October 2008: UVVM

UVVM Monthly Report: October 2008

Also available in Slovak, here

UVVM reverted to the mean this month, its poll numbers pulling back from extremes for most of the major parties and toward the results obtained by other pollsters.  There are gains to be made from a comparative analysis of various polls, but as usual the major papers (http://spravy.pravda.sk/opozicne-strany-si-mierne-polepsili-dvg-/sk_domace.asp?c=A081015_151947_sk_domace_p04)
present these without a hint of analysis from ČTK  which itself takes these numbers as givens rather than as a particular (and with regard to SMK, particularly troubling) survey.

Otherwise (and maybe this is why the papers do not bother to put more energy into it) there is not much to see here that is new:

Smer leads, but not as much as before.  SDKU moves slightly upward into clearer (but far distant) second place while SNS sinks toward the other three major parties:

UVVM+poll+data+ for +all+parties+ for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia
The movement of the mid-size parties is clearer here.  Particularly troubling is the movement for SMK.  A party which has by far the most stable overall electorate and the most stable historical voting patterns has the highest level of volatility in month-to-month poll numbers of any major party in UVVM surveys (see a more in-depth post here: http://www.pozorblog.com/#/p=110).  (HZDS has also been rather volatile, and while it is possible that this party’s support is actually a bit more volatile, its major swings also seem to be more the result of survey networks than actual shifts in public opinion.)

UVVM+poll+data+ for +all+parties+except+Smer+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia
Aggregated according to blocs, the shifts above mean a slightly closer gap between opposition and coalition, but no different than the overall average for the period.

UVVM+poll+data+ for +coalition+support for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

UVVM+poll+data+ for +coalition+support for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

Vote blocs, too, stay roughly the same.

UVVM+poll+data+ for +party+'blocs'+ for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

UVVM+poll+data+ for +party+'blocs'+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

And Smer is still likely to be able to build a coalition with a single party of its own choosing.

UVVM+poll+data+ for +estimated+party+seat+distribution for the most recent +1+month+ in Slovakia

UVVM+poll+data+ for +estimated+party+seat+distribution for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

As always, the actual polling numbers are available online at Google Docs:

http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=pdhlCClsiyAMi39bLFpY_Zg

And the most recent three months are below in tabular format (using “iframe” which may not work on all browsers).

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September 2008: Poll Comparisons

Trends and comparisons monthly report

Inside the averages are multiple polls using slightly different methods and samples.  When put together these yield a surprisingly smooth and consistent picture that is the most useful for assessing levels and trends, but it is useful to take them apart from time to time to discern any internal shifts and to assess the work of the pollsters whose efforts combine to make the overall average.

Between June and September we had one month with only one poll (July) and one with only two (August), so the most useful baseline comparison here are the first and last entries for each poll.

For Smer the story is consistent over time.  Among FOCUS respondents Smer achieved a near-record high in the June survey; among UVVM respondents the high came in the July survey and as always it was considerably higher than Smer numbers in the other surveys. We do not have MVK for this period but Smer almost invariably polls lower for MVK (nearer to FOCUS-levels) than for UVVM.  Over time UVVM numbers show stability around 46%, while FOCUS shows a decline from around 44% to around 39% and MVK shows a rise from 39% to 41%, meaning that the overall shift is slightly downward.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +Smer+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

The SDKU graph is rather striking and shows an unusual pattern: near unanimous agreement between the three pollsters in June and August followed by almost the same mean in September composed of divergent estimates (FOCUS, as usual on the high side, UVVM as usual on the low side and MVK, as usual (for both SDKU and Smer) near the mean.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +SDKU+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

Results for SNS show a shocking degree of consistenc.  All three polls remained within a single point and showed the exact same pattern: a rise between June and August followed by a decline below June levels in September.  This kind of univocality is really quite.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +SNS+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

But just when the polls were looking consistent, results for MK give us reason for taking any estimate with a large grain of salt:  Of all parties it is the Hungarian Party’s almost exclusively ethnic base that should yield the most consistent answers and yet UVVM numbers for September tend to wander around more than for other, non-ethnic parties, this month dropping below 7%.  This is highly unlikely and appears to reflect a long-term problem on the part of UVVM to get the ethnic samples consistent.  The Hungarian ethnic population is stable, and the overall averages for MK are quite stable (though showing a long term pattern of decline) so MK’s numbers should be relatively stable as well and for UVVM they simply are not.  This, of course, raises questions about how other sampling questions could be affecting other parties’ results (for any of the polls, not just UVVM) and suggests the importance of looking at multiple polls.  As it is averaged here, MK remains stable at just above 9%.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +MK+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

Similar problems emerge with regard to HZDS.  All three polls agreed on a level of 8%-9% in June but have since diverged, with FOCUS and UVVM show a drop to around 7% while UVVM alone shows a rise to arund11%.  This is a divergence of nearly 50% on an average support of 8% and something is clearly wrong here.  It is not clear what, but a facile decision by majority rule suggests that the problem may lie with HZDS.  Given the inconsistencies, it would not be surprising to see the party’s preferences in the UVVM survey fall back to around 9% in October.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +HZDS+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

With KDH there is simply not much to say.  As with SNS, the polls tend to agree and show the same patterns over time.  Here, however, the pattern is absolute stability around 9%. This is what one would expect of a “demographic” population rather than the variations in MK seen above.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +KDH+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

For the smaller parties it is always more difficult to gauge, but KSS remains stable around 2% (FOCUS and UVVM show a slight overall rise, MVK shows a drop, but the June MVK number was a recent-record-high for MVK and may have been an outlier in the first place.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +KSS+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

SF, too, hovers around 2%, and from June to September shows almost no change in any of the three polls, though they disagree among themselves whether the party is closer to 1% (UVVM) or 3% (FOCUS)

Multiple-poll+average+ for +SF+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

There are some issues that I realize I am not dealing with in these analyses, particularly support for the Green Party (SZ) which is included in the questioner list only by MVK, and the question of non-voters, which is worthy of attention and should become a topic of future monthly and quarterly graphs.

September 2008: Poll Averages

Overall Monthly Report

Both FOCUS and MVK released their numbers in the last 48 hours, and while it is difficult to talk about bad news for a coalition with over 60% of the likely vote, September was not a particularly good month.

As the overall graph below shows, Smer dropped slightly from its plateau, though it still remains well above past plateaus and shows a slightly upward trendline over the past 2 years. The bigger changes came within SNS, which posted its biggest monthly drop in years, down to just above 10%. There are also some questions about HZDS’s slight gain that I will deal with in the next post (the party’s gains in the UVVM survey are sharply at odds with its losses in FOCUS and MVK surveys.)

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For the current opposition, there was no particularly encouraging news but SDKU did turn up slightly after nearly a year of downward trend (of course it has turned up slightly in other months during the overall decline) and both the Christian Democrats and the Hungarian Coalition remained stable, as has been their habit.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +all+parties+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

The overall news is therefore reversion toward the two year mean for both coalition (dropping to just over 60%) and opposition (rising above 30%). The remaining 9% or so remains divided among parties across the party spectrum and both Slobdne Forum and the Communist Party posted slight gains this month but remain at the 2% mark. HZD and ANO, not pictured here, face an even less hopeful prospect, with numbers around 1% and perfectly flat trendlines.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +coalition+support for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

Within the framework of (rather artificial) party blocs, these changes put the parties of the “Right” ahead of the “Slovak National” bloc, which has fallen by this standard to its lowest level ever (which is not to say that “Slovak National” ideas are at their lowest ebb since these have clearly been incorporated into the rhetoric of Smer.
Multiple-poll+average+ for +party+blocs+ for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

Multiple-poll+average+ for +party+blocs+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

In terms of the overall consequences for electoral politics, the report of these results remains a broken record: Smer remains in a strong position to chose a single party as its post-election coalition partner.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +estimated+party+seat+distribution for the most recent +1+month+ in Slovakia

Multiple-poll+average+ for +estimated+party+seat+distribution for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

As always, the actual polling numbers are available online at Google Docs:
http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=pdhlCClsiyAMi39bLFpY_Zg

And the most recent three months are below in tabular format (using “iframe” which may not work on all browsers).

<br />

Two-thirds Rule

A brief note here to comment on one specific element of Robert Fico’s press conference remarks here regarding contracts received by those close to Smer: “the government coalition will not allow discrimination against two-thirds of the population only because they sympathize with the government party.” (see below in red).

This is notable for several reasons,

  • first because it is a nice example of the power of the current coalition’s public opinion position as political argument (popularity here becomes a justification for actions) and, within that framework, of a particular interpretation of public opinion.  It is certainly fair to say that 2/3 of Slovakia’s current voters support Smer, HZDS or SNS, but to the extent that in any given poll about 30% of voters do not support any party.  Of course this is ordinary political use of numbers and nothing particularly unusual or scandalous.
  • Second, and I noticed the artfulness only in translating and transcribing, there is the notion of government refusing to permit discrimination.  This is a common argument, but it is distinctive here because the prime minister is arguing that he will not permit discrimination against his own supporters.  The powerful subtext here, and what allows this to work despite the fact that in the same sentence he notes that he and his coalition partners have a clear supermajority in public opinion, is the spectre of dominant forces other than 2/3 the people who seek to do them harm.  I have been noting for some time how well Fico has maintained his anti-establishment position despite having almost sole control of the strongest party (and coalition) in Slovakia’s postcommunist history.  Whether he can keep this up is another question (and I have consistently been wrong in predicting that he couldn’t, but that is a question for another post).  The key appears to be his ability to persuade others (perhaps because he believes it to be true) that others (media, the former opposition, the United States, foreign investors) are the ones shaping Slovakia’s destiny.  Balancing that appeal to weakness with appeals to his own efficacy requires a delicate sense of balance.  So far he has proven himself a master.

Nedovolíme diskrimináciu ľudí len preto, že nás podporujú, odkázal médiám Fico

22. augusta 2008  16:28
Premiér Robert Fico sa znovu zastal ministerky práce Viery Tomanovej, ktorá čelí kritike za sporné štátne dotácie ľuďom blízkym jeho strane Smer-SD. Premiér zdôraznil, že nezákonné postupy alebo predražené tendre bude trestať, zároveň však je podľa neho prirodzené, ak sa predstavitelia vlády snažia v súlade so zákonom podporiť obce a mestá, ktoré vedú zástupcovia vládnych strán.

Predseda vlády Robert Fico počas tlačovej besedy, na ktorej oznámil, že vládna koalícia nedovolí diskrimináciu dvoch tretín obyvateľov len preto, že sympatizujú s vládnymi stranami.
Predseda vlády Robert Fico počas tlačovej besedy, na ktorej oznámil, že vládna koalícia nedovolí diskrimináciu dvoch tretín obyvateľov len preto, že sympatizujú s vládnymi stranami.

(autor: SITA)

Vládna koalícia nedovolí diskrimináciu dvoch tretín obyvateľov len preto, že sympatizujú s vládnymi stranami, vyhlásil premiér na brífingu, po ktorom nepripustil žiadne otázky. Predseda vlády chcel len novinárom ukázať prípady “straníckeho klientelizmu” vo fungovaní americkej demokracie a aj tak ich presvedčiť, že za dotáciami svojim nie je nič nemorálne.

Kritiku za podporu sociálnych podnikov v oblastiach s vysokou nezamestnanosťou považuje za zvrhlú. Zároveň oznámil, že už viac nebude reagovať na mediálne útoky a rôzne pseudokauzy, ako boli sociálne podniky či verejné obstarávania. “Vy nemôžete nahradiť Úrad pre verejné obstarávanie,” povedal médiám.

Fico: Nenecháme sa terorizovať médiami

Zdroj: SITA • 5,14 MB • zaznamenané: 22. 8. 2008

Ministerstvo práce podľa tlače pridelilo spolu asi 500 miliónov korún (16,6 milióna eur) na budovanie takzvaných sociálnych podnikov spoločnostiam, s ktorými sú spojení poslanci a členovia premiérovej strany. Tomanová (Smer-SD) však nedávno odmietla úvahy, že žiadatelia ťažili so svojich kontaktov s najsilnejšou vládnou stranou. Sociálne podniky by mali pomáhať znižovať nezamestnanosť. Určené sú napríklad pre ľudí, ktorí sú bez práce dlhodobo.

“Nebudeme považovať za neprípustné, ak napríklad v prípade dvoch rovnocenných projektov s rovnakou kvalitou a rovnakým výsledným efektom člen vlády uprednostní starostu či primátora za vládnu koalíciu,” vyhlásil Fico. Podmienkou podľa neho však je, aby nebol porušený zákon.

Ministerka Tomanová už v minulosti čelila výhradám za vyplatenie štátnej podpory Centru privátnych sociálnych služieb Privilégium napriek tomu, že na ňu nemalo nárok. Za sporné dotácie z verejných zdrojov nedávno musel na žiadosť premiéra odísť Jaroslav Izák (SNS) z postu ministra životného prostredia. Predražené tendre zas stáli miesto ministra obrany Františka Kašického zo Smeru-SD.

Nedovolíme diskrimináciu ľudí len preto, že nás podporujú, odkázal médiám Fico – Pravda.sk – Flock

Back from outer space (and/or Finland)

But still in the stratosphere (and/or Ferndale).

July

A virtually computer-free vacation meant no July poll analysis. There is one (and really only one) sense in which this is unfortunate: July polls showed something I have never seen before in Slovakia, a one-party parliamentary majority.

UVVM+poll+data+ for +estimated+party+seat+distribution for the most recent +1+month+ in Slovakia

In the UVVM July survey, Smer polled 48.5% which, after factoring out all the parties below the five-percent threshold (see the next post on small parties) gives the party just over 50% of all supporters of electable parties and, thanks to some slightly favorable electoral-system math, one vote more than half.%C2%A0 Whether or not the party sustains this level of support, the instance itself is notable because it is unprecedented: 48.5% of voters expressing a party preference, 76 seats, 4.2 times as many as the next largest party, 5 times as many as the next largest opposition party.

August

So far all we have for July or August are the UVVM polls so I will use the restricted comparison set here. The August UVVM polls put Smer back down to 44.9% which is still at the high end of its previous “normal” range, with “only” 3.5 times as many supporters as the next largest party (once again the opposition party SDKU).

UVVM+poll+data+ for +all+parties+ for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

The same “return to normal” is apparent for the smaller parties (and compared to Smer,
every party is a smaller party). July’s record high for Smer was accompanied by a post-election record low for SDKU (9.7%, in percentage terms an even bigger shift from the average than Smer’s high-water mark) but August returns the party to the (low side of the) 11%-15% range where it has been since the election. Since SNS has showed a steady climb back from its poor showings in May and June, this again leaves us with the 3-track pattern of party support–Smer around 40, SDKU and SNS around 13 and HZDS, MK and KDH around 9–that dominated the first half of 2008. Indeed, August 2008 is virtually identical to February 2008, with no party’s results differing by even a full percentage point from 7 months ago and overall volatility between those two months at a shockingly low 1.5%. Of course we are not back in February–a lot has happened since then–but the long-term stability is striking.

UVVM+poll+data+ for +all+parties+except+Smer+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

Though the shifts mean that this month is not as propitious for the current coalition as last month, it is still near its overall high point in the post-election period…
UVVM+poll+data+ for +coalition+support for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

…a second graph shows that the gains have been mostly for Smer and show a slight declining trend for the both the “Slovak national” and “right” parties (their current recovery takes them back only to a point that would have been considered low for much of 2007 and 2008.

UVVM+poll+data+ for +party+'blocs'+ for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

As for parliament, the August figures again correspond with the likely “real world” consideration that were elections held today Smer would require one (and only one) coalition partner.

UVVM+poll+data+ for +estimated+party+seat+distribution for the most recent +1+month+ in Slovakia

UVVM+poll+data+ for +estimated+party+seat+distribution for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

We will need to wait for figures from FOCUS or MVK to make a better assessment of whether UVVM’s trends show echoes elsewhere or whether July was an anomaly, though given the erratic change, I bet on the anomaly.

As always, the actual polling numbers are available online at Google Docs:
http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=pdhlCClsiyAMi39bLFpY_Zg

And the most recent three months are below in tabular format (using “iframe” which may not work on all browsers).

<br />

More nutshells

In late June I presented an updated review of Slovakia’s politics to the American Chamber of Commerce in Bratislava. This revised version has quite a bit more data on demographic support for parties and recent polling trends. The annotated powerpoint presentation files (quite long) can be found online at the following locations:

As always, I would love to hear any comments or critiques.

June 2008: Half-Time Report (UVVM, Poll Averages, and Comparisons rolled into one)

Smer at half-time

UVVM caused a minor stir with this month’s poll which shows Smer support at near-record levels (46.7%, a level higher than any but that of early 2007’s 47.7%). The dominance of the party is remarkable. Meciar’s HZDS on only one occasion–the election of September 1994 and the first poll immediately following–received preferences that were more than three times greater than its nearest opponent. The Smer’s current polling support is 3.5 times that of SDKU, and the average ratio between Smer and next largest party support over the past two years is 3.2.

UVVM+poll+data+ for +all+parties+ for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

While there is no questioning the party’s remarkable position, it is necessary to take at least one step back. Pravda‘s headline, for example, reported that “Smer approaches 50% @@@ but there is no evidence whether the current level is a more of a trend or a peak. Since 2007 each peak above 45% has been followed by a drop back near the 40% level, with no clear trend of overall rise or fall in the level of peaks and valleys. Nor is it clear that 45% support in the polls means 45% in elections, as some Smer activists have taken pains to point out to me. This is itself unusual, since party supporters–even those of HZDS at its peak in the mid-1990’s have often argued that polls under-estimated their party’s support. In this case, Smer’s very success has forced a certain amount of caution lest even an unprecedented electoral showing by the party be regarded as a “loss” because it failed to match the polls. The caution seems warranted in light of other surveys.

Averages of the “big three” surveys over the past two years smooth out the hypothesized levels of Smer support. On the one hand, these show a lower level of overall support: closer to 42% than 46%. On the other hand, unlike the UVVM figures, these actually show a steady, if moderate growth in Smer support over the last six months, and the current level of 42.6% for June 2008 is Smer’s highest ever “average” score for months which produced two or more surveys.
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Of course it is important to be wary of the “average” figure when looking for short-term trends since this figure depends on which polling firms report in a given month, and as regards Smer, polling firms find quite different results. The following table shows results for the “big three”: whereas in April 2008 these were nearly identical, in June 2008 the difference between UVVM (which has consistently produced the highest results for Smer, about 3 percentage points above the average) and MVK (usually somewhere in the middle, about 1% below the average) was huge: 8.2 percentage points. Put in perspective, this “Gap” in Smer results is larger than the entire electoral support of HZDS or KDH.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +Smer+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

Which of these polling firms is closest to the actual number, none can say. UVVM final poll results in both 2002 and 2006 were slightly less inaccurate than those of MVK or FOCUS%20%28t%29% (according to one mode of calculation, 17% versus 24% and 28% in 2002; 23% versus 28% and 33% in 2006), but final results for Smer were nearly identical among the big three. There is a chance that MVK records somewhat lower levels for Smer because the firm is the only one that explicitly includes on its list of choices Slovakia’s small Green Party (ZS) which might draw support away from Smer (with which ZS has signed a strategic cooperation agreement).

It is diffcult, however to translate these polling numbers into actual electoral results. In 2006 the final polls were not too far off, differing from the actual result by an average of 2 percentage points, but election campaigns make a difference and there was considerable motion in these polls in the month before elections.

Toward this end it may be relevant to point out that while Smer’s relative position compared to other parties has remained high and stable, its absolute position compared to the electorate as a whole has actually weakened somewhat since early 2007 because of a slowly rising share of voters who either have no preference or do not intend to vote. According to UVVM, this share has risen from 22.9% shortly after the election to 36.5% in the most recent survey. (UVVM changed its methodology for asking this question in mid-2007 but this does not appear to have changed the overall level by any significant margin). As a result, Smer’s share of the overall electorate has dropped from around 32% in the first half of 2007 to around 29% in the first half of 2008. Since other parties shares have of course dropped by similar percentages, this does not reflect a particular weakness in Smer, but the increasing level of indifference and fatigue opens the possibility of new dangers and new opportunities.

Other parties at half-time

As with Smer, the overall positions of other parties are relatively unchanged, not only from the previous month but from two years ago. The most recent data confirms the disappearance of the “two-tier” pattern separating SDKU and SNS from HZDS, MK and KDH but otherwise shows little major change.

UVVM+poll+data+ for +all+parties+except+Smer+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

Nor do these patterns differ from those of the immediate post-election period in 2006. Indeed, as the chart below shows the relative positions of the parties averaged for all polls for the first half of 2008 months are almost exactly the same as those of the last half of 2006. Nor are the absolute positions much different: SDKU varied slightly over time but ended up where it started (moving from 14.0% to 13.8%), SNS rose steadily but slightly (from 12.0% to 12.9%), SMK dropped steadily and slightly more (from 10.6% to 9.2%) as did HZDS (from 9.6% to 8.3%). Of the parliamentary parties other than Smer, only KDH showed any rise and even that was quite small (7.8% to 8.4%). Among the non-parliamentary parties there was also little change. KSS remained almost unchanged (falling slightly from 2.5% to 2.2%), as did HZD (shifting from 1.3% to 1.0%) and ANO (from 1.0% to 0.7%. Only SF dropped significantly (from 2.6% to 1.1%)

Multiple-poll+average+ for +all+parties+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

It is worth considering briefly the differences among polling firms on these parties. As with Smer, UVVM numbers for SDKU exceed the average on a consistent basis whereas FOCUS and MVK often show lower numbers. The difference between polls is smaller than that of Smer in absolute terms (around 1%-3% for SDKU compared to around 3%-9% for Smer) but this almost identical relative to the size of overall party preferences

Multiple-poll+average+ for +SDKU+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

For SNS differences are even smaller with no clear tendencies by any particular firm to poll consistently higher or lower than the average.
Multiple-poll+average+ for +SNS+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

For the Hungarian Coalition (MK), the most recent 3 months show higher survey numbers from UVVM than from other survey firms, but this follows on several months in which UVVM numbers were systematically lower. Because MK support should be more stable than that of other parties (given it’s close correlation to ethnicity), such shifts call attention to a potential change in survey networks, and suggest, by extension, that other parties may be similarly affected by hidden shifts in methodology or even in the composition of the survey network. Such shifts may actually have a greater effect than changes in actual preference.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +MK+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

As with SNS, HZDS shows relatively small differences among survey firms. The UVVM figure of more than 10% for April 2008 appears by this standard and by the standard of other polls before and after to be artificially high.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +HZDS+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

As with SDKU and Smer, KDH scores differer significantly according to the polling firm, with differences higher, on a relative basis, than for any other party (over 30% of the party’s average score). Here, however, it is FOCUS scores that are higher and UVVM scores that are lower. The overall averages, however, are remarkably stable.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +KDH+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

Among the non-parliamentary parties, the numbers are now so low as to prevent close analysis but it is worth noting that UVVM consistently produces lower scores for KSS than do other polls (UVVM’s numbers average around 1%; for FOCUS and MVK the average is around 3%-4%).

Multiple-poll+average+ for +KSS+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

For the other smaller parties, however, there is a far smaller difference, and indeed there is no room for difference since these parties regularly poll around 1%. Below you can find SF as an example, but HZD and ANO are not terribly different.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +SF+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

Government and opposition at half-time

The movements of various parties tend to cancel one another out such that by various reckonings, there has been little change in Slovakia’s overall political balance since late-2006. UVVM polling, in particular, shows an almost flat trendline from October 2006.

UVVM+poll+data+ for +coalition+support for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

As above, average polling shows a slightly lower level for the current coalition but also a slight positive trend.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +coalition+support for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

The composition of some of the tradeoffs is visible in the otherwise somewhat problematic assigning of parties to ‘blocs’. This shows, however, that the recent gains of Smer have been offset by losses among the “Slovak National” parties HZDS and SNS. The “Hungarian National” bloc and the “Right,” consisting of SDKU and KDH, remained stable (despite those parties’ internal struggles).
UVVM+poll+data+ for +party+'blocs'+ for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

Dividing the same data in a different way–according to the number of the parliamentary seats that a party might win–shows this tradeoff in an even clearer fashion. The key area of change here is the relative size of Smer’s orange compared to the combined brown of HZDS and dark green of SNS.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +estimated+party+seat+distribution for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

Of course it is important not to ignore the absolute levels either, and Smer’s dominance here is so significant that the party would remain well positioned even in the case of significant changes (which there have not been). Indeed, UVVM data shows Smer remarkably close to a one parliamentary majority (Meciar’s HZDS, at its popular height in 1992 obtained 74 seats, but much of that came on the basis of redistribution from the large number of parties fell just short of the parliamentary threshold.

UVVM+poll+data+ for +estimated+party+seat+distribution for the most recent +1+month+ in Slovakia

Even average preferences show Smer just 7 seats short of a parliamentary majority. Since the parliamentary threshold means that even the smallest party in Slovakia’s parliament, must have at least 7 seats, current polling numbers would amost guarantee a 2-party government dominated by Smer…

Multiple-poll+average+ for +estimated+party+seat+distribution for the most recent +1+month+ in Slovakia

Of course current polling numbers are only obliquely related to electoral results, especially those 2 years away. In a future post I hope to be able to take a look at half-time in previous electoral cycles.

April 2008: Poll Averages

Overall Monthly Report

FOCUS has just released its March and April numbers and as usual, not much has changed. Indeed the sheer absence of change makes me note (and regret) that I mentioned about an absence of change even in months with much bigger jumps. Though the various polls show some change (as this weekend’s post on poll comparisons should show), these average out to almost nothing.

2:|||2006||||||||||||2007|||||||||

As the bands above and below show, the “4 band” (Smer, SNS/SDKU, HZDS/SMK/KDH, all other parties) model continues. Not since November of 2006–over a year and half–has a party crossed the line from one of these groups to another. With regard to specific parties, (on which more later), it is worth noting only that HZDS has recovered from its dramatic drop earlier in the year and that despite major intra-party struggles and defections, none of the current opposition parties has seen its preferences alter in a meaningful way, suggesting, perhaps, that these parties have are relying only on their core support base, those who will not go anywhere else (except a new and compelling but otherwise programmatically identical party) no matter what happens.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +all+parties+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

If the current opposition parties have indeed fallen to their core, they can take little solace in the fact that that core gives them only 1/3 of Slovakia’s overall electorate, as the graphs below suggest.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +coalition+support for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

This long-term graph of poll results for coalition and non-coalition parties shows @@@

Multiple-poll+average+ for +coalition+support for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

The party “bloc” story is similar and actually reinforces the fact that among non-Hungarian voters, the support of the current opposition is no larger than support for the current coalition’s more nationally-oriented parties. Even if much of Smer’s currently unprecedent support consists of a large number of relatively passive voters who may change their minds before the next election, it is difficult to imagine any coalition that did not include the “left” or any coalition involving the “right” that did not involve either the “left” or parties from more than two blocs. That is not impossible to imagine–indeed it is a mainstay of Slovakia’s politics: Slovak National+Left (1992-1994, 1994-1998, 2006-) or Right+Hungarian National+Left (1994, 1998-2002)–but it underlines the exceptional nature of the 2002-2006 government (Right+Hungarian National).

Multiple-poll+average+ for +party+blocs+ for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

Multiple-poll+average+ for +party+blocs+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

Although the results meant a bit of reshuffling within opposition and coalition, the overall proportion of seats has remained highly stable in the last year (with the never-ending caveat that elections are different than polls).

Multiple-poll+average+ for +estimated+party+seat+distribution for the most recent +1+month+ in Slovakia

Multiple-poll+average+ for +estimated+party+seat+distribution for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

As always, the actual polling numbers are available online at Google Docs:
http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=pdhlCClsiyAMi39bLFpY_Zg

Below I attempt (for the first time) to insert these in tabular format (using “iframe” which may not work on all browsers).

UVVM April 2008

UVVM Monthly Report

A brief encounter between my computer and a falling hat-rack has led to a long hiatus in postings, but finally I have the processing capacity to post recent results. Not a lot of change, but enough to justify comment:

UVVM+poll+data+ for +all+parties+ for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

This overall long-term graph of poll results for UVVM shows little change in relative party positions, but this is actually rather significant given a variety of other changes that have occurred in the meantime: KDH has not lost support despite the departure of 4 key deputies; SDKU has not lost support despite bitter internal struggles; and Smer has lost support for two months running despite a series of successes at the parliamentary and policy level. Of course the changes (or the expect-able changes that didn’t happen) are relatively small and so could be obscured here by polling noise and so the next several months should help us discern the effects.

Also notable here is the recovery of HZDS from its lows at the beginning of the year, but there remains a substantial gap between the party and the next level. Whereas for many years the fortunes of parties crossed one another creating a confusing ebb and flow, for six months there have been four clear tracks, clusters of parties with no movement from one to the other: 40% (Smer), 14% (SDKU, SNS), 9% (KDH, SMK, HZDS) and 1% (everybody else, most notably KSS, SF, HZD and ANO), as the following graph shows in more detail.
UVVM+poll+data+ for +all+parties+except+Smer+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

The changes of the last two months have not had much effect on overall coalition-opposition share, however, as the following two graphs indicate.

UVVM+poll+data+ for +coalition+support for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

UVVM+poll+data+ for +coalition+support for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

To the extent that ‘blocs’ mean anything (and this is not always clear), Smer’s small drop has its counterpart in the slight rise of the right and Slovak national blocs, but this is almost imperceptible on the big graph and the ewest results take us back almost precisely to Autumn 2007.

UVVM+poll+data+ for +party+'blocs'+ for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

UVVM+poll+data+ for +party+'blocs'+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

The result is in practice the same as before: Smer can take its pick of coalition partner (though for the first time in over a year, there is a 2 party coalition that does not have a majority (the in-any-case unlikely combination of Smer and KDH). It is notable, however, that the decline led Sme to report that “Smer plus SNS have a comfortable majority” which several months ago was so clear that it did not even need reporting.

UVVM+poll+data+ for +estimated+party+seat+distribution for the most recent +1+month+ in Slovakia

UVVM+poll+data+ for +estimated+party+seat+distribution for the most recent +24+months+ in Slovakia

February 2008: Trends and Comparisons Revised, Now with MVK!

Trends and Comparisons Monthly Report

I missed the press release for MVK earlier this month and so I add its polls here with a few comments where MVK data actually changes anything. Because MVK results tend to stand between the other two surveys, the only major changes involve a gentle smoothing of trends:

Multiple-poll+average+ for +Smer+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

With MVK added the trend for Smer between December and February is almost flat and the final average closer to 40% than to 41%, but that’s not exactly earthshaking. On all 3 occasions MVK splits the difference between UVVM and FOCUS
Multiple-poll+average+ for +SDKU+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

This graph of recent polling results for SDKU shows no real difference with the addition of MVK: drop and then slight recovery. MVK jumps from side to side.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +SNS+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

MVK slightly dampens the loss-gain patten of SNS here.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +MK+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

This graph of recent results for MK shows even more stability with the addition of MVK data. As before, this data suggests that perhaps UVVM was not surveying a sufficient number of ethnic Hungarians, a problem that may have been fixed in the most recent UVVM poll.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +HZDS+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

Adding MVK to HZDS reveals a completely flat trend. MVK tends to show lower values for HZDS than do other polls.

Multiple-poll+average+ for +KDH+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

MVK data brings up the middle but there’s not much middle to bring up as the range is extremely narrow.
Multiple-poll+average+ for +KSS+ for the most recent +4+months+ in Slovakia

This graph of recent results for KSS shows no change because on all three occasions, the figure for KSS is the exact mathematical mean of the figures for UVVM and FOCUS.