Events
We regularly convene events, speak at conferences and deliver webinars, to share our latest insights and findings. Find out more about opportunities to hear about our research below.
We regularly convene events, speak at conferences and deliver webinars, to share our latest insights and findings. Find out more about opportunities to hear about our research below.
With polling day just around the corner, More in Common has published its final MRP projections and polling for elections across Britain.
More in Common’s comprehensive briefing ahead of the elections sets the scene ahead of votes across Scotland, Wales and England. Revealing new MRP models for Scotland, Wales and London, polling across England and insights from focus groups conducted across Britain, we’ll be looking at the factors driving the vote, offering guidance on interpreting the results, and looking at the implications for the future of British politics.
With days until London goes to the polls, More in Common’s first ever London MRP finds Labour holding their lead in the capital, but with a series of traditional strongholds under siege from Zack Polanski’s Green Party. Reform, meanwhile, are set to make gains at the Conservative’s expense in outer London.
With less than a week to go until the Senedd elections, More in Common’s latest projection finds a tightening race – Plaid Cymru and Reform UK are tied on Senedd seat estimates, while Labour’s vote share is being squeezed in all directions. The MRP model finds that even with Labour and Plaid Cymru in coalition, they could still be just short of a majority.
As the race enters its final days, More in Common’s latest Holyrood projection finds the SNP gaining ground – but still falling short of a majority. Meanwhile, Labour falls back further, facing a potentially historic defeat. With nearly a fifth of Scottish voters still undecided and five marginal seats separating the SNP from a majority, the result remains highly uncertain.
More in Common’s first Senedd MRP model suggests that the 2026 Senedd election will reshape Welsh politics.
Our first Scottish MRP projects that the SNP will remain the largest party in Holyrood – but squeezed on all sides and short of a majority. Meanwhile Reform UK is on track to break through North of the border for the first time.
On the day that the results were announced, More in Common held three focus groups with Green, Labour and Reform to understand what drove the outcome and what it means for Britain’s changing politics.
More in Common’s new MRP projects a Reform UK majority if a General Election were held today. Based on polling of more than 16,000 Britons, the model estimates that Reform would take 381 seats – with Labour and the Conservatives fighting for second place.
More in Common’s new MRP projects a Reform UK majority if a General Election were held today. Based on polling of nearly 20,000 Britons, the model estimates that Reform would take 373 seats with Labour reduced to double digits.
More in Common’s new MRP projects Reform UK would be in touching distance of a majority if the General Election were today. Based on polling of over 10,000 Britons, the model estimates that, Reform UK would be the largest party with 290 MPs – more than twice as many as any other party.
In one of the first major electoral tests of the new parliament, More in Common’s research suggests that Britain’s new era of multi-party politics has put the mayoral elections on a knife edge. Based on polling and focus groups across all four mayoralties, the research highlights a public mood of widespread disillusionment, and the fragmentation of politics across the country.
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