By Tim Montgomerie
Follow Tim on Twitter
Labour has a 41% to 32% overall lead in Lord Ashcroft's
latest mega opinion poll of more than 8,000 voters but Cameron has a 48%
to 40% lead over Ed Miliband when the respondents were asked who would
make the best PM.
Those are the headline findings of a poll rich in detail. Entitled 'Project Red Alert' Lord Ashcroft writes about the strategic dilemma facing Ed Miliband on this morning's Comment pages:
"He can either make clear to his supporters that there will be no return to the days of lavish spending, or he can fight an election knowing that most voters do not believe Labour have learned their lessons, and that many of his potential voters fear Labour would once again borrow and spend more than the country can afford."
But there is also plenty for the Tories to benefit from in this huge survey. Over on LeftWatch I've listed five big weak points in Labour's electoral position.
Here are ten other key findings from the report:
(1) Voters prefer idea of Red-led government to Blue-led government… 56% would like to see Labour in power in some form and only 44% would like to see the Conservatives in office (on their own or in coalition with the Lib Dems).
(2) …despite the fact that more than half of voters say Labour can't be trusted with power again! More than half of voters 52% surveyed by Lord Ashcroft say "Labour have not yet learned the right
lessons from what
went wrong during their time in government, and cannot
yet be trusted to run the country again". 48% think Labour have learnt
the right lessons from their defeat (35%) or didn't have any lessons to
learn (13%).
(3) Cameron still ahead on prime ministerial qualities… On six measures of prime ministerial qualities (representing Britain in international negotiations, making unpopular but necessary decisions, clarity of agenda, ability to lead a team and overall skills) David Cameron beats Ed Miliband. The Labour leader has a 63% to 37% advantage in the one area of understanding ordinary people.
(4) Overall, Ed Miliband remains a substantial drag on his party's fortunes: 40%
feel more favourable to Labour than to Ed Miliband and just 9% feel more
favourable to Ed Miliband than to Labour.
(5) …But Labour brand stronger than Tory brand: 49% think Labour is the
party that most wants to help ordinary people
get on in life compared to just 24% thinking the same of the
Conservatives (or the Liberal Democrats). 39% think the Labour Party is
"on the side of ordinary people" compared to 27% who think that of the
Conservative Party. On only one quality are the Conservatives ahead –
"willing to take tough decisions
for the long term" – by 48% to 28%.
(6) Tories still more trusted on the economy but only narrowly: By 53% to 47% Cameron and Osborne are preferred over Miliband and Balls "to manage the
economy in the best interests of Britain".
(7) The two parties appear to be level-pegging when it comes to competence… 30% of
voters see Labour as "competent and capable" – exactly the same as for
the Conservatives.
(8) …But voters thing nearly everything would have been worse if Labour had been in power. Asked if they thought key areas of national performance would have been better or worse if Labour had been in power over recent years, rather than the Coalition, voters think things would have been worse in most key areas of public policy:
(9) The Liberal Democrats' numbers are dreadful throughout the poll. Lord Ashcroft is one of the people least willing to write off Clegg's party. Only yesterday, in his much-reported memo to Lynton Crosby, "people in Lib Dem-held constituencies are much more likely to say they will stay with the party". Nonetheless the poll pours cold water on any idea that the Lib Dems have won serious economic credibility from joining the Coalition government. One question, in particular, stands out. 46% say the Tories have the best overall approach to dealing with the economy. The Labour number is 42%. The Lib Dems are way down on just 12%.
(10) Boris Johnson is the
politician that voters feel most positively towards. On a scale of zero to ten (where zero equals most negative and ten is most positive) David Cameron scored 4.69 compared to 4.55 for the Labour leader.
Boris at 5.99 was the only politician named who got more than halfway
up the scale with more voters feeling, on the whole, positively towards
him than felt negatively. William Hague came second with a 4.94 average ranking.
The poll was conducted nearly one month ago – between 17th and 28th October but its headline finding of a 9% lead matches today's daily YouGov tracker poll.
Go to Lord Ashcroft polls for more detail.