The full tables for Deltapoll’s survey looking at voting intentions in the politcal constituency of Finchley and Golders Green.

The following commentary was written by Peter Kellner in The Observer.

Two years ago, Emma Dent Coad was elected as Labour’s first ever MP for Kensington. Now she risks being the party’s first ever candidate there to come third.

Today, the Observer publishes the results from the first three of a series of constituency surveys in seats that could determine who governs Britain after December 12. All three are London seats that were closely fought between Labour and Conservative in 2017; as well as Kensington, Deltapoll has surveyed Finchley and Golders Green, and Wimbledon. In all three, the Conservatives now hold narrow leads; in all three, the Liberal Democrats are close behind.

FINCHLEY AND GOLDERS GREEN KENSINGTON WIMBLEDON Vote share Change since 2017 Vote share Change since 2017 Vote share Change since 2017 % % % % % % Current voting intention Conservative 46 -1 36 -6 38 -8 Liberal Democrat 32 +25 33 +21 36 +21 Labour 19 -25 27 -16 23 -13 Other 3 0 4 +1 3 0 How would you vote if you felt that the only two candidates with a realistic chance of winning here in [constituency] were …. a) the Conservatives or Labour? Vote share Effect of tactical voting Vote share Effect of tactical voting Vote share Effect of tactical voting % % % % % % Conservative 53 +10 50 +14 48 +10 Labour 37 +18 41 +14 41 +18 Liberal Democrat 7 -25 5 -28 10 -26 Other 3 0 4 0 1 -2 b) the Conservatives or the Liberal Democrats? Vote share Effect of tactical voting Vote share Effect of tactical voting Vote share Effect of tactical voting % % % % % % Liberal Democrat 50 +18 56 +23 56 +20 Conservative 44 -2 38 +2 38 0 Labour 5 -14 5 -22 6 -17 Other 1 -2 1 -2 1 -2 Deltapoll questioned 500 electors in each constituency by telephone between November 7 And 13. Data are weighted. Voting intentions are adjusted to take account of turnout.

The surveys have been funded by donations from individuals acting separately from any party or campaigning group. Their aim is not to endorse any candidate, but to provide objective data for constituencies where the nature of the local contest is in doubt – in particular where three parties all believe they have a real chance of victory. Each week, alongside the main findings reported by the Observer, full details of each survey will be published online.

The first group of seats are London marginals which overwhelmingly voted to stay in the EU in the 2016 referendum. In all three, the Lib Dems have been boosted by their stance on Brexit, mainly at Labour’s expense. Finchley and Golders Green has seen the biggest shift, with a 25 per cent swing from Labour to Liberal Democrats. Here the Lib Dem challenger is Luciana Berger, who left Labour earlier this year, criticising its stance on Anti-Semitism.

However, she still trails Mike Freer, the Conservative incumbent, by 14 points. The Tory leads in the other two seats are far narrower: three points in Kensington, where Sam Gyimah, a former Conservative minister, is the Lib Dem candidate, and just two points where Stephen Hammond is seeking re-election. He lost the Conservative whip temporarily following his rebellion two months ago against Boris Johnson’s Brexit policy.

Two years ago, Conservative support in these seats was evenly divided between pro- and anti-Brexit voters. Their support among Leave voters is rock-solid; but Johnson’s Brexit policy has gone down badly with many pro-European Tories. Around half of the party’s Remain voters have deserted it. Most of this group now back the Lib Dems; there are also a number of ex-Tory Remain “don’t knows” who have yet to decide how to vote.

Nevertheless, the Conservatives are currently leading in these strongly Remain seats, because the anti-hard-Brexit majority is divided between Labour and the Lib Dems. Could this change? Deltapoll asked respondents how they would vote under two scenarios – if they thought that the only two candidates with a realistic chance of victory were, first, the Conservatives or Labour, and second, the Conservatives or Liberal Democrat.

In all three seats, the pattern is similar:

Most Labour and Lib Dem supporters are prepared to vote tactically if their preferred party is out of the running

Labour supporters are willing to switch to the Lib Dems in overwhelming numbers – in all three seats by enough to give the Lib Dems victory.

Lib Dem supporters tend to prefer Labour, but far less decisively. If they can’t have a Lib Dem MP, quite a few would vote Conservative, in each case by enough to increase the Tory majority.

These surveys uncover the reasons why the tactical choices of Labour and Lib Dem supporters are different. Labour supporters are hostile to both Johnson and Brexit; a switch to the Lib Dems accords with both sentiments.

Many Lib Dem supporters are more conflicted. They are almost unanimously anti-Brexit. But most are also hostile to Jeremy Corbyn, and in all three seats, most think the Tories would be better than Labour for the economy.

This commentary was first published by The Observer