Pupils in England who get poor results in their Sats tests at the end of primary school will face a resit in secondary school if
the Conservatives form the next government.
Primary school pupils in England who get poor results in their Sats tests will have to resit them in secondary school if
the Conservatives form the next government.
Pupils in England who get poor results in their Sats at the end of primary school will face a resit in secondary school if
the Conservatives form the next government.
Not exact matches
The
next leader of the NDP will need to work hard to ensure that progressive voters do not flock to one
conservative party in order to block another
conservative party from
forming government during the
next election.
For these people, the
Conservatives have settled on the message that however much they may like what Nigel has to say, the better UKIP do
next May the more likely it is that Her Majesty will have to ask Ed Miliband to
form a
government.
Polls are judged first and foremost on whether they correctly indicate which party will
form the
next government and, as the chart below shows, were the
Conservatives not to win an overall majority on June 8, we would be looking at a polling miss of unprecedented magnitude.
And with the Liberal Democrats increasingly irrelevant locally, as was seen by their disastrous showing in Seven Sisters recently, it is clear that
Conservatives are the only credible choice to
form the
next Government».
Even if it comes to office with a healthy majority, when the
next Conservative government is
formed, serious consideration should be given to offering Labour MP Frank Field the position of Secretary of State for Work and Pensions.
The more seats a party or grouping has, the more chance it has of
forming a
government - with 198 seats out of 646 the
Conservative Party could only
form a
government if significant numbers of other MP's decided to back them, as happened in 1924 when there was a situation that the
Conservatives didn't want to
form a coalition with either other main party and equally the Liberals didn't want a coalition with Labour and the Liberals and
Conservatives saw it as an opportunity to allow Labour into
government but in a situation in which legislation was still reliant on Liberal and
Conservative votes and they could be brought down at the most suitable time, supposing the notional gains were accurate and in the improbable event of the
next election going exactly the same way in terms of votes then 214 out of 650 is 32.93 % of seats compared to at 198 out of 646 seats - 30.65 % of seats and the
Conservative Party would then be 14 seats closer towards a total neccessary to
form a
government allowing for the greater number of seats, on the one hand the
Conservatives need Labour to fail but equally they need to succeed themselves given that the Liberal Democrats appear likely to oppose anyone
forming a
government who does not embark on a serious programme to introduce PR, in addition PC & SNP would expect moves towards Independence for Scotland and Wales, the SDLP will be likely to back Labour and equally UKIP would want a committment to withdraw from Europe and anyway will be likely to be in small numbers if any, pretty much that leaves cutting a deal with the DUP which would only add the backing of an extra 10 - 13 MP's.
These boundary changes are good for winning extra seats but bad if the
Conservative party wishes to
form a
Government at the
next election.
«The agreement between the
Conservative and Liberal Democrats to
form the
next government is welcome news.
Despite this, it was the
Conservatives who
formed the
next government with a majority of 17 seats.
The important figures for the
Conservatives next year will be firstly the voting intention figures — the
Conservatives need a substantial lead to have any chance whatsover of
forming a
government and if David Cameron wants to keep the support of his party he needs to show he has the potential to deliver.
Whilst David Cameron may become Prime Minister
next year with an overall
Conservative majority in the Commons, any administration he
forms will start its life as a minority
government in the House of Lords.
«It looks as if the
Conservative Party is going to be the largest party in this parliament and therefore it has the moral authority to
form the
next government.»
The
Conservatives shocked everyone by winning a small majority at the 2015 General Election, despite predictions of a hung parliament and the possibility of constitutional wrangling over who had legitimacy to
form the
next Government.