Sentences with phrase «leave voters concerned»

But saying it in this way allows Corbyn to reassure Labour Leave voters concerned about immigration while pretending to his young metropolitan support base that his hands are tied on the issue.

Not exact matches

The social network's announcement Friday could allay concerns of election experts and lawmakers that ads about hot - button social issues meant to be divisive and foment voter outrage might still slip through, leaving a dangerous weak spot on the network.
Abortion issues seemed left in the dust as economic concerns drove this year's election, but on Tuesday voters ousted several pro-life Democrats and ushered in fiscal conservatives who tend to oppose abortion.
State GOP and Tea Party leaders have done so, but there is a nagging concern on the part of some that Paladino might well implode, leaving Republican and Conservative voters with no options.
Opposition to Voter ID laws in America can be seen as a left - wing attempt to disenfranchise right - wing voters because one of the major concerns is that alien (as in from a different country, not different planet) residents may be voting, and in America aliens generally support the Democratic party.
Second, PO and United Left were defeated because they were more preoccupied with their internal squabbles than with concerns of the voters.
Third, while many have concerns about the process of leaving the EU, the arguments that led 52 % of the electorate to vote Leave — principally around immigration and sovereignty — still resonate: «The losers will be lazy spongers who don't come here to work» as one Leave voter put it in a recent study.
Swing Left is targeting 64 House seats and has activated local, self - organized teams across the country to begin canvassing their respective swing districts — including knocking on doors to survey constituents» concerns, registering new voters at farmers markets and recruiting locals to build up volunteer capacity inside the targeted districts.
Leave voters in Britain have used the ballot box to voice their disapproval of growing inequality and continued neglect of their legitimate concerns.
It seems likely that the one - third of Labour voters from the last general election who want to leave the EU are disproportionately drawn from the Labour party's historic — but increasingly perilous — working - class base, and there is little doubt that these economic concerns are a major explanation for their dissatisfaction.
There are doubts about the breadth of Corbyn's appeal given his cultural identity as a left - wing metropolitan liberal representing the constituency of Islington North, allegedly «a world away» from the concerns of most uncommitted Labour voters.
Phil Woolas claims that even at party gatherings Labour was scared to talk about one of the biggest concerns among voters, and that by 2010 the party had no credibility left on the issue -
At a time when the economy and jobs pretty much top the list of voters» concerns in every poll I've seen for months now, I'm not sure the war is an issue that resonates, although it may serve to rally the left — a bloc on which Tasini is counting in the primary.
Appealing to the north of England, working class voters and ethnic minorities with an aspirational agenda was at the heart of this launch, with a focus on «bread and butter issues such as the cost of living,» as well as ensuring environmental problems aren't merely seen as a concern of the left.
In an interview on the BBC's World This Weekend, Blair said that if Theresa May won a landslide, as the polls currently suggest, the Conservatives would read it as a mandate for «Brexit at any costs» — and voters concerned about the risks of leaving the EU should press every candidate to answer whether they had an open mind about whether the final deal was in Britain's interests.
Most Green and SNP voters probably prefer a Labour - led government to a Conservative - led one, and that is why those two left - leaning parties have been at the forefront of calls for a «progressive alliance» (particularly in the form of a post-election deal, as far as the SNP is concerned).
Leave voters don't regret how they voted but Remain voters are concerned about national cohesion (Comments: 544)
Leaving aside California and Switzerland, which delegate large numbers of political decisions to their voters, most referendums around the world concern constitutional change.
John Mills, a major Labour donor who has been campaigning for leave, said his party's mistake was to link itself so closely to the in campaign, instead of understanding the concerns of its traditional voters.
The row comes amid mounting Labour concerns that increasing numbers of their traditional voters are switching to Leave as the 23 June referendum approaches.
The concerns about his performance as head of the Labour In For Britain campaign came amid increasing evidence that working class voters are switching from Remain to Leave.
As Bush strategist Karl Rove explained in his book Courage and Consequence: «When Bush said education was the civil rights struggle of our time or that the absence of an accountability system in our schools meant black, brown, poor, and rural children were getting left behind, it gave listeners important information about his respect and concern for every family and deepened the impression that he was a different kind of Republican whom suburban voters... could be proud to support.»
Yet, it turns out that all the arguments and dire warnings didn't do much to address the actual concerns about immigration, jobs, and loss of national autonomy that motivated the «leave» voters.
But for those concerned with taking steps to combat human - made climate change, the conversation on the left over Initiative 732 — a carbon tax swap championed by the group Carbon Washington that will make its way to voters this November — has often been difficult to endure.
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