Presented in the pie charts are changing patterns of five different political parties prior to and post-the June 2005 Election. Overall, it is transparent that the general election had a major influence on the reputation scale of four political instituitions, with the upswing rise of the Undecided party to fame. Still, the Conservatives still retained its dominant position over the given period.
Before the election took place, the Conservatives accounting for the lion’s share of 41%, followed by the Labour consitution logging around a quarter of supporters, was tenfold as much as that of the Undecided party. The Green Party and the Liberal Democratics exhibited relatively comparable figures, around 19% and 10% respectively. Noticeably, after 6-month post-election, these trends registered almost no variations, with a negligible 5% rise of popularity in the Undecided Party and the Consevatives.
The popularity rates among the political parties witnessed precipitous disparities one year after the June 2005 election. It was the Undecided that registered a staggering rise of 10%, peaking at approximately a fifth. The Conservatives and Labour institutions shared the same amount of reputation, standing at a third, while only 6% of supporters chose the Liberal Democratic and the Green Party.
