🇬🇧🇮🇳 1/ Today, we are releasing a detailed, new study on the political attitudes of British Indians. The Indian diaspora in the United Kingdom is now the largest immigrant group in the country. Yet, we know far too little about their political attitudes. bit.ly/3HwOPZF
2/ This report—by @CEDuckworth21, Devesh Kapur, and me—draws on a new, nationally representative survey of nearly 800 British Indian eligible voters conducted w/ @YouGov in August 2021. The survey has an overall margin of error of +/- 3.5 percent.
3/ This report provides an empirically robust and analytically nuanced picture of the attitudes of this increasingly important demographic. Some of our top-line findings follow:
4/ British Indians demonstrate a modest preference for the Labour Party, but the latter’s historical advantage has eroded. Around 4 in 10 British Indians identify with @UKLabour, while 3 in 10 support the @Conservatives.
5/ If a snap election were held tomorrow, British Indians could be important swing voters. Among British Indians, Labour enjoys an advantage over the Conservatives in a hypothetical general election, but a significant minority is undecided.
6/ Related data from the British Election Study (@BESResearch) suggests that there is a clear deterioration in British Indians’ support for the Labour Party. However, while Labour has lost ground over the last decade, the Conservatives have not consistently been the beneficiary.
7/ Further, British Indian voters are polarized on religious grounds. A majority of Muslim and Sikh respondents would support Labour in a snap election. But, a plurality of Christians and Hindus reports a preference for the Conservatives.
8/ While respondents do not necessarily perceive a clear partisan advantage in the overall representation of British Indian interests, religion again serves as a dividing line. Indians of different faiths disagree on which party is “closer” to the British Indian community.
9/ In terms of leadership, British Indians are dissatisfied with @BorisJohnson. In a hypothetical general election, Labour leader @Keir_Starmer emerges as the most popular PM choice, followed closely by @RishiSunak. Home Secretary @pritipatel rates poorly.
10/ British Indians are preoccupied with the state of the economy and healthcare. Amid an unprecedented pandemic, British Indians are primarily motivated by kitchen table issues. The only other pressing issue that ranks highly is the environment/climate change.
11/ It would be an exaggeration to state that views on Modi shape the voting behavior of British Indians. At the same time, the data suggest that views on Modi are highly polarized with Conservatives and Hindus demonstrating greater support for his job performance
12/ There’s much more in the report than can fit in one thread. Here’s a link to the full report: bit.ly/3HwOPZF. (There is a very short executive summary for those who simply want the greatest hits). Huge thanks to our @CarnegieEndow team for making this come to life.
1/ Some interesting insights from latest JP Morgan note on COVID crisis in India.
First, while aggregate *reported* cases have stabilized at 350K, seeing a rotation in states (test positivity rates in MH, CH, MP stabilizing while WB, UP, DL rising) markets.jpmorgan.com/research/email…
2/ Ashley J. Tellis' piece on US-India is well worth reading (as always). Key takeaway: "Trump’s defeat produced palpable uncertainties in New Delhi. One hundred days into Biden’s presidency, these doubts have not been erased, but they have been allayed." carnegieendowment.org/2021/04/27/wel…
3/ On the recent COVID brouhaha, Tellis writes: "Despite early fumbles, the administration’s support for India in managing its current spike in COVID-19 cases will hopefully deflate the unjustified complaints about the U.S. DPA being the principal cause of India’s vaccine woes."
1/ I've been helplessly watching the humanitarian crisis unfold in India. Friends' anxiety has turned to distress. Distress has turned to panic. Smart people in the US govt are working behind the scenes to help. But it's time for private deliberation to turn into public action.
2/ I'm no expert on public health or humanitarian crises, but I think there are at least four key elements of a response. First, we need to see senior U.S. leadership express solidarity with the Indian people. To Indians and Indian Americans, empathy will be welcome.
3/ Second, the US has the capacity to provide oxygen, ventilators, medication & emergency supplies. The public sector can galvanize private support. If the optics of the US Defense Dept delivering relief is problematic, there are other workarounds, including via 3rd countries.
As is this para on judicial evasion: challenges to important constitutional cases--abrogation of 370, EWS reservations, Aadhaar Act, etc.--remain pending indconlawphil.wordpress.com/2021/04/23/eva…
1/ As a Washington, DC resident for the better part of two decades, I experienced a visceral reaction to the events of January 6. Here's my attempt in @htTweets to make sense of them hindustantimes.com/opinion/americ…
2/ I think there are, for me, 4 big takeaways. First, the Trump era serves as a vivid illustration that institutions are ultimately only as strong as the social norms that underpin them, and the individuals who mobilise to support them hindustantimes.com/opinion/americ…
3/ Second, democratic accountability cannot be limited to the ballot box alone. Desperate talk of the need to protect the country from Trump to avoid further chaos in his final days only underlines the series of missed opportunities to hold him to account. hindustantimes.com/opinion/americ…