Overall 67 per
cent of members think Labour did well at the 5 May elections and 11 per cent think it did badly.
When asked to consider press coverage of Labour and anti-Semitism: 49 per
cent of members think Labour does not have problem with anti-Semitism and that it has been created by the press and Corbyn's opponents to attack him, as against 35 per cent who think the party does have a problem with anti-Semitism but it is used by the press and Corbyn's opponents to attack him.
A poll by Jake revealed that 44.8 per
cent of its members thought Labour was the most gay - friendly party, followed by Lib Dems with 44 per cent.
The conference also found that only nine per
cent of members thought that Ofsted were independent and free from political interference.
Not exact matches
I
think we'd be lucky if ten per
cent of our current membership levels say yes, they want to be
members of the Labour party.»
A majority
of members (53 per
cent)
think Labour is now on course to be in government in 2020, but if Corbyn was replaced only 42 per
cent think Labour would win the next general election.
The bulk
of Labour
members 47 per
cent think anti-Semitism is a problem, but no worse than in other parties, whilst 38 per
cent do not
think anti-Semitism is a problem within Labour.
A recent FSB poll revealed that more than 70 per
cent of FSB
members thought a corporate mediator would help build better relations between banks and small businesses.
Some 49 per
cent thought the drawbacks
of being a
member outweighed the advantages - compared to 31 per
cent who said the opposite, and 20 per
cent who were not sure either way.
He said all the parties were in favour
of reforming the Lords, all believed there should be at least 20 per
cent of members from non-political backgrounds, all
thought the remaining 92 hereditary peers should go, and all agreed the reforms should be introduced slowly.
It is a measure
of Corbyn's online success that only 51 per
cent of those who were full
members at the last election
think he is doing a good job.
A survey
of over 600 ATL
members working in state - funded schools in England found that 83 per
cent of education staff did not
think SEND pupils were adequately supported, with 58 per
cent stating that pupils who are officially identified as having SEN do not receive the help they need to reach their potential.
A poll
of 900 National Education Union
members by the Child Poverty Action Group found that 60 per
cent of staff believe all eligible children in their school are getting the free meals they are entitled to, while 21 per
cent think some are not.
â $
cents Provides continued care for radiation patients â $
cents Assess patient needs and uses critical
thinking to resolve issues â $
cents Acts as family advocate to uphold the rights
of the patient â $
cents Instructs patients and family
members of methods
of side - effect management