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Are election posters on bill boardings etc. for political parties effective

(8 Posts)
Romola Sun 23-Jun-24 21:25:25

You see Lib Dem posters and stakeboards because people who support the Lib Dems have thought about their values and made a decision. They are prepared to put time and their own money into working to make their views known, even though as a minority party they do not get much media coverage.

M0nica Sun 23-Jun-24 20:42:31

Door to door canvassing has almost ceased because so many of those whose doors are knocked on are so unpleasant to the canvassers and canvas returns are no longer the reliable guide to voting intentions that they used to be.

Also most parties have a far smaller group of active workers to call on in each constituency, regardless of party and they just do not have enough people to do door to door canvassing.

I am not sure that placards of themselves encourage people to vote for a particular party, at least not consciously, but I think when there is a sea of placards in a constituency of one particular party, I think people who are undecided, may well choose to vote for someone who they had been thinking of voting for, because they feel their vote will count.

This particularly applies to smaller parties like the Lib Dems. If you are thinking of voting Lib Dem but do not want to 'waste' your vote, seeing lots of placards for them may convince you that they are in with a fighting chance in that constuency so that it is worth voting for them.

Casdon I have noted exactly the phenomena you have noticed. All those fields that in the past always voted Conservative are now all voting for the Lib Dems.

So far travelling from Somerset to Cambridgeshire and DS having travelled down from York. The only signs you see are Lib Dem. I have seen them to many to count. Apart from that I have seen 2 Green Party placards and 1 Labour placard.

SueDonim Sun 23-Jun-24 20:35:12

I’ve only seen Tory billboards here, and only two of those. They probably think Social Media is more effective.

Last week we did have some canvassers at the door. At least, that’s what I initially thought they were - they turned out to be Jehovah’s Witnesses. 😂😂

Desdemona Sun 23-Jun-24 20:04:17

I wouldn't be influenced by one.

No boards, posters or anything else round my way. A couple of leaflets and no visits from anyone at all.

Why does nobody knock on doors? Is it because I live in a Labour 'safe seat' area - nobody sees the point in bothering?

AGAA4 Sun 23-Jun-24 19:52:04

I haven't seen any where I live and have only had a leaflet from one party.

Casdon Sun 23-Jun-24 19:48:36

I think they are a bit of a gauge for how people are feeling - the farmers around me were a sea of blue last time, now they are a sea of orange, so given the placards are every 100 yards or so in the fields they obviously want to influence people - whether it will work or not we will have to wait and see.

ginny Sun 23-Jun-24 19:34:55

Wouldn’t influence me.

25Avalon Sun 23-Jun-24 19:16:56

In our village someone has erected two for the Conservatives, whilst on the outskirts there are four for Labour. In central Somerset all you see are hoardings for the Liberal Democrat’s. It set me to thinking how effective they were. Do they really influence the way people vote? Just wondered. What do others think?