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Pattie, Charles, Johnston, Ron and Rossiter, David (2020) Repealing the Fixed-Term Parliaments Act is a tidying-up exercise, not a major constitutional change. British Politics and Policy at LSE (19 Feb 2020), 1 - 3. Blog Entry.
Johnston, Ron, Jones, Kelvyn, Manley, David, Pattie, Charles, Hartman, Todd K. and Rossiter, David (2018) General election polling goes geographical: the accuracy and value of constituency-level estimates. Democratic Audit Blog (06 Jun 2018). Blog Entry.
Johnston, Ron, Jones, Kelvyn, Manley, David, Pattie, Charles, Hartman, Todd K. and Rossiter, David (2018) General election polling goes geographical: the accuracy and value of constituency-level estimates. British Politics and Policy at LSE (30 May 2018). Website.
Johnston, Ron, Pattie, Charles and Rossiter, David (2017) How UKIP’s election strategy is boosting Theresa May’s chances of a big majority. Democratic Audit UK (29 May 2017). Website.
Johnston, Ron, Pattie, Charles and Rossiter, David (2017) The case of the missing marginals: how big will May’s majority be? Democratic Audit UK (25 Apr 2017). Website.
Johnston, Ron, Pattie, Charles and Rossiter, David (2015) Ensuring equal representation in Parliament: who counts? British Politics and Policy at LSE (20 Jul 2015). Website.
Johnston, Ron, Pattie, Charles and Rossiter, David (2015) There are fewer people registered to vote in 2015 than there were in 2010: is that to Labour’s advantage? British Politics and Policy at LSE (02 Apr 2015). Website.
Johnston, Ron, Pattie, Charles and Rossiter, David (2014) Translating Votes into Seats. British Politics and Policy at LSE (10 Dec 2014). Website.
Johnston, Ron, Pattie, Charles and Rossiter, David (2013) In Depth: The Conservatives will suffer electorally from the Liberal Democrats’ revenge over failure to support House of Lords reform. British Politics and Policy at LSE (01 Mar 2013). Website.
Johnston, Ron, Pattie, Charles and Rossiter, David (2011) The re-vamped public inquiries currently changing Westminster constituency boundaries in record time (across the whole of the UK) keep power firmly in the hands of the biggest political parties, and not the general public. British Politics and Policy at LSE (07 Dec 2011). Website.