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1 Edita Birnkrant and Tracy Winston: The Horse Who Collapsed in the Street 37:03
John Curtice: is tribal politics dead?
Manage episode 424728199 series 3581000
Do political "tribes" still matter, or do voters pick-and-mix their political preferences?
Armando and Ailbhe Rea are joined by the legendary polling expert, John Curtice, and former Labour defector Shaun Woodward, to explore the importance of demographics in understanding voting intention and whether identity politics really does sway voters.
Guests
John Curtice is professor of politics at Strathclyde University and the resident polling expert on the BBC's coverage of general elections from 2005-2017.
Shaun Woodward is a former Labour minister who defected to the Conservatives in 1999. He now chairs the Human Dignity Trust, an international LGBT charity.
Ailbhe Rea was political correspondent at the New Statesman until 2022, and was a regular co-host of the New Statesman podcast.
--
This episode was originally published in the New Statesman podcast feed on May 4, 2022.
Listen to the New Statesman podcast here: https://podfollow.com/new-statesman
Subscribe to the New Statesman for full access to all our reporting and analysis.
Get your first month free: www.newstatesman.com/30daytrial
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
20 episoder
John Curtice: is tribal politics dead?
Armando Iannucci: Westminster Reimagined | a New Statesman podcast
Manage episode 424728199 series 3581000
Do political "tribes" still matter, or do voters pick-and-mix their political preferences?
Armando and Ailbhe Rea are joined by the legendary polling expert, John Curtice, and former Labour defector Shaun Woodward, to explore the importance of demographics in understanding voting intention and whether identity politics really does sway voters.
Guests
John Curtice is professor of politics at Strathclyde University and the resident polling expert on the BBC's coverage of general elections from 2005-2017.
Shaun Woodward is a former Labour minister who defected to the Conservatives in 1999. He now chairs the Human Dignity Trust, an international LGBT charity.
Ailbhe Rea was political correspondent at the New Statesman until 2022, and was a regular co-host of the New Statesman podcast.
--
This episode was originally published in the New Statesman podcast feed on May 4, 2022.
Listen to the New Statesman podcast here: https://podfollow.com/new-statesman
Subscribe to the New Statesman for full access to all our reporting and analysis.
Get your first month free: www.newstatesman.com/30daytrial
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
20 episoder
Alla avsnitt
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1 Ash Sarkar and Ian Dunt: What's gone wrong with political journalism in the UK? 50:01

1 Richard Layard: Why don't politicians care about happiness? 35:16

1 Alistair Campbell: are prime ministers too powerful? 32:35

1 Jon Stewart: has the Special Relationship turned sour? 44:27

1 Whipped into shape: is politics just a game to MPs? 40:02

1 John Curtice: is tribal politics dead? 38:20

1 Dominic Grieve: Britain's ramshackle constitution 38:53

1 Parliament: the ultimate old boy's club? 41:09

1 Paul Mason & Anna Soubry: how to disagree 34:32

1 Chris Addison: Is Westminster withering? 30:28

1 XR & Louise Casey: how to make real change 32:11

1 Ian Hislop: Britain's political accountability crisis 31:42
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