Sentences with phrase «yougov daily polling»

Our latest YouGov daily polling for the Sun has topline figures of Conservative 37 %, Labour 42 %, Liberal Democrats 8 % and others on 13 %.
People watching last night's «challengers» debate» were most impressed by Ed Miliband and Nigel Farage, the ITV News / YouGov daily poll suggests.

Not exact matches

Online polling is growing more responsive since the days when YouGov was set up and the ability to contact several thousand members of the public daily - built up thanks to the respectability afforded by a politically - balanced editorial position - gives PH a step advantage in being able to provide authoratitive data.
A YouGov poll today has terrible news for the Daily Mail — the public overwhelmingly side with Miliband.
My own regular national poll — as well as the daily YouGov polls published in The Sun — put the Tories tantalisingly ahead last week.
A YouGov poll published in the Daily Telegraph today shows the Conservative party holding a 21 - year - record lead over Labour with an 18 - point advantage.
Some polls this week have found the party ahead this week, although four daily consecutive YouGov polls this week found Ed Miliband's party in the lead.
Today's daily YouGov tracker poll put the Labour lead at nine, with the party on 40 % to the Conservatives» 31 %.
An exclusive YouGov poll for the Daily Telegraph gives the Conservatives an 18 point lead.
One of the polls, YouGov for the Sun, has the Lib Dems and Labour in joint second place, while Harris for the Daily Mail shows Labour continuing to languish in third.
Meanwhile the daily YouGov poll for the Sun had topline figures of CON 32 %, LAB 38 %, LDEM 8 %, UKIP 14 % (tabs here).
Today's polls ComRes / ITV News / Independent: Con 32, Lib Dem 31, Lab 28 ICM / Guardian: Con 33, Lib Dem 30, Lab 28 Opinium / Daily Express: Con 34, Lib Dem 28, Lab 25 YouGov / Sun: Con 33, Lib Dem 29, Lab 28
A few weeks ago I posted about the possible power of YouGov's new daily tracking polls.
First YouGov's daily polling has topline figures of CON 36 %, LAB 43 %, LDEM 10 %.
Comparisons are with the most recent YouGov poll for the Daily Telegraph published eight days ago.
The Daily Mirror reported on Tuesday that Corbyn, who is already supported by Britain's largest trade union, Unite, has opened up a 20 - point lead in the contest after a YouGov / Times poll last week gave him a 17 - point lead.
A new YouGov poll for tomorrow's People newspaper shows the Tory lead remaining at 18 %, in line with the most recent YouGov / Daily Telegraph poll from earlier this week:
The latest YouGov poll for the Daily Telegraph places support for the Conservatives at 43 per cent, up three on last month.
The latest YouGov poll for the Daily Telegraph sees the Tories climb nine points from their lacklustre pre-conference rating to 41 per cent.
Two new polls today — the daily YouGov poll for the Sun and the monthly Survation poll for the Daily Midaily YouGov poll for the Sun and the monthly Survation poll for the Daily MiDaily Mirror.
The daily YouGov polls for the Sun allows us a sustained look at how polling if doing.
We're back to five polling companies this week, with the usual daily polls from YouGov and one each from Lord Ashcroft, Populus, Opinium and Ipsos Mori.
A YouGov poll for the Daily Telegraph yesterday found 63 per cent of people thought Israel had the right to defend itself, but its attacks in Lebanon and Gaza were «inappropriate and disproportionate».
YouGov did the fieldwork for two academic election surveys (the British Election Study and the SCMS) as well as their daily polling, and all three used different question ordering (daily polling asked voting intention first, SCMS after a couple of questions, the BES after a bank of questions on important issues, which party is more trusted and party leaders) so will allow testing of the effect of «priming questions».
UPDATE2: The daily YouGov poll for the Sun has topline figures of CON 34 %, LAB 35 %, LDEM 8 %, UKIP 12 %, GRN 5 %.
The latest voting intentions from our YouGov / Sun daily tracker poll have the Conservatives on 36 %, Labour on 44 % and the Liberal Democrats on 10 %.
A YouGov daily tracker poll for the Sun today shows the Conservatives unchanged on 34 %, five points ahead of the Liberal Democrats who were up by one on 29 %, with Labour unchanged on 28 %.
UKIP is regularly getting 6 % to 8 % in the YouGov daily tracking poll (7 % in the overnight Sun survey).
Analysis by YouGov has found that, aggregating their daily polls month by month between last September and January, the Conservative vote share among men was 33 %, while among women it was just... 33 %.
Tonight's YouGov data, which will be updated daily between now and polling day, based on complex model and 7,000 sample over 7 days pic.twitter.com / MzpXXifBFX
A YouGov poll for the Daily Telegraph shows the SNP ahead of Labour in voting intentions for a UK general election for the first time in the party's history.
The poll was taken at the weekend and appears to verify a YouGov survey in the Daily Telegraph from last week which saw David Cameron's party slip four points to a lead of eight per cent.
This morning's YouGov poll, published in the Daily Telegraph, is surely the final nail in the coffin of any speculation about Gordon Brown calling a snap general election early in the New Year.
Tonight's daily YouGov poll for the Sun has topline figures of CON 36 %, LAB 42 %, LDEM 11 % — a six point Labour lead, but still very much within the normal margin of error of the Labour lead of eight points or so YouGov have been showing lately.
We have only one GB voting intention poll today, but from a brand new pollster (later on we'll have the regular daily poll from YouGov and the ComRes / Mail / ITV poll).
That said, looking at the broader picture of YouGov's daily polling the Liberal Democrats are definitely upon a downwards trend.
In contrast, the fieldwork for the YouGov / Sun poll was conducted on the 8 and 9 April and for Harris / Daily Mail on the 7 and 8 April.
I always urge some amount of caution with great big shifts in support, but in this case we have already seen Labour increasing their support into the mid 30s and the Lib Dems dropping into the mid-teens with YouGov's daily polling, so while it's not to the same degree (this is the smallest Conservative lead any poll since the election has shown), the trends are in the same direction.
These figures are almost identical to the previous YouGov poll, not particularly surprisingly given it was only carried out a a few days ago for the Daily Telegraph.
Even without daily polling, polls that used to crop up on the middle of conference in past years showed the same sort of thing (last year YouGov had the Tories going from a 20 point lead before the Labour conference to a 10 point one straight afterwards).
This morning's voting intention figures for the daily YouGov / Sun poll are Conservatives 39 %, Labour 41 %, Liberal Democrats 10 %.
YouGov are carrying out genuine daily voting intention polls throughout the conference season.
UK Polling Report has been given access to the latest figures from YouGov's daily political trackers, covering changes since my last report in mid-June.
YouGov's daily polling allows this to be tested.
By contrast, the running YouGov daily online poll shows Labour leading by about 11 points, a hardening in its ratings after an apparent softening in the previous fortnight.
YouGov, which is running a daily opinion poll for the Sun, has been asking voters what would be most likely to put them off voting for the Liberal Democrats.
A YouGov poll in the People showed the Conservatives on 40 % (up two points on the You Gov poll in the Daily Telegraph on Friday), Labour on 31 % (unchanged), and Lib Dems 18 % (down one point).
Two big truths have emerged so far from YouGov's daily (well, five a week) polls.
If you look at YouGov's daily polls, you can see that a nett 13 - 15 % of panel members who voted for one of the three main parties in 2010 are now not doing so.
YouGov's daily polls for the Sun and Sunday Times will continue to tell the story as it unfolds, first and fastest.
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