IQ

From the July 13th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Britain

Britain has many levers for controlling migration. Which ones should it pull?

Not the one marked “reduce the government wage bill”

Winston Churchill’s urinal shows Britain’s hang-up with heritage

A planned Labour reform goes down the drain


Britain’s oil and gas industry faces an uncertain future

Small operators in the North Sea are struggling with a tax squeeze


NHS dentistry is decaying

Can Labour stop the rot?

Britain’s justice system has responded forcefully to the riots

But the perception of a “two-tier” approach does not bear scrutiny