Polls current point to a hung parliament, and despite this dire situation, many conservatives care more about Len being shadow Business.
Not exact matches
Liberal Democrat support nationally has dipped from 23 % in 2010 to 8 % in
current polls, a fall of 15 percentage
points.
Current opinion
polls point to the Liberal Democrats being «wiped out» in the 2015 general election.
Even by recent
polling standards, the figures for the EURef have been unusually varied but
current online
polling puts the race within a few
points either way, while telephone
polls suggest a single - figure Remain lead.
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?
Cuomo's
current 22 - percentage -
point lead is about half as large as it was in March, when a Siena College
poll had him 47
points ahead of Nixon among Democrats.
And this from the Gallup analysis: «The six -
point Democratic advantage among all registered voters in the
current poll suggests the 2010 election could be quite close if it were held today given low turnout in midterm elections and the usual Republican advantages in turnout.»
This is puzzling — but we should remember that September's
poll showed a four -
point drop in Conservative support for the list vote; that may again have been a slight outlier, and our new
poll may be showing things reverting to what is the
current norm.
Since that
point, many of those whose second preference was Labour have switched their first preference from the Lib Dems anyway, and many now form part of Labour's
current poll lead — this YouGov
poll showed that last year's Lib Dem voters split 42 % Labour, 30 % Lib Dem, 17 % Tory!
The
poll shows that Gard, the
current Assembly Speaker, has an 11 -
point lead in the northern part of the district, which includes his hometown of Peshtigo.
Even with
current polls putting Hillary Clinton some 20
points ahead, and even though she pulled more than twice as many votes in New York's Democratic primary than Trump drew in the GOP one, he insisted he would ultimately win New Yorkers over with his agenda and his accent.
There are two
current national
polls published today, from YouGov and Harris, and both show a ten
point lead for the Conservatives over Labour.
The Tories»
current poll lead would be almost halved from 19 to 10
points.
While that's down 4
points from a Quinnipiac
poll conducted last month, it's still an impressive showing — especially given the
current tough economic news, and the grim outlook for New York City's budget.
Siben predicted Lazio would soon narrow his
current 40 -
point gap in the
polls against Cuomo and that campaign donations would quickly follow.
David Cameron led Ed Miliband by 15
points (42 % to 27 %) as best Prime Minister in the national
poll, though it was notable that his lead was twice as high among men (22
points) than among women (10
points), and more than twice as high among private sector workers (24
points) than public (10
points)-- though for him to have any sort of lead among public sector workers in the
current climate is an achievement worth noting.
(Using
current national opinion
polls to illustrate the
point.)
In theory, such a shift would decimate David Cameron's
current 12
point lead in the
polls.
vote on opinion
polls, such as the
current one asking whether 50/50 should be the start
point for child access
An increase of one percentage
point from
current rates would negatively impact the overall standard of living of 29 per cent of mortgage holders
polled.