A latest national tracking poll by Global InfoAnalytics indicated that the majority of voters are happy with how their Members of Parliament (MPs) have performed so far in the Ninth Parliament.
Fifteen per cent of the voters sampled in the poll rated the performance of their MPs as excellent, 52 per cent as very good/good, 14 per cent as average, while 18 per cent said they have performed poorly/very poorly.
The poll was conducted between September 15 and September 23 this year with a sample of 9,509 voters using a mixed mode (telephone and face-to-face) with a confidence level of 99 per cent and a margin of error of +1.30 per cent.
A total of 1,997 voters were sampled using Computer Assisted Telephone Interviews (CATI) and 7,512 face-to-face interviews across 83 constituencies in all 16 regions of the country.
The poll released yesterday by the Head of Research, Global InfoAnalytics and Pollster, Mussa K. Dankwah, showed that 30 per cent of voters who openly associated themselves with the opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP) in July 2025 declined to 27 per cent in September 2025.
It also indicated that voters who openly associated themselves with the governing National Democratic Congress (NDC) declined from 44 per cent in July 2025 to 42 per cent in September 2025.
It added that floating voters saw an increase of two per cent to 17 per cent in September, while voters who don’t disclose their party affiliations also went up from eight per cent in July 2025 to 10 per cent in September 2025.
The poll further indicated that nearly 70 per cent of voters use social media, while 30 per cent do not have social media account with those who are on social media, 28 per cent using Facebook; 27 per cent TikTok; 13 per cent Snapshot; 12 per cent using X (Twitter); 10 per cent use Instagram and others, 10 per cent.
In what could be a significant development in future elections, the poll revealed that Gen Z and Millennial voters (voters under 44 years of age) accounted for nearly 78 per cent of voters.
It also revealed that 64 per cent of voters prefer the country to elect young leaders compared to 12 per cent who opposed electing young leaders, while 24 per cent were neutral.