Now that Elections Canada has released poll-by-poll data from the 2019 election, it's time to create some maps.
In the replies, I will post (E-W) maps of various cities and regions, and off each city/region,
I will post other replies showing that city/region over time. #elxn43
@RealAlbanianPat This is a small (and slow) Shiny app that explored these results following the redistribution a couple of years ago:
https://t.co/qtZi7vsiKy
@ryanburge Is this controlling for age? Higher education rates have risen over time. "High school only" often means older/elderly, which could also correlate with health issues requiring them to stay home and therefore participate online.
@starsandrobots I think I originally followed you for your commentary around tech, but I'm also finding your parenting posts to be as good (there was another a week or two back that I saw, too). It's great you can be multidimension in your writing.
@wyatt_claypool Increase the deposit amount, and only return the deposit if the candidate obtains, say, 5% of the vote: doesn't restrict candidates but will probably fix the problem.
@TubeMapCentral I don't think you follow me, so I think it would make little change. I don't post much, I don't seek out followers, and I follow accounts with content I want to see, rather than looking for accounts that might boost my virtually non-existent engagement.
@Maggie_Perry6 It looks to me like the outer-suburbs had a bigger swing than the inner-suburbs.
Western Sydney vs Sydney, Grayndler, Wentworth and Kingsford-Smith.
Bonner, Moreton, Oxley, Rankin, Forde vs Brisbane, Griffith, Lilley.
Adelaide is an exception. Perth is middle suburbs.