The latest estimates of General Election voting intent from IHP’s SLOTS MRP model (revised 01/2024) show SJB and NPP/JVP leading with 34% and 32% of voters’ support, respectively, followed by the SLPP with 13%, the UNP with 7%, and ITAK with 5% in July 2024. Voting intentions in July have not changed substantially compared to the previous month. The July estimates are provisional and carry a margin of error of 2–3% for the two leading parties.
Compared to IHP’s July release, estimates of NPP/JVP and SJB support in June 2024 were revised +8 and -3 points, respectively. IHP polling director, Dr. Rannan-Eliya commented tha there was unusual instability in the model estimates in recent months which may reflect fluidity in voting intentions, but that IHP is aiming to address this by increased numbers of interviews in coming months.
These estimates are for all adults, not just for likely voters. They are based on the January 2024 revision of the IHP SLOTS Multilevel Regression and Poststratification (MRP) model. IHP is working on improving its likely voter model and will resume the release of voting intent in likely voters in a future update. It should be noted that differences in voting intent shares between all adults and likely voters have typically been 1–2% for most estimates in the past two years.
This July 2024 update is based on 19,015 interviews conducted with adults across Sri Lanka since Oct. 2021, including 701 interviews during July and 497 interview in August 2024. IHP’s SLOTS MRP methodology first estimates the relationship between a wide variety of characteristics about respondents and their opinions – in this case, ‘If there was a General Election today, which party would you vote for?’– in a multilevel statistical model. It then uses a large data file that is calibrated to the national population to predict voting intent in each month since Oct. 2021, according to what the multilevel model says about their probability of voting for various parties (‘post-stratification’) at each point in time. The multilevel model was estimated 100 times to reflect underlying uncertainties in the model and to obtain margins of error. The voting intent results for previous months have changed in this update as more data were collected after the last release, and these changes are within the margin of error.
About IHP
IHP is an independent, non-partisan research centre based in Colombo, Sri Lanka. The SLOTS lead investigator is Dr Ravi Rannan-Eliya of IHP, who has trained in public opinion polling at Harvard University and has conducted numerous surveys over three decades.
Methodology details
SLOTS combines interviews from a national sample of adults (ages 18 and over) reached by random digit dialling of mobile numbers, and others coming from a national panel of respondents who were previously recruited through random selection and face-to-face interviews. IHP estimates voting intent using an adaptation of Multilevel Regression and Post-Stratification (MRP), with multiple imputations to account for uncertainties in its modelling, exploiting data from all SLOTS interviews to estimate voting in a particular month.