![]() ![]() Results were weighted on gender, age and region to be nationally representative of the Turkish adult population based on the latest available census data. ![]() The poll surveyed 2,593 Turkish-language smartphone users based in Turkey who identified themselves as likely voters between Tuesday 4 – Thursday 6 April 2017. Qriously worked with journalist Michael Daventry to develop the survey questions and gave his website James in Turkey exclusive access to the weighted results. Qriously will be doing a final survey this time next week, two days before the referendum. There will be a flurry of polls coming over the next few days, including from Gezici – which will help establish whether its Yes lead was a statistical anomaly or a true change in voter intentions. The likeliest position right now seems to be that the Yes campaign has a statistically significant lead, but it is in the low-to-mid 50s, meaning it is vulnerable to change in the last week of campaigning. Ahead, but not in the bagīut the signs are that Yes is creeping ahead. Mr Erdoğan, for example, declined to discuss specifics during a Kanal 7 interview this week, saying only that Yes was building on its lead. There have been no other major polls this week, but the message from so many polling company directors appears to be the same: it’s close, very close. Gezici, a Turkish pollster that is certainly not pro-government, found a lead for the Yes campaign for the first time (although it was Gezici’s first survey since early February). Qriously’s extremely high Yes result last week – coming in above even the predictions from pro-government pollsters – caused a bit of a stir. That produced an expressed vote of YES 58.3 / NO 41.7, a swing of 3.1 percentage points from Yes to No.Īs ever before a Turkish election, the polling picture remains mixed. ![]() ![]() The topline figures – with changes from Qriously’s first poll last week – were YES 43.5 (-0.1) NO 31.1 (+3.7) UNDECIDED 25.4 (-3.6). The number of undecided voters remains a significant factor, however: a quarter of those polled said they had not made up their mind. The national poll of smartphone users produced another strong lead for the Yes campaign, which wants to grant sweeping executive powers to the country’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.īut the gap between the two camps was narrowing, the poll suggested, with Yes falling below the 60 percent threshold and No pushing above 40 percent. Over the last week more undecided voters in Turkey have opted to vote No rather than Yes in next weekend’s referendum, the second Qriously poll released to this website suggests. The results of Qriously’s second poll for this website, as others suggest a narrow advantage for Yes ![]()
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