If the national elections were next Sunday, the 44th% would vote for the Broad Fronthe 27% to the National Party, 6% to the Colorado Party and 2% to Open Town Hall, according to the latest Cifra survey released on Telemundo this Tuesday
Besides 2% say they would vote for the multicolor coalition but do not define a partyhe 1% to the Independent PartyMeanwhile he 18% this undecided or would vote blank or annulled.
If all the percentages of those who vote for the multicolored coalition are added, the Broad Front exceeds the ruling party by 6% (44% vs. 38%).
In the last survey of Figure realized in Aprilthe Broad Front had a 41% voting intention and exceeded by 1% to the coalition multicolor that accounted for 40%. This difference widened five points in this survey.
According to the analysis of the survey, the Broad Front “had a slight drop in April and is now recovering,” while the preference in the National Party “varies between a maximum of 31%, at the end of last year, and a minimum of 27% today.”
“But what the whites lose tends to be won by the other parties in the coalition, with which support for the ‘halves’ oscillates less,” he adds.
“There are two groups of voters who keep their sympathy for the Front or for the Coalition very stable, and another groupalso very stable, which is waiting before deciding. That group, about a fifth of the electorate, He is the one who will decide who governs from 2025. Probably the vast majority of them wait until the presidential candidates are defined, and who is the candidate in each party will weigh heavily in your decision“, he concludes.
Montevideo and Interior
The differences widen or narrow depending on the region, given that in Montevideo 53% would vote for the Broad Front, 18% for the National Party and 11% for another coalition party.
However, in the interior, 39% would vote for the Broad Front, 33% for the National Party and 10% for another coalition party.
The survey was carried out between June 15 and May 2 to 1,009 people by telephone throughout the country.