Finchley Poll Flawed Because It Was Held During Passover When Fewer Jews Would've Taken Part, Candidate Says

Thatcher Constituency Poll 'Wrong Because Fewer Jews Took Part'

A poll that predicted Margaret Thatcher's old seat could fall to Labour was flawed because it was held during a Jewish festival which would have seen fewer of the constituency's Jews take part, the Tory candidate has alleged.

Lord Ashcroft's poll of Finchley and Golders Green, a north London seat where 22% of the population is Jewish, put Labour two points ahead.

But Mike Freer, the Tory candidate defending the seat, said conducting the poll during Passover would have made Jewish voters, who are not keen on Labour according to a national poll, less likely to answer the phone.

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Thatcher and her husband Denis waves to supporters after she retained her Parliamentary seat of Finchley in North London, Friday, May 4, 1979

He told The Daily Telegraph: "Many people will have gone away for Passover or will be observing Passover so that’s a factor that needs to be borne in mind.

"Miliband and Labour are not popular amongst the Jewish community so when you have constituency that’s 22 per cent Jewish, to be telephoning and polling on Friday and Saturday of Passover would be a bit of a faux pas.

"They wouldn’t be answering the phone, they may not even be here; many people will travel or they are very observant. The 9th and 10th especially are the two high holy days."

More than two-thirds of Britain's Jews, 69%, are planning to vote for the Conservatives while only 22% are planning to vote Labour, according to a recent poll for The Jewish Chronicle.

Passover ran from April 3 to 11, which led some to question how significant an impact it would have had on the polling, which was conducted between April 7 and 11. Most Jews celebrate Passover with a festive meal - called a Seder - on the first two nights of the religious holiday when working or using electronic devices, like a phone, are not permitted. But nothing would have prevented observant Jews being contacted by phone on the Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday of that week, because those restrictions do not extend across the middle days of the festival, when polling took also took place.

The Finchley and Golders Green Labour Party retweeted this tweet:

Labour candidate Sarah Sackman, who is herself Jewish, has said of the Ashcroft poll: "“It’s only a poll. I just want to keep meeting as many people as possible.”

She also attacked Freer over comments he made that a "non-Jewish MP" would represent Jews "more forcefully" because they "can't be accused of any vested interest".

"I’ve never questioned Mike’s qualification to represent his Jewish constituents. but he is wrong if he thinks a Jewish MP would represent the community less effectively," she told Jewish News.

Thatcher stood down from parliament in 1992, having represented Finchley since 1959. The seat's boundaries were redrawn to create Finchley and Golders Green in 1997, when Labour won and held it until 2010, when Freer won it for the Tories.

Below are pictures of Margaret Thatcher in her Finchley constituency

Thatcher In Finchley
(01 of18)
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Margaret Thatcher, Conservative candidate for Finchley. (credit:Barratts/S&G and Barratts)
(02 of18)
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Margaret Thatcher 34, Conservative candidate for Finchley, is introduced to darts in a local pub by Fred Booth, a Finchley greengrocer. Mrs Thatcher aims to be the first woman barrister to be an M.P. (credit:PA/PA Archive)
(03 of18)
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Margaret Thatcher, Conservative MP for Finchley (credit:Barratt's/S&G and Barratts)
(04 of18)
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Margaret Thatcher MP enters the House of Commons after being elected member for Finchley in the General Election (credit:Barratts/S&G and Barratts)
(05 of18)
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Recently elected Conservative MP for Finchley and Friern Barnet, Margaret Thatcher, 33, with her twin children, Carol and Mark, aged 6, at their home in Farnborough, Kent. (credit:PA/PA Archive)
(06 of18)
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Mrs Margaret Thatcher, who succeeds Sir Edward Boyle as spokesman for Education in the Conservative Shadow Cabinet, at the Houses of Parliament. The change was announced by Mr Edward Heath. (credit:PA/PA Archive)
(07 of18)
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Margaret Thatcher shopping in a supermarket in her Finchley constituency, North London. (credit:PA/PA Archive)
(08 of18)
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Margaret Thatcher, the Prime Minister, shopping in a Finchley supermarket, London, part of her constituency. (credit:PA/PA Archive)
(09 of18)
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Newly elected MP for Finchley and future British Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher celebrated her victory with her 21 year-old son Mark, 11th October 1974. (credit:Sydney O'Meara via Getty Images)
(10 of18)
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Margaret Thatcher, the Conservative M.P. for Finchley and Friern Barnet, is shown Nov. 1959 at her Farnborough, Kent, England, home with her twins, Mark and Carol, aged six. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
(11 of18)
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British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher crouches down to get an eye level view of one of the displays when she visited a supermarket at Finchley in north London on Saturday, May 22, 1983. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
(12 of18)
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Mrs. Margaret Thatcher, Barnet, Finchley MP who believes in stocking up her larder shelves, places an empty shopping basket in the boot of her car, parked outside the House of Commons, Westminster in England on the eve of the Conservative party's leadership election on Feb. 3, 1975. (credit:AP)
(13 of18)
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Margaret Thatcher, who succeeds Sir Edward Boyle as spokesman on Education in the Tory Shadow Cabinet, is shown at the Houses of Parliament, Oct. 22, 1969. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
(14 of18)
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The lady in red chiffon is Conservative Party leader, Margaret Thatcher at her London home, Feb. 1, 1976, prior to leaving for her meeting with constituents at Barnet, Finchley. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
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Tory leader Margaret Thatcher holding up five one-pound notes during a speech on April 30, 1976 at the Conservative headquarters in her Finchley, North London, constituency. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
(16 of18)
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A library picture taken of Conservative Party leader Mrs. Margaret Thatcher in a jubilant mood outside her Chelsea, London, home in November 1976, after Tory victories in by-elections at two former Labour strongholds â Workington and Walsall North. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
(17 of18)
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Mrs. Margaret Thatcher and her husband Denis, at The Town Hall in London's Hendon, Friday, May 4, 1979 where she heard she had been re-elected at Finchley with a big increase in majority. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
(18 of18)
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Conservative Party leader Mrs. Margaret Thatcher, wearing a fire chief's helmet during a visit to the London Fire Brigade's Finchley fire station in London, in October 1979. (credit:AP)