Currently instructed in another claim against
UKIP on behalf of an excluded member.
And public sector workers, in spite of Ed Balls, have returned to Labour in droves: Lord Ashcroft's poll in January put Labour support amongst public sector workers at 51 % (up 12 %) with Tories on 20 % (down 6 %),
UKIP on 10 % (up 8 %) and the Lib Dems collapsing to as few as 7 % (down to 18 %).
In a straight vote against the Conservatives, DUP and
UKIP on the Right, the Left coalition of Labour and Liberal Democrat wins.
The latest Sun / YouGov poll gives Labour a four - point lead on 38, the Conservatives on 34 %, Labour on 38 %, the Liberal Democrats on 7 % and
Ukip on 13 %.
At the weekend four online polls showed Ukip support in the high teens, but a new Populus poll showed
Ukip on 10 %.
The BNP, who had made up the majority of the other vote, are now down to 4 % with the Greens and
UKIP on 3 % and 4 % respectively.
UKIP on 30 % and all other parties flat or down.
There is far, far too much
ukip on this site.
But there is a palpable read - across from the 45 per cent of Scots who voted «Yes» for independence last month and the huge numbers of English voters who backed
Ukip on Thursday.
The poll puts Labour on 35 %, the Tories on 31 %,
Ukip on 17 % and the Lib Dems on 7 %.
Speaking against the backdrop of one poll by Survation showing
Ukip on 25 %, Johnson said he did not believe EU partners would recoil in horror at British demands for renegotiation of free movement and the introduction of a points - based system linked to skills.
The positions of Conservative voters are for all issues roughly equidistant from
UKIP on the one hand, and the seven left - liberal parties on the other.
In their second ever national poll, pollsters Survation raised eyebrows by placing
Ukip on 11 %, just one point behind the Liberal Democrats and up seven points from the eurosceptic party's showing in their first survey.
This move is unlikely in itself — David Cameron is in no mood to face down his backbenchers, the Telegraph and
UKIP on another policy area in the months leading up to an election.
The party will also be encouraged by a finding that 25 % of all voters said they are «likely» to consider voting Green, higher than the Liberal Democrats on 23 % and just one point behind
Ukip on 26 %.
It puts
Ukip on course to trump Simon Hughes» 44 - point victory over Labour candidate Peter Tatchell in the 1983 Bermondsey by - election.
Finally, despite the important effects of the substantial rise of
UKIP on the shares of the vote for the two main parties, UKIP are not set to win many seats nor have a disproportionate effect on the competition for seats between the two main parties in their key marginals.
Labour's share is 43 %, down a point since 2011, but the Conservatives have fallen to 29 % with the Lib Dems on 8 % and
UKIP on 11 % — a rise of 8 points since the last election.
Survation, who along with YouGov were one of the closest pollsters to predicting the result, had Labour on 45 % (+5), Conservatives on 39 % -LRB--3), Lib Dems on 7 % -LRB--) with
UKIP on 3 % (+1).
The SNP also had the strongest results for the statement «I know what the party stands for these days» with 80 %, followed by the Conservatives on 63 % and
UKIP on 58 %.
[117] The final polls showed a mixture of Conservative leads, Labour leads and ties with both between 31 — 36 %,
UKIP on 11 — 16 %, the Lib Dems on 8 — 10 %, the Greens on 4 — 6 %, and the SNP on 4 — 5 % of the national vote.
Support for Labour dropped by one point to 27 %, with
Ukip on 13 %, the Lib Dems on 9 %, and the SNP and Greens both on 4 %.
Boris Johnson brings out fish puns to mock his political opponents and pledges to fight
UKIP on the beaches.
Tories 316, Labour 239, SNP 58, Lib Dems 10,
Ukip on 2.
On the basis of Friday's results, the BBC is calculating that Labour would have got a 31 % projected share of the national vote, slightly higher than expected, with the Conservatives on 30 %, the Lib Dems on 15 % and
UKIP on 12 %.
An Opinium poll in the Observer showed the party was maintaining its four - point lead over the Tories, by 35 % to 31 %, with
Ukip on 17 % and the Liberal Democrats on seven per cent.
He has a good record on immigration and you don't get the sense he's likely to emulate
Ukip on it in a bid to bandage the flow of white working class voters to the party.
The former Tory MP, who is now UKIP's deputy chairman, told Andrew Neil: «I can't see, with
UKIP on the up and up, and the Tories in freefall, why we would to arrest our skyrocketing way forward.»
The Populus poll put the Lib Dem candidate, Mike Thornton, on 33 per cent, with the Tories on 28 per cent and
Ukip on 21 per cent.
This time our final poll was close to the result: we put
UKIP on 18 %; it achieved 17 %.
We put
UKIP on 19 %; it won 16 %.
Lib Dem leader bids to exploit high - profile TV debates with Nigel Farage arguing only his party can fight
Ukip on Europe
Thus Tories could switch to
UKIP on this occasion knowing that their action could not bring Ed Miliband to office 24 hours later.
It put Labour on 37 %, up one, the Tories on 34 %, up four,
Ukip on 12 %, down two, and the Liberal Democrats unchanged on ten per cent.
Bob Spink, the independent MP for Castle Point, is supportive of
Ukip on foreign policy matters.
My poll found Labour 14 points ahead of the Tories, by 43 % to 29 %, with the Lib Dems on 8 % and
UKIP on 11 %.
The Liberal Democrats were level with
Ukip on 11 %.
And how exactly do you out -
UKIP on immigration?
In the list the SNP were up three to 45 per cent, Labour were down two to 18, the Tories were down one to 15 per cent, the Greens remained on nine per cent, and the Lib Dems and
Ukip on six.
Labour made a massive mistake trying to take on
UKIP on immigration.
The Lib Dems were on 9 % (+1) and
UKIP on 4 % -LRB--2).
Vote shares for the four biggest parties remain unchanged since last week, with the Tories on 30 %, Labour on 29 %,
UKIP on 16 % and the Liberal Democrats holding on to their 10 %, a result which party president Tim Farron joked was causing champagne corks to pop at Lib Dem HQ last week.
My poll on the Clacton by - election, to be held on 9 October, the day David Cameron turns forty - eight, has found
UKIP on 56 per cent, 32 points ahead of the Conservatives on 24 per cent.
A poll by Lord Ashcroft in November put the Tories one point ahead of
UKIP on 33 %, with Labour not far behind on 26 %.
Labour is also clearly avoiding the folly of trying to outflank
UKIP on immigration and the EU.
The out
Ukip on immigration, view is odd, as immigration is a concern of Northerners too, and apart from in Liberal North London, there's.
The Conservatives seem to have made great gains since a Survation poll a year earlier put Labour first on 34 %,
UKIP on 30 %, and the Tories on 28 %.
With just over three weeks to go before a crucial byelection in the normally safe Tory seat of Rochester and Strood, which Ukip threatens to seize, the poll puts
Ukip on 18 % of the national vote, with the Lib Dems on 6 % and the Greens on 4 %.
It puts
Ukip on 29 %, narrowly ahead of Labour on 27 % and the Conservatives on 26 %, among male voters.
Fascinating that the @Survation poll has
UKIP on 24 % & the Tories on 27 % tonight, but the papers tell us that Labour is the party in crisis.