andrewducker: (Back slowly away)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2022-05-08 03:36 pm

A quick graph on Northern Ireland voting patterns

Lots of noise about "Look at Sinn Fein! The Republicans are coming!"

So I grabbed the numbers from Wikipedia all the way back to the first NI Assembly vote in 1998, and it's quite clear that the numbers for Republicanism in general have hardly nudged in the last 25 years. SF+SDLP goes back and forth over the 40% line by a point or two.

The real story is that Unionists are slowly moving to Alliance. It's taking a generation or three, and past performance is not a guarantee of future performance, but if you look at where the figures have gone, that's why SF has moved into first place - not because Republicanism has taken mindshare, but because enough people have decided that Unionism isnt for them.



You'll have to excuse the fairly constant 6-7% of "Unknown" at the bottom. I wasn't going to go through every tiny party from the last 25 years and work out whether their 0.7% of the vote was Republican, Unionist, or Other.

For the record - Republican is SF and SDLP, Unionist is DUP,UUP, PUP, and TUV, and Other is Alliance, Green, and People Before Profit (who I'm fairly sure are Other, but am happy to be told otherwise, although it won't make much difference to the graph shape.
danieldwilliam: (Default)

[personal profile] danieldwilliam 2022-05-08 10:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Did you get a sense of how much the relative fragmentation of the Unionist vote in NI impacted the number of seats they won overall?
danieldwilliam: (Default)

[personal profile] danieldwilliam 2022-05-09 11:04 am (UTC)(link)
Seems to be a bit of a fragmentation effect but more of an impact of the Traditional Unionist Voice being unpopular as a second and third choice.