Paula Surridge
@psurridge.bsky.social
16K followers 550 following 2.3K posts
Professor of Political Sociology, University of Bristol British politics, elections, public opinion and (a lot of) political values. SubStack: https://pollingsnippets.substack.com/?r=4a6d0z&utm_campaign=pub-shar
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psurridge.bsky.social
This has led me down a collective noun wormhole to a wisdom of wombats.
psurridge.bsky.social
We will need a collective noun for Tim's.
psurridge.bsky.social
Frame as Keep Human Rights Vs Lose Human Rights....they won't do this.
psurridge.bsky.social
Still haven't learnt the academic skill of not giving direct answers....
ukandeu.bsky.social
"Are they [MRPs] any use to anyone at this stage of the Parliament? No! Do something more useful. Stop producing these polls. They're not magic."

Expert pollster @psurridge.bsky.social reflects on polls and electoral reform

Catch up on the discussion in full here 👇 www.youtube.com/live/ivRLHUb...
psurridge.bsky.social
The perfect image for explaining to students what it means to say the young people included in political surveys may not be typical of all young people.
katie0martin.ft.com
L-R:
Tether - Bitcoin - $Trump - Actually The Underlying Technology
psurridge.bsky.social
Exactly the same. I think the few hours where UK and US news overlap each evening are the worst.
psurridge.bsky.social
I don't understand how their computers don't constantly crash. Mine is high spec for gaming but would still hate that many tabs open.
psurridge.bsky.social
I am experimenting this year with a read this 'one thing' for seminars which is often a blog or shorter piece that at least ensures everyone has something to contribute...too soon to say if it helps.
psurridge.bsky.social
There are 58 days til the end of the teaching term, it is perhaps a bit early to begin counting them in the middle of week 3 but here we are.
psurridge.bsky.social
Yep from wave 30 - Westminster VI
Reposted by Paula Surridge
lwestheuser.bsky.social
JUST OUT: "Boundaries and Cleavages: Elements of a Cultural Sociology of Political Divides."

OA: direct.mit.edu/ecps/article...

It develops what the cultural sociology of group formation can contribute to research on political cleavages.

(And why "Somewheres vs Anywheres" really doesn't cut it.)
psurridge.bsky.social
It's been at least 15 years since I could ring a GP and get a same day appointment without doing the 8am dash for the phone lines and then hope to be judged an emergency, including at least one occasion 10+ years ago where not being judged worthy of an appointment resulted in a hospital stay.
stephenkb.bsky.social
"We used to ring up our GP and get an appointment on the same day," says Kemi Badenoch. She does not add: we're all looking for the guy who did this!
psurridge.bsky.social
That is (mostly) explained by generational replacement - younger generations are more educated, more ethnically diverse and to some extent less religious.
psurridge.bsky.social
It has become more pronounced (I have a working paper on this here though it doesn't show the longer time period to get the full context media.ukandeu.ac.uk/wp-content/u...) we've been capturing it since the early 1990s. I will be working on this further in the first few months of 2026.
media.ukandeu.ac.uk
psurridge.bsky.social
I have been over this ground endlessly, because the meaning is specific to the field of study in this case. This is a validated attitudinal scale used extensively in the study of British politics since the early 1990s. The substack sets out the content for transparency.
psurridge.bsky.social
Deliberately not divided to be equal parts. Can get a sense of the relative sizes from this

pollingsnippets.substack.com/p/values-and...
psurridge.bsky.social
Will the traditional poltiics of left and right manage to reassert some influence (potentially helping the 'old parties?

(As shown here both Labour and the Conservatives could potentially shore up vote shares across the economic dimension)

bsky.app/profile/psur...
psurridge.bsky.social
Meanwhile the Conservatives are losing even more support in those groups Reform dominate. And Labour have lost support most heavily among groups of the economic left
psurridge.bsky.social
Question for today - will the 2029 UK general election be the first where the '2nd dimension' dominates vote choice (rather than also being important) - which looks like very bad news for the 'old' parties or /1
psurridge.bsky.social
You can see clearly the party space fragmenting as Reform dominate the authoritarian (and increasingly the 'moderate') groups but staying virtually at 0 on the liberal left. While the Greens move to a strong second place in the liberal left group but struggle outside that group.
psurridge.bsky.social
Hadn't expected this to be quite so relevant today. I understand why Conservatives might have Sociology in their sights but English and Performing Arts?
psurridge.bsky.social
He wants mixed communities in the same way Conservative MPs want to reduce how many young people to go to University.
psurridge.bsky.social
I think that one shows your age more than Sooty. Definitely more niche.
Reposted by Paula Surridge
josiah.writes.news
"Non-voters stand out as consistently the most anti-growth group across nearly every question. After them, the next most anti-growth groups are either Green or Reform UK supporters"

Tldr: Talking non-stop about "growth" probably isn't doing the Govt many favours
open.substack.com/pub/jamesbre...
What Do The Public Actually Think About Economic Growth, Technological Change and "Abundance"?
There's an "anti-growth coalition" and a “pro-growth coalition” out there, it’s just not necessarily the people you think it is
open.substack.com
psurridge.bsky.social
I spent the time marvelling that Tim M had managed to get a hotel room colour coordinated with his new party 😀
psurridge.bsky.social
Looks more like Sweep though!
psurridge.bsky.social
By learning the 'lingo' presumably...