The opposition adds up to 44% of the wills, against 38% of the different official parties, according to a Cifra survey.
Facing the elections to be held next year, the Broad Front (FA) accumulate a 44% of intention to vote, against a 38% that arises from the sum of the parties of the Multicolored Coalition, according to the latest Cifra survey.
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With less than a year left for the internal ones, where there are already favorites in the respective spaces, the survey showed that the FA recovered some ground, in a stable scenario, with a Uruguay divided.


According to the survey, if the vote were to take place today, 44% would choose the Broad Front, while 27% would National Party, 6% to Colorado Party, 2% to Town meeting and 1% to independent party, with 2% saying they would vote for the Coalition, without specifying party, which totals 38%.
From Cifra they highlighted that there is a fairly stable support for the “two halves”, with a slight advantage towards the opposition, whose intention to vote ranges between 41 and 44%, after a slight drop in April. Instead, the Coalition as a whole remains between 38 and 40%, with the same level it had in February.
https://twitter.com/CifraConsultora/status/1676380371443912705
INTENT TO VOTE “IF THE ELECTIONS WERE TODAY”
44% would vote for the Broad Front, 27% for the National Party, 6% for the Colorado Party, 2% for the Open Cabildo and 1% for the Independent Party.
Full note -> https://t.co/e2sTDRJ7jl pic.twitter.com/atBYQF7cqa
– CIFRA (@CifraConsultora) July 5, 2023
The undecided, 18% that will be key to defining the election
However, in a context where the President Luis Lacalle Pou has a positive image that is higher than the intention to vote than the eventual candidate for his space, there is still a significant portion that all sectors are going to try to win over. The thing is 18% responded in the survey that they would vote blank, they would cancel their vote, or they do not know or do not say what they would vote for.
Regarding this phenomenon, the consultant specified that “there are two groups of voters who maintain their sympathy for the Front or for the Coalition very stable, and another group, also very stable, that is waiting before deciding.”
This last sector, which represents a fifth of the electorate, is the one who will decide who governs from 2025. To define their vote, it is estimated that the vast majority will wait for the presidential candidates to be defined, which gives a notable relevance to the internal ones.
“The vast majority of the ‘faithful’ will vote for ‘their’ party, no matter who the presidential candidate is. They are the others, the uncommitted, who will not vote in the internal ones, those who will decide in October, partly for a party, but above all for a candidate”, analyzed from Cifra.
Source: Ambito