Also worth noting that the polling trajectory of the 'actually existing socially liberal centrist party' has been flatter than a pancake for the last year!
@zackgp94
Postdoctoral Researcher at the Nuffield Politics Research Centre (Uni of Oxford). I research public opinion and party competition in Europe. Especially interested in political implications of AI + tech change; ethnic fragmentation; the environment.
Also worth noting that the polling trajectory of the 'actually existing socially liberal centrist party' has been flatter than a pancake for the last year!
Please, please, please can you provide at least *some* evidence if you make these arguments:
a) Tories lost lots of votes to Lib Dems 2019-24
b) Voters Tories lost to LDs 2015-present are "liberal"
c) LD switchers more "open" to return to Tories than RUK switchers
d) Right-liberals are big % of pop
Will 'Your Party' still exist this time next year? Will it even outlast Change UK's record? (10 months, so c. July).
We also look at small sample of U.S. workers. Essentially no effects of AI exposure on demand for regulation in full U.S. sample, BUT higher support among liberals expecting personal harm. No such interaction in Britain. Makes sense: support for βbig govβ generally more widespread in Europe. 12/16
Panel model looks at new/updated exposure experiences on regulation support, controlling for prior attitudes/exposure. Suggest a short-term (reactive?) adjustment in demand for AI reg. in response to perceiving greater threats at work. So potential for demand for gov reg. to rise in future⦠11/16
Link between AI regulation support and obj. workplace exposure + subj. AI-pessimism robust to controls. Trad. automation (RTI) exposure, while widely used in polsci, does not predict attitudes. Note obj. AI exposure still predictive net of βsubjectiveβ beliefs about personal AI cost/benefitsβ¦ 10/16
Among those *feeling* pos / neg exposed, an interesting asymmetry. While net support highest among those saying AI worsens own job prospects (+59), there is no diff. between those expecting no impact (+38) vs. those expecting benefits (+41). Even AI optimists do not oppose idea of gov. reg. 9/16
But how important is personal AI job exposure? First, letβs look at support by quartiles of βobjectiveβ AI exposure. Net support rises from around +31 to +51 points from least (Q1) to most (Q4) exposed. Not much techno-libertarianism among those at AI forefront. Again, robust to D/P controls. 8/16
How popular is gov. regulation of AI in general? Quite! If we look at *all* British workers, net support (support minus opposition) rose from +35 to +43 points between Oct 2024 and Spring 2025 β though many people remain ambivalent/undecided. 7/16.
Workers arenβt clueless about likely AI impacts either. Use Felten et al. (2021) to map exposure of 364 jobs (from budget analysts to dancers), we find that ~50% of those in the most AI-exposed jobs (Q4) think itβll affect them v 1/5 in least-exposed (Q1). Robust to demog/polit (D/P) controls. 6/16
First: how do current workers *feel* that AI will affect them? Interestingly, while nearly half of workers think that it wonβt make a difference, rising numbers feel personally threatened by AI (from 23 to 28%, 2024-2025). Personal AI-optimists are a much smaller group (1-in-10 in all waves). 5/16
Ofc, AI could raise hiring/earnings through productivity gains. But currently highly uncertain, so crucial to see how the most affected perceive things + if potential AI βwinnersβ+βlosersβ are mobilising politically. Strong anti-AI coalition could make it harder to realise AIβs potential gains. 4/16
An important Q! Traditionally, tech replaced routine, working-class, non-graduate jobs. Now, the roles most exposed to AI β e.g. budget analysts, actuaries, graphic designers, paralegals β are professional. If econ. insecurity spreads to the middle classes, could upend politics. 3/16
We link data on what job tasks AI can actually do (from @edfelten.bsky.social and others) with new 2024β25 survey data on how British workers feel AI will affect them (good/bad/neither/DK). Then we see if both real and perceived exposure to AI shapes support for government regulation of AI. 2/16
To try to be restrained and persuasive:
1) Academic work (like most things) is of varying quality
2) There is an enormous leftward ideological skew to the lowest-quality work
3) 1 + 2 makes it hard for credentialed "expertise" to be credible even when most experts are good
How much credence do you give the theory that pollsters' samples of the youth electorate are fairly underrepresentative (even w/ common weights)? I've heard response rates among males without degrees under 30ish tend to be pretty abysmal, and you would expect those to be more right-leaning?
Very strong start to the conference!
Most interesting thing for me: a majority of Lib Dems back the sentiment, and almost half take no issue with the language. Supports @jamesbreckwoldt.bsky.social's research emphasising how poorly understood Lib Dem voters are. Not nec. true that Labour losses there are disaffected social liberals.
BJPolS abstract discussing the financial and political polarization, the support for government spending on welfare measures, and the struggles of younger individuals and families in managing economic hardships, possibly in the context of British assets and family-centric economical approaches.
NEW -
Family Matters: How Concerns about the Financial Wellbeing of Young Relatives Shape the Political Preferences of Older Adults - cup.org/3Gny1bz
- @zackgp94.bsky.social, @profjanegreen.bsky.social & Geoffrey Evans
#OpenAccess
Oldshoremore?