Sentences with phrase «poll results suggest»

Recent Gallup Poll results suggest that this skepticism among Republican and conservative elites has led rank - and - file Republicans to follow suit, as currently there is a large gap between self - identified Republicans and Democrats in terms of perceptions of global warming.
The poll results suggest that a surprising number of people are seemingly immune to credit card marketing.
While those can be important features of cards, the poll results suggest that the wealthy still believe cash is king.
The poll results suggest there could be ongoing difficulties for advocates of the Common Core initiative as they face challenges to the standards across the country.
The poll results suggest that people want more officers conducting background checks; they want the same standards applied to those who buy a gun from a person at a gun show or online or at a physical store; they want to remove the background check work - around of buying a gun through a trust or corporation; and they want the feds to do a better job of notifying local law enforcement when people in their communities who are prohibited from purchasing a gun attempt to buy one.
But these polling results suggest that many are having second thoughts and want countervailing forces at work in society as we experiment with moral deregulation.

Not exact matches

A poll last week suggested that Labour would fail to take Wandsworth and Westminster, but indicated the party was still on track for its best result in 40 years in London.
But David Zahn, head of European Fixed Income, Franklin Templeton Fixed Income Group, suggests investors should be cautious about extrapolating this result to the upcoming polls in France and Germany.
The BBC told the Mail on Sunday: «It is completely wrong to suggest that the BBC suppressed the results of the poll.
Considering that most polls have maybe a 4 - 6 % typical error, this result was really quite within the range of possibility for most (although their consistent bias suggests that there really are some fundamental shortcomings).
Other final telephone polls from ORB / Telegraph, Survation and ComRes have also put Remain in the lead, with an average of 53 per cent, while polls conducted online have suggested a closer result.
It's still very early days, but the results we've seen so far suggest that the Conservatives have actually done significantly better than the earlier dramatic opinion poll suggests.
First, while public opinion polling on the question of cannabis legalisation has been all over the place on the question, the most reliable results suggests that a slim majority of Germans opposes cannabis legalisation.
In a number of Labour targets, constituency polls and local election results suggest the party simply does not have enough of a lead (and sometimes none at all) over the Conservative incumbent.
While the data pertain to the period immediately prior to the election campaign, longitudinal analyses and other polling data suggest that the results are still relevant at the time of the general election.
For a variety of reasons (including the impact of high levels of undecided voters in a specific poll), the actual result of an election contest may vary from the figures suggested by an opinion poll, even if the poll is carried out relatively close to election day, or on election day itself as in the case of exit polls, but the likelihood of such variation is not something that can be factored into this model.
The volume of response since those results suggests that the UK now realises that first - past - the - post is problematic - backing up a pre-election poll that found that a majority favoured voting reform to help the smaller parties.
However, a YouGov poll out this week showed that Corbyn was well ahead of his rivals, even with long - standing Labour members, suggesting that any entryism will not change the final result.
Corbyn's party avoided any sort of humiliating drubbing at the polls, but the results suggested the party will perform poorly at the general election, given the historical precedent.
As the opinion polls and betting markets suggest the 2010 General Election will result in a hung parliament, independent political analyst Greg Callus analyses for Channel 4 News the potential scenarios the parties face.
I don't put much store in opinion polls, but if true it would only indicate roughly what you would expect to happen at this point in the parliament - 32 % isn't that much lower than Labour got in the 2005 General Election and all it would suggest is that the Liberal Democrats are having a reversal - tactical voting could see them holding onto many of their current seats, indeed it is even possible that if they got 17 % of the vote that if it focused in an area that they could actually end up with more seats, where the switches in support are occuring is crucial - if they are focused then if the Conservative Party were to get 39 % then it might still result in them getting fewer seats than Labour or in extremis winning a 150 seat majority or so?
Results and public polling suggested voters split along racial lines.
In a later conversation Dietl laughed and suggested that perhaps his Facebook poll results pushed Massey to exit the race.
Both opinion polls, and local by - election results, suggest that the lead over Labour has widened since then.
Those results generally align with views of both party insiders, though Democrats think Ayotte's margin over Trump is smaller than it appears because the GOP presidential nominee is drawing more support in New Hampshire than public polls suggest.
The party's election campaign chief Jon Trickett has been blasted after he suggested losing to the Conservatives in next month's council poll would still be a good result for the party.
Earlier, as the polling stations closed an exit poll suggested that the Conservative Party would get 316 MPs to Labour's 239 when all the results have been counted.
A more likely explanation for the rather odd result is probably that suggested by Lord Ashcroft himself in his commentary — that Southampton Itchen has a substantial university population (students and staff) who wouldn't have been around when the poll was conducted.
However, the results of the ComRes poll also suggest any tax gains from the use of contrived offshore arrangements could be partially offset by consumer anger in the form of boycotts.
And, polling suggests he has incurred significant political damage as a result.
Among other results, Lord Ashcroft's polls suggested that the growth in SNP support would translate into more than 50 seats; [124] that there was little overall pattern in Labour and Conservative Party marginals; [125] that the Green Party MP Caroline Lucas would retain her seat; [126] that both Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg and UKIP leader Nigel Farage would face very close races to be elected in their own constituencies; [127] and that Liberal Democrat MPs would enjoy an incumbency effect that would lose fewer MPs than their national polling implied.
Constituency polls by Lord Ashcroft suggest that prompting people to think about the candidates in their constituency when asking people whom they will vote for results in much more Liberal Democrat voting in Liberal Democrat seats.
«That the Parliament looks critically at the results of a new poll on support for nuclear weapons in Scotland commissioned by Lord Ashcroft; believes that the result stating that 51 % of Scots want the Trident nuclear deterrent to be replaced is misguidedly being used to suggest that a majority of Scots support keeping nuclear weapons in Scotland; understands that the results of this poll were intended to challenge the findings of a recent poll commissioned by the Scottish Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament that showed a decisive 75 % majority of the Scottish public is against both the cost and the reasoning behind the UK Government's intention to keep all of its nuclear weapons stationed in Scotland; understands that, while Lord Ashcroft conducted the poll to supposedly show that «more than half of Scots are in favour of nuclear weapons», the poll showed that only 37 % of Scots believe so in principle, compared with 48 % who do not; questions the integrity of a poll that, it understands, was privately paid for by a wealthy Tory backer; considers that Lord Ashcroft is spinning the results, and believes that he should stop doing so and accept what it considers the fact proven time and again that Scots want rid of nuclear weapons.»
Shortly after the referendum result, Nicola Sturgeon announced plans to hold a second independence referendum, which a poll at the weekend suggests she would now win.
On the basis of yesterday's results the Conservatives would have a 6.2 % lead over Labour - a very different picture to the national opinion polls which actually suggest a 5.8 % Labour lead (according to ConservativeHome's Poll of Popolls which actually suggest a 5.8 % Labour lead (according to ConservativeHome's Poll of PollsPolls).
What you suggest would mean that computers with internet connections be set up at each polling place, so that the memory card could be placed into those computers and the results immediately transmitted back to the board of elections.
Peter Kellner, the former President of pollsters YouGov said that if the exit poll was wrong, as suggested by results from Newcastle and Sunderland, the Tories could still have a majority of 80 - 100.
Unless the result is even more dramatic than the polls suggest, AV + is likely to be the voting system for the general election that follows 2010.
Further results from YouGov's monthly poll for the Telegraph suggest that people largely agree with the arguments against ID cards, but continue to support them.
This suggests that while all those polls showing a Conservative lead as the best party to run the NHS and suchlike were just the result of a torrid couple of weeks for Labour, there has been a genuine change in peoples» perceptions of Labour's competence and it is this and disillusionment with Blair that has pushed them behind the Conservatives in the polls.
Yes, polls suggest Labour is on course to win the best results of any party in the capital for more than 40 years.
The latest Marist poll suggests Paterson, who took office after Eliot Spitzer's scandal - scarred resignation, trails New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo by nearly 51 points in a hypothetical 2010 Democratic primary matchup - with results virtually the same whether or not a voter has seen the governor's new ads.
It was suggested that Aussie Sir Lynton had already conducted private opinion polls and results showed that their seats would be safe under a Boris premiership.
Ian Swales, the Redcar MP whose constituency was also polled by Oakeshott, told his local Gazette that the results suggesting he would lose his seat were «based on a small sample and look very amateurish».
The SNP appear to be doing worse than the 3 post GE polls suggest and likely closer to the GE result.
Our results suggest that the multi-billion public opinion polling industry could be replaced by Twitter analytics performed practically for free,» concluded Makse.
The two other main parties suffered heavy losses at the ballot box, but polling companies also have egg on their face after months of suggesting a Conservative majority win was virtually impossible — the very result we see this morning.
«U.S. public sees ill health as resulting from a broad range of causes, poll suggests
Responses on national polls asking some of these same questions have been similar to those from New Hampshire, suggesting the New Hampshire results could provide a rough proxy.
«Our results suggest that Republicans, more so than Democrats, believe that the «buck stops» with the President,» said Tatishe Nteta, associate director of the UMass Poll.
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