Matt Goodwin Profile picture
Feb 14 18 tweets 7 min read
What's happening to Boris Johnson's support? A thread based on a talk I gave last week
1. Since coming to power the Conservative's share of the vote has declined from almost 50% to 32%. While it was partly supported by the vaccine rollout, it has now entered new decline. Were an election held 2mrw Labour would be largest party albeit short of majority
2. Much of this is about people who voted for Boris johnson in 2019 walking away. Since early 2020, support among 2019 Conservatives has crashed by 20 points with a particularly sharp drop since #partygate
3. These losses are especially visible among the Brexit voters who voted for Johnson in 2019 to 'Get Brexit Done'. Johnson has lost support among Conservative Remainers but they are a much smaller part of his new electorate. His support among Leavers is now down nearly 20 pts
4. This helps to explain why the Conservatives strength among the (mainly pro-Brexit) working-class in 2019 has been steadily draining -who were key to dismantling the Red Wall. Support among workers for the Conservatives is down by approx. 15 pts. Labour are now pulling ahead
5. One side effect of all this is the sharp rise in the share of 2019 Conservative voters who have either drifted back into apathy, who now say they will not vote at all at the next election, or who have switched to Reform. The former is a much bigger group than the latter.
6. In fact, overall, the % of 2019 Conservatives who have drifted away has increased more than three-fold to almost 40%. When squeezed, many still say they will vote Con to keep Lab out of power but as in 2015, 2017, 2019 they will need to be given a reason to come back
7. Key to that is the fact that their priorities have changed. Two years ago, when Johnson came to power, it was all about Brexit. Today, for Conservative voters, it is all about the economy, immigration & health.
8. But on all of these core issues there are now v real challenges for Boris Johnson. Even on Brexit, which has been delivered, while few of ALL voters think it is being managed "well", the share of Conservatives who think so is also now down by about 10 points
9. There is also a little bit of evidence of a creeping "Bregret" among Conservatives. While the share of ALL voters who think we were "right to Leave the EU" is broadly static, the share of Conservatives who think we were right to Brexit is down by almost 10 points
10. But immigration is a MUCH bigger problem for Johnson. Since Brexit, the share of Leavers who think that gvt managing immigration "badly" has rocketed to 76%. A highly salient issue which Johnson's core voters are v unhappy with.
11. Because of this, all of the work the Conservatives put in to winning back the ownership of the immigration issue from UKIP & then the Brexit Party is gone. Among Leavers, their core voters, they are no longer seen as the preferred party on immigration
12. Alongside this is rapidly rising disillusionment with how the government is managing the economy as we enter a cost of living crisis & tax rises. Among all voters & Leavers a majority now say the economy is being badly run while over 40% of Conservatives now share this view
13. Within this, there has also clearly been a shift in the minds of Conservative voters about tax & spend. Today, for the first time since Boris Johnson came to power, a plurality now say we are taxing too much and spending too much on public services
14. And while Levelling-Up is not a salient issue for voters (vs economy, health, migration), it's worth noting that while most say they do not know what Levelling-Up means, the Leavers who concentrate in these areas are not convinced it is bringing Cons closer to the north
15. Put all of this together -economy, tax, immigration, levelling up- and it helps to explain why a rising number of Conservatives no longer think their government has a clear sense of PURPOSE. The % who think it does has crashed from 82% in the spring of 2020 to just 36% today
16. Boris Johnson is clearly at the centre of this. As he reboots his premiership he faces a rising number of his own Conservative voters who have concluded that he is incompetent. In the spring of 2020 only 31% thought so; now, 64% do.
17. And whatever he does to tackle these core problems he will have to do them very quickly because many of his core voters -ahead of crunch local elections in the Red Wall in the spring- are clearly losing patience /ends

-data via YouGov & my own

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More from @GoodwinMJ

Jan 16
A short thread on our new report on academic freedom in four democracies which will be of interest to researchers, journalists, politicians & policymakers
#highered
Academic freedom -the ability of scholars to research, voice & teach ideas without fear of negative consequences- has long been central to prosperity, innovation, dynamism. Exposing students to different ideas is also central to developing well-rounded, critical thinkers
But recent years have seen growing international concern about threats to academic freedom. Prominent cases (e.g. Jordan Peterson, Kathleen Stock, Noah Carl, Peter Boghossian etc.) + recent studies suggest this core freedom is being challenged/under threat on multiple fronts
Read 20 tweets
Jan 13
If Johnson goes, the realignment goes
What do I mean by this? For the last 20 yrs, Britain (& other Western states) has been in an unfolding political realignment -an enduring shift in people's political loyalties which is mainly rooted in their education, age and above all their cultural values
It is helpful to think about realignments in terms of structure & agency, the underlying structural change which bring them about (education, class, age, etc.) but also the agents who mobilise them into politics (leaders, movements, etc.)
Read 14 tweets
Dec 10, 2021
How Boris Johnson's electorate is starting to unravel. A short thread 1/?
Almost 2 yrs ago to the day Johnson won the largest majority for any Conservative since 1987. He did so by pushing through the realignment of British politics, reshaping the Conservative vote around Leavers. He promised 3 things. Brexit. Strong borders. A levelled up country.
His victory was emphatic. He won 76% of Leavers (& a not insignificant 26% of Remainers). And in the early months of his premiership he retained almost all of them, holding over 90% of his 2019 coalition together
Read 14 tweets
Oct 11, 2021
Intellectual and academic freedom in Britain and other Western nations. A thread where I will compile ongoing pieces of research & cases as they are released 1/?
Full disclosure. I have publicly stated that I think this is a serious issue, I have given evidence to (UK) parliament on it & I support the UK Higher Education & Academic Freedom Bill. I appreciate people have different views but such a thread might be useful.
Once Cambridge academics are allowed to vote anonymously & not publicly, the vast majority of them reject proposals to insist students & staff be ‘respectful’ of opposing views in favour of being "tolerant"
spectator.co.uk/article/cambri…
Read 34 tweets
Sep 27, 2021
"Gina Miller to launch a new anti-Brexit party". Have people learned nothing from Change UK? And does Labour really need ANOTHER party splitting it's vote? Hard to avoid the conclusion that this is more about ego than Britain.
Labour is currently losing 15-20% of its 2019 vote to an assortment of Lib Dems, Greens, Plaid, etc. Lavishing the Brahmin graduate left with yet another cosmopolitan anti-Brexit party will only weaken their cause 1/2
2/2 this will likely be magnified by the absence of Brexit Party alternative in 2023/24. If you strip away Brexit Party candidates from 2019 election Boris would probably have majority over 100. Ppl forgetting this. Realignment could still easily smash Lab & warring progressives
Read 4 tweets
Sep 8, 2021
This is what leaning left on the economy and leaning right on culture looks like. It is a new era in British politics.
Johnson's premiership has so far delivered Brexit, reformed migration, shifted conversation to levelling up & presided over massive expansion of state. New measures will now see tax burden rise to 35%-ish of gdp by 2023/24, highest level since 1940s.
Contrary to old left v right, much of this will sit well among cross pressured voters who lean left on econ, want bigger state, & right on culture, back Johnson/Brexit/Britain. Is especially important group for Johnson coalition & also many more in Red Wall 2.0.
Read 4 tweets

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