Reports

August 2024
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31
A Monthly Income Breakdown of Political Party Support in South Africa
This report investigates political party support in South Africa across different monthly income brackets. It does so via two different charts. The first chart measures what share of people in a monthly income bracket vote for a particular political party. The second chart measures what share of the support of a particular political party comes from a particular monthly income bracket. The data in the report is drawn from a survey of 7 196 demographically and geographically representative registered voters conducted in April and May 2024. That survey had a margin of error of 2%.
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July 2024
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30
Trump Takes Vast Lead in American Election Race
This report is the second in a series tracking the political race in America ahead of that country's November 2024 presidential election. The data is drawn from a wide cross-section of polling organisations.
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July 2024
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29
South African Public Opinion on Energy Policy
This report investigates the energy policy preferences of registered South African voters. The data in the report is drawn from a survey of 1 512 demographically and geographically representative registered voters conducted in March 2023. That survey had a margin of error of 5%.
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June 2024
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28
A Home Language Breakdown of Party Political Support in South Africa
This report investigates political party support in South Africa across different home language groups. It does so via two different charts. The first chart measures what share of people in a particular home language group vote for a particular political party. The second chart measures what share of the support of a particular political party comes from a particular home language group. The data in the report is drawn from a survey of 7 196 demographically and geographically representative registered voters conducted in April and May 2024. That survey had a margin of error of 2%.
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June 2024
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27
An Age Breakdown of Party Political Support in South Africa
This report investigates political party support in South Africa across different age groups. It does so via two different charts. The first chart measures what share of people in a particular age group vote for a particular political party. The second chart measures what share of the support of a particular political party comes from a particular age group. The data in the report is drawn from a survey of 7 196 demographically and geographically representative registered voters conducted in April and May 2024. That survey had a margin of error of 2%.
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June 2024
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26
Support for an ANC/DA Coalition
This report examines the support amongst ANC and DA voters for an ANC/DA coalition. The data in the report comes from 3 previous Foundation surveys conducted in July 2022, October 2023 and April 2024. These surveys had sample sizes ranging from 1 412 to 3 204 and margins of error that ranged from 1.7% to 5%. The data demonstrates that there is considerable support amongst ANC and DA voters for the parties to enter into coalition as a government of national unity.
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May 2024
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25
Projection of the May 29 2024 Election Results for the ANC and the DA
This report is a projection that was produced by the Foundation of the likely final election result after voting had concluded and the vote count had commenced. In each of the 3 charts below the trendline of the Foundation's tracking poll in the month ahead of the election is shown to the point where it concluded together with a Foundation projection of the final result conducted after vote counting had got underway.
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May 2024
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24
Estimating the South African Election Result
This report estimates the May 29 South African general election results. It does so via inferring from the Foundation's tracking poll the trajectory of each key political party in the week ahead of the election and applying to that trajectory the margin of error of the poll plus an additional 1 percentage point (the extra point is to account for the continuing volatility we see in the most recent political data). In the charts below three lines are produced for each political party. The blue line is the figure towards which that party was tracking in the final week ahead of the election. The black line is the likely upper extreme towards which the party was tracking once the poll's margin of error was applied. The orange line is the likely lower extreme towards which the party was tracking once the poll's margin of error was applied (on the 58% and 60% turnout model charts for the ANC and the DA you will see a fourth, green line which is the projection of the final result that the Foundation developed after voting concluded). Be warned that in the final days before an election it may be customary to see tracking poll lines flatten as political opinion crystalizes. This has not happened in the case of this election for the reason that ANC voter opinion is so fractured on the fringes of that party that a share of voters continue to ping pong between the ANC and the EFF, MK and the DA in the main. This fractured ANC support has been a key insight generated by the tracking poll but necessarily diminishes the predictive qualities of the poll. At the Foundation we continue to see the media misreporting polling as forecasting. We must stress that in this election particularly significant swings in voter sentiment, even beyond the margins of error, will make it very difficult for any entity to call the result with precision.
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May 2024
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23
Could The ANC Still Reach 50+1%?
This report explores a potential route to an ANC majority in the South African elections that will take place later this week. The case for an ANC majority rests on four insights. The first is that in both 2022 and 2023 the Foundation polled ANC support at a relatively stable near 50% mark – and on occasions even slightly above that. It was only the 2024 introduction of the MK party into the election that changed this driving ANC support into the mid- and even lower-40 percentiles (as MK support rose to just over 10%). The second is that after hitting a low point of near 40% roughly six weeks ago ANC support lifted steadily to break through the 45% mark about 10 days ago as the ANC campaign machine got into full swing (a long established phenomenon of South African elections). ANC support was subsequently driven downwards again by the joint events of the government’s NHI announcement and the Constitutional Court judgment that Mr Zuma was unfit to stand for parliament (an event that drove support for Mr Zuma’s MK party sharply upwards). The ANC has since held its final (successful) rally in Johannesburg and also commandeered the state broadcaster to address the nation and both of these actions should lift its support levels by an extent that the Foundation’s tracking poll may not fully digest ahead of the vote. The third is that the MK party is a new phenomenon and that its growth is carried by sentiment, which may be fickle, whilst the KwaZulu-Natal province, which serves as its home base, is difficult to poll. Trendlines of the past week have continued to put MK party support levels at just upwards of 10%. Whether MK will be able to turn out the vote to secure something approximating that number is a key uncertainty of this election around which the question of a surprise ANC majority pivots. The fourth is that trendlines for the DA and EFF at upwards of 20% and near 10% respectively are in line with their established numbers of several past elections. A minority call therefore, of the Foundation, is that if MK support flounders on the day of the vote to something near 5% to 7% that will free up around 5% of the vote, the bulk of which should flow back to the ANC and may thereby be sufficient to drive its final number to just over 50%. Whilst it is not probable, it therefore remains plausible, that the ANC may secure a majority. In the charts below the Foundation has compared and contrasted ANC and MK support numbers through May to demonstrate how MK underperformance may deliver an ANC majority.
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