They’ve now updated the debate page with the tallied results:
Pre-debate: 67% Pro, 33% Con
Post-debate: 64% Pro, 36% Con
Con wins by a 4% gain (probably not 3% due to rounding)
So it seems that technically, yes, the Cons won the debate in terms of shifting the polling. However, the magnitude of the change is so small that I wonder if it’s within the margin of error (especially when accounting for voting failing at the end; attendees might not have followed up to vote via email), and this still reflects a large majority of attendees supporting the statement.
Despite 92% at the start saying they could change their minds, it seems to me like they largely didn’t as a result of this debate.
They’ve now updated the debate page with the tallied results:
Pre-debate: 67% Pro, 33% Con
Post-debate: 64% Pro, 36% Con
Con wins by a 4% gain (probably not 3% due to rounding)
So it seems that technically, yes, the Cons won the debate in terms of shifting the polling. However, the magnitude of the change is so small that I wonder if it’s within the margin of error (especially when accounting for voting failing at the end; attendees might not have followed up to vote via email), and this still reflects a large majority of attendees supporting the statement.
Despite 92% at the start saying they could change their minds, it seems to me like they largely didn’t as a result of this debate.
Thanks for adding this!