Director politicscentre.nuffield.ox.a… | Co-Director @BESResearch | President @BritPollingCncl | Posting at bsky ...

Joined February 2010
128 Photos and videos
Jane Green retweeted
Makerfield would now vote to rejoin the EU – further evidence of why viewing British politics as frozen in 2016 is such an error.
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I had the good fortune to hear Michaela Amiekhai today at an event in Parliament and was very impressed. Wishing her great success!
“Can Social Media help save Democracy?” 🏅Congratulations to winner & runners up of our Student Blog Competition. 🌟 This year’s winner is 16 year old Michaela Amiekhai, from Harris Chobham Academy @harrisinstitute.bsky.social ➡️ Read winning blog buff.ly/FRTWayx
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Jane Green retweeted
Pro Andy Burnham tactical voting? In today's exclusive Sky-YouGov poll, it's striking just how much a difference Burnham seems to make. In this week's voting intention poll, Labour are 8 points behind Reform. But asked who you want to win in Makerfield - where the poll names Andy Burnham as the Labour candidate - Labour is ahead by 8 points. And amongst Northern voters, Labour is ahead by 16 points. Why? Look at this tactical voting / support switching. Amongst those who want Burnham to win Makerfield include: 16% current Tories 46% current Lib Dems 6% current Reform UK and 35% current Greens All of these say if there were an election tomorrow, they want another party to win but want a Burnham victory in Makerfield
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Jane Green retweeted
Hat off to you @AndyBurnhamGM
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Jane Green retweeted
The numbers tell a striking story: Right bloc (Reform Conservative): 43% Left/centre-left bloc (Labour Green Lib Dems): 51% The progressive majority is real but it’s fractured. Reform wins on 26% precisely because the anti-Reform vote is split four ways across parties that won’t coalesce. This is the core argument of the #WhyPopulistsAreWinning made vivid in a single set of numbers. Farage doesn’t need to build a majority. He just needs to be the biggest fragment in an era of fragmentation. The implication for Labour strategy is not a simplistic ‘shift left’ strategy but - Max unity of left bloc - Flip the tractable, centrist groups of voters seduced by Reform (Civic pragmatists / melancholy middle) - Keep the right divided.
We’ve released the BBC Projected National share based off the council results. Reform 26% Green 18% Labour 17% Conservative 17% Lib Dems 16% A clear but far from overwhelming victory for Reform, with everyone else clustered in a big lump behind them. Ultimate fragmentation.
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Jane Green retweeted
Have Reform UK replaced the Conservatives as the party on the right of British politics? Talking Politics with @Peston @tombradby and ITV’s seriously big brained election analysts @ProfJaneGreen and Colin Rallings m.youtube.com/watch?v=Euyrj_…
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Jane Green retweeted
The 10 charts that show how British politics could be about to change forever. Good explainer by the brilliant @ProfJaneGreen and my @itvnews colleagues youtube.com/watch?v=GvhI-56Q…
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I worry about this in the UK precisely because so many academics are no longer incredibly privileged. Short-term contracts and precarity abound at junior levels, poor working conditions/workloads, huge pressure and pay that hasn't kept anywhere up with inflation.
I don't think we (academics) realize how vulnerable we are. I'm not sure how much longer tenure will last in an era when a) we've lost the public trust (for a lot of reasons, b) college/academia is a partisan political issue, and c) college-educated white-collar workers are losing their jobs to AI. We are in an incredibly privileged position relative to others, but that privilege also makes us far more precarious than most academics realize bc it makes us a target--and the threat is not just conservative politicians gunning for us but the much larger group of regular people who don't mind if we get put in our place or start losing our jobs like similar others or being asked to do tasks we don't want to do.
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Jane Green retweeted
🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿“I want to wake up & not have to worry & go to sleep without having to worry” Spent the weekend in focus groups across south Wales from Cardiff to Merthyr, to Port Talbot & Pembroke Dock, above all else we heard deep pessimism about the state of Wales, the UK & the wider world
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Jane Green retweeted
This is a brilliant - bleak - piece about the broken local politics of Birmingham. First class on the ground reporting by @alexrogerssky @JoshGafson1 These pieces aren’t easy - you only get footage like this with skill, graft and luck - please watch:

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Jane Green retweeted
This is incredible. This machine is capable of cleaning up 100 million kg of plastic ocean waste, and as of 2025, it has already collected about 500,000 kg of plastic. It aims to remove 90% of ocean plastic by 2040.

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60% in the left-liberal bloc! Usual caveats and small sample. But if Reform win, that’s a massive left-split problem.
🚨 NEW: The latest Gorton and Denton by-election poll 🟢 GRN - 28% 🔴 LAB - 28% ➡️ REF - 27% 🔵 CON - 6% 🔶 LD - 4% ⚪ Other - 6% Via Opinium, 401 sample, 16–24 Feb
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Gorton and Denton is a fascinating insight into the structure that still underlies GB electoral politics. None of this is random or chaotic - it all makes total sense and reflects blocs coalescing or dividing based on viability and desirability! En mass in a GE.
Every by-election attracts attention, but Gorton and Denton is one of those rare by-elections where the word seismic might be useful, because it will have all sorts of narrative impacts: Here are some of different scenarios: Labour win: PM vindicated in Burnham block, things aren't as bad as they look in worst polls, greens aren't splitting the left vote as much, their GOTV still works, Macron strategy against Reform feasible. Maybe worst end of May avoidable. Reform win: Progressive tactical voting isn't organised enough to stop them, or is even counter productive to stopping Reform ~30% national polling could lead to big majority. Polarising candidates don't hurt. Further momentum heading into May. Green win: Polanski enthusiasm surge is real and can be turned into votes, huge swathes of normally reliable Labour vote (students and muslim voters in particular) are up for grabs - bodes well for London locals and beyond. Can't win here barrier weakened. But also the consequences of various losses is just as important: Labour lose with Greens 1st or 2nd: Macron strategy for Labour is blown out of the water, especially after Caerphilly, becomes really hard for Labour to say hold your nose to stop Reform as full-fat left version does better Reform lose: Tactical voting is a real barrier to Reform for second time in a row, will place a real premium on broadening tent beyond 30%. Maybe allows Tories to start making argument Reform are such drivers of TV only they can take on Labour. Is Advance hurting them at all? Greens come third: If Reform win allows Labour to point to them as spoilers in other contests, if Labour win shows they aren't eating into left vote anywhere near as much. Of course in reality there may only be a handful of votes between any of these scenarios so we shouldn't draw those conclusions, but that's not how by-election narratives work, placement matters.
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….”the price of putting a roof over your head and food on the table has tremendous electoral potency when people are struggling to do both. Zohran Mamdani may be a shiny new thing, but the moral of these elections is as old as the Appalachian mountains.”
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Jane Green retweeted
Another US story which may have escaped your attention….
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The journalists who cover the Pentagon had to choose today between signing a pledge that would make it impossible to do independent journalism and turning in their Pentagon press badges. Almost all of them turned in their badges and left the building.
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Jane Green retweeted
The ceasefire is on. The world’s media is in Israel and we have spent much time understanding the suffering of the hostage families. But the journalism in Gaza is being done only by surviving Palestinian journalists. The world’s media must be allowed into Gaza now to report the suffering there too. That wasn’t in the deal. We wait.
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The policies at CPC aimed at young people's savings are very interesting. They signal a) Conservatives have something to say to younger people (!), but also b) they have something to say to parents and grandparents deeply worried about younger generations. That's smart.
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