Sentences with phrase «so vote in the poll»

So vote in the poll below, and make it snappy like, because... Continue reading «WEEKEND POLL: WHAT»S YOUR FAVOURITE DAVID CRONENBERG FILM?»

Not exact matches

Not So Fast: A new poll found a marked increase in the number of young Americans who say they will vote in the upcoming midterms.
Abacus Data polling last month said Canadians are more likely to think the NDP will «promise anything to win votes» than the Liberals are, an unusual spot for a party so rooted in principle and ideology.
While some of my closest friends are Catholics, I'm not, so I wouldn't have had a vote in this poll to determine America's ten greatest Catholic intellectuals.
Their political uniformity is so reliable that I take an LGBT voter's guide with me into the polling booth, knowing that in voting against their endorsements I can never, for example, inadvertently harm a pro-life candidate.
In addition, one must also realize that these polls only address Republican primary voters, but there are significant groups of evangelicals who are Democrats or Independents, so the anti-Trump vote amongst all evangelicals in the country might reach 80 - 90 % once non-Republican primary voters are accounted foIn addition, one must also realize that these polls only address Republican primary voters, but there are significant groups of evangelicals who are Democrats or Independents, so the anti-Trump vote amongst all evangelicals in the country might reach 80 - 90 % once non-Republican primary voters are accounted foin the country might reach 80 - 90 % once non-Republican primary voters are accounted for.
We are polling in Insta Stories so be sure to go cast a vote (for me preferably!)
In this episode we look at right - backs, so stay tuned and the only way to make sure your choice is selected is to vote on the poll to the right of your screen.
Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger and former Leicester City manager Nigel Pearson — somewhat strangely — got two writers» votes each, so we created an online poll, in which Wenger edged out Pearson with 21 % to 8 %.
It's astonishing that so many people are voting «yes» in this poll.
big gun I think the poll is a bit misleading, you yourself have said give wenger till the end of season I want him gone but realise in January it could hurt the club, so there's no where to vote for some of us, start another poll wenger out or wenger to stay then we will get a good idea as long as it's not fixed
This pattern is likely to be repeated at the next general election; in almost every voting intention poll, women express a lower propensity than men to vote, sometimes significantly so.
In doing so, we did find a statistically significant positive correlation between performance and voting intention as measured by Public Policy Polling data around the same time.
What is so galling about his choice of Nov 2 for a special election is that voters in NY - 29 will go to the polls to vote in the primary elections in September.
As I wrote before, polls in the most competitive Senate races look to have had about a 6 - percentage point Democratic bias based on the votes as counted so far.
The pre-election polling averages (not the FiveThirtyEight forecasts, which also account for other factors) in the 10 most competitive Senate races had a 6 - percentage point Democratic bias as compared to the votes counted in each state so far.
Which brings me to my favourite part of this result: the strongest Green list vote we've seen since this polling sequence began, indicating a Green group five times larger than that which currently sits at Holyrood, primarily because Labour would no longer be so substantially under - represented in the constituencies.
He also said people are unaware that in minority neighborhoods — including African - American, Hispanic and Chinese — organizations «bus people around to vote» to different polling sites so they can get more votes for themselves, and argued New York needs a Republican - advocated voter I.D. law.
This might be because Labour's share in the polls is so close to their 2015 vote share that no reversion to past performance is predicted.
John Mahama, who is leading an ECOWAS Observer Mission to monitor the election in that country, told the media that although there were few hitches and late start of voting in some polling centers, the process has been «so far so good.»
«If we can not get relief in the process, we will go to the courts, and we will go to the final, final round, to ensure every vote... is counted, so that tomorrow, when the senior citizen or the young voter goes to the polls, they can be reassured that this democratic process works for them and not that it is rigged, or perhaps that there are backroom strategists put in place to prevent them from voting or to skew the results.»
A new poll by the Committee on Standards in Public Life has revealed that four in ten people are so disillusioned from politics that they might not vote at the next general election and that under 30's are particularly disenchanted.
The report's authors agree that turnout could be crucial to the final result: «Most of the polls we've looked at have not been weighted by likelihood to vote in a referendum, so turnout modelling is unlikely to be a factor in the discrepancy between the results of phone and online.
In the second ballot, held two days later on 20 October 2005, Cameron polled 90 votes, Davis 57 votes and Liam Fox was eliminated with 51 votes [16] so Davis went through to the next stage with David Cameron.
If, in a fit of madness, they announced their intention to try and vote down Miliband's Queen's Speech, and so provoke constitutional gridlock, Tory support in the polls would crumble.
In YouGov polls a large chunk of former Liberal Democrats now say they'll vote Labour, so as a consequence of their different Lib Dem scores ICM also end up showing a lower Labour score than most other companies... hence the 1 point Tory lead yesterday.
I'm excited to see so much support for Randall in this poll, but I know that polls are easy — getting to the voting booth is the part that matters.
The Libertarians polled over 2 % for Governor in 2010, and under Texas precedent, that guarantees the Libertarian Party a spot on the 2012 and 2014 ballots in any event, so technically Libertarians don't need to meet the 5 % vote test in 2012.
The Electoral Commission said in a statement: «It is a cause for serious concern that many people who wanted to vote today were unable to do so by 10 pm when polls closed.
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?
«They were not bilingual... They were requesting IDs and making people believe they needed IDs to vote... They removed entire families from the book... They switched the names so they can not be found in the book,» charged Espana Aristay, an Espaillat supporter who worked as a poll watcher in the 72nd Assembly District on Election Day.
So, voters in the 37th District may have two choices when they go to the polls April 24, not only for their State Senator, but a vote to see which party controls the senate into 2020.
The poll comes in the wake of a stretch of high - profile corruption charges — including those facing Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver and State Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos — 55 percent of voters say all state elected officials should be voted out of office so new representatives can start with a clean slate.
In a presidential or similar elections, it's a habit, if one is a candidate, to get to the polling place, and vote, usually in the storm of camera flashes, from propaganda reasons, so self - voting is expecteIn a presidential or similar elections, it's a habit, if one is a candidate, to get to the polling place, and vote, usually in the storm of camera flashes, from propaganda reasons, so self - voting is expectein the storm of camera flashes, from propaganda reasons, so self - voting is expected.
Most current UKIP supporters (and SNP supporters) have previously voted Labour, Lib Dem or Conservative (over two thirds according to AW's churn analysis) and, since a little under half of them are not firmly committed to UKIP (Ashcroft's poll) I contend that it is not unreasonable to theorise that some may do so again in May.
«The people of Kogi are aware that the man being paraded by the APC is not the person they exercised confidence in at the election as he scored a paltry 6,885 votes in the so - called supplementary election, as against the 204,877 votes polled by the PDP candidate, Alhaji Idris Wada, in the overall election.
«There'll be a lot of headscratching afterwards,» he says; people from all polling organisations will be trying to work out why the way in which people say things differently in a poll in advance of the election is so different to what they say when they've voted.
Polls close at 9 p.m., so if you haven't had a chance to get out and vote, please do so — assuming there are active races in your area.
There is some good news for Mr Clegg in Lord Ashcroft's research, which also included a second poll of 1,000 people who considered voting Lib Dem in May but did not do so, as well as focus groups.
Parties from the centre - right, on both sides of the Atlantic, have often relied on the so - called «blue collar vote» to build majorities and bearing in mind the Tories» struggle to break through the magic 40 % barrier in the polls, it is significant that Resolution Foundation data reveals some low hanging fruit for the Tories.
Topline voting intentions are REMAIN 42 %, LEAVE 40 % — so wholly in line with ICM's polling before the deal.
Greenberg said Siena wouldn't be conducting a separate poll of likely voters» attitudes toward the primary because it's impractical, and turnout in Democratic primary races will be so low that it would be hard to find respondents who are actually planning to vote in the September race.
Oakeshott believes the Tories are outspending progressive candidates, and believes the appetite for anti-Tory tactical voting remains strong, especially since so much of the polling by Lord Ashcroft in key marginals can be used to guide voters how to vote tactically.
Importantly for the party this means that GB vote intention polls are understating the increase in Labour support in England and so their potential to take seats from the Conservatives.
Labour should see their vote pick up in line with the party's stronger national poll showing, so that their top candidate Clare Moody has a good chance of being elected, so even with if there is a UKIP surge.
Note also that, judging from the tables, ComRes have switched over to prompting for UKIP in their main voting intention question in this poll — as with their last national poll, it does not seem to have had a major effect (UPDATE — I think this is because ComRes have changed turnout weightings, so that there is a tighter turnout filter for the Greens and UKIP than for the main parties).
YouGov also asked how people would vote in a re-run between Boris and Ken — 49 % would vote Boris, 33 % Ken (respondents were not offered the chance of voting for other candidates, so this was not a genuine voting intention polls by any means, but since the London electoral system does redistribute votes between the top two candidates it offers a rough guide).
As far as I can recall the last proper ComRes poll of London voting intentions was in March (there was one that asked which candidate people were inclined to support in September, but it was a small sample and wasn't really comparable), and showed Ken very narrowly ahead, so this suggests a move towards Boris though, given the difference in the question now that other candidates are known, I wouldn't read too much into that.
Today's Times has a new YouGov poll of Labour party members and registered supporters (so members, registered trade unionists and # 3 supporters — the same group who were able to vote in the Labour leadership election).
Underlying figures are pretty much unchanged so there is nothing in this poll regarding vote shares to get excited about.
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