Sentences with phrase «even vote in the poll»

So let us know in the comments below and even vote in the poll.

Not exact matches

With many people flocking to vote in the evening, polling stations stayed open well beyond their originally scheduled closing hour — one station in Taikoo Shing received its last vote at 2:30 a.m.
Simcha Felder says he will stick with New York Republicans, even as voters went to the polls in special elections that could make him the swing vote.
The Mormons are a sleeper cell and have been commanded to attack the polls in two weeks — Even the missionaries over seas will be able to VOTE!
No candidate had even 25 % of evangelical support in the most recent poll, raising the possibility that Iowa's evangelical vote will be pretty diluted this week.
Among white evangelicals, Democrats won just 20 - percent of the vote, less even than in 2004, when that group flocked to the polls to support George W. Bush, an evangelical who took religious outreach to new levels.
The tall forward is perhaps most famously remembered in his time in England by a superb solo goal scored away to Wolves in November 2010, with a poll in the Guardian even voting it the best Premier League goal of all time.
The Metro edited the article after realising the error, but the internet has long memories, and Spurs fans even trolled them in their online poll for player of the week, voting Rose to the top (this was also removed later) Continue reading →
On the contrary, if «your» candidate is losing in the polls you may consider your vote more important to omit and can even flirt with voting for someone despite not supporting him / her completely (let's call it a protest vote, see French presidential election in 2002, with a lot of people voting for small groups on the 1st round).
Given this treatment, I believe the public has a right to be aggrieved about the circumstances surrounding the referendum process and even to «Bregret» their vote (Wales has changed its mind over Brexit and would now vote to stay in the EU, poll finds).
Even as the polls leading up to election night showed Slaughter in the lead, conventional wisdom kept telling me Republican voters would vote the party line.
Its standing in polls of vote intentions for Scottish Parliament elections averaged just 16 %, while its reading on vote intentions for a Westminster election were, at 14 %, even slightly worse.
This morning's Times carried the result of the latest YouGov poll of voting intentions in Scotland, while this evening Channel 4 News released further results from the same poll.
NEW YORK CITY — New Yorkers headed to the polls for a chance to select Mayor Michael Bloomberg's successor and cast ballots in a host of other elections — even as broken voting machines across the city stalled their efforts.
He said the ballot paper to be used in the voting is «fraudulent» to the extent that «the leaders of the House are prepared to even rig the poll
Having someone of Rangel's stature explain that even he can't make sense of polls showing strong support for Spitzer in the black community was a nice vote of confidence.
Even in the House of Assembly election held that year, APC garnered 109,783 votes while PDP struggled to poll 51,540 votes.
Jeremy Corbyn could romp to victory in the Labour leadership race with an even bigger vote share than he secured last year, a new poll has suggested.
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?
Even though the number of registered Democrats outnumbers Republicans in Erie County, fewer are heading to the polls to cast their vote.
«A major point of contention with the first Siena poll was the city vote was equated to 25 percent of the total county that didn't even happen in the year that Barack Obama won the presidency.
Top Democrats gawked at polls this week showing her with slight advantages in Arizona and Georgia, even though neither state has voted Democratic since Bill Clinton was president.
«You have almost half of New York voters saying they're not voting for this guy after he's spent tens of millions of dollars, and even 20 percent of Democrats in the Quinnipiac poll weren't supporting him,» he continued.
MPs have voted overwhelmingly to back military action in Libya, even as poll figures emerge showing the conflict is unpopular with the public.
The Brooklyn councilman rejected Cuomo's argument that the polls prove New Yorkers are on his side, noting: «The majority of the people in the state don't even vote; that 77 percent approval rating is bogus.»
The poll for the Times found that 66 per cent of Labour members believe that Corbyn is doing «well» — even higher than the 59 per cent who voted for Corbyn in September, with many of those who voted for Andy Burnham now getting behind the leader.
The HRC, meanwhile, is relying on last week's Siena poll to back up its claim, noting gay marriage didn't even register when voters were asked about the single most important factor in their decision to vote for either Weprin or Turner.
Malpass and Blakeman polled fairly even in the first round of balloting, but on the second vote Blakeman surged over the 50 percent threshold needed to be the party's formal designee.
After the release of the latest Quinnipiac University poll on Wednesday, which showed de Blasio beating both candidates handily — he received 64 percent of the vote against 21 percent for Malliotakis in a head - to - head race and 63 percent against Massey's 21 percent — Malliotakis» campaign took an opportunity to undercut Massey, even calling for him to end his campaign.
The Labour northern / working - class vote gives them a solid block of seats they can always rely on; even in 1983, when they polled just 27 % of the vote, they secured 209 seats.
The Labour Party polled below expectations and won 30.4 % of the vote and 232 seats, 24 fewer than their previous result in 2010, even though in 222 constituencies there was a Conservative to Labour swing, as against 151 constituencies where there was a Labour to Conservative swing.
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 accEven 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 acceven 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.
The geography of Liberal Democrat support in the BES suggests even greater losses for the party than the already dire overall vote share in the polls.
Even most of those in my poll who said they would vote Labour said the party had not yet made clear what they would do to improve things — though this may fall slightly now that Ed Miliband has unveiled his programme of price controls and land confiscation.
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.
Even if a majority votes to stay in the EU, as polls seem to indicate, it could tear the Conservatives apart, give a second (or third) wind to UKIP, and further strengthen the desire for independence within Scotland.
Mr Griffin was elected to Brussels even though the BNP polled fewer votes in the region than it had in 2004 - the slump in Labour support meant its share of the vote increased.
Nevertheless, then - Secretary of State Ted Brown ruled that the SLP should also remain on the ballot for 1972, even though the party had polled less than one - half of 1 % for Governor in 1970 and even though the new law required a 5 % vote for that office for a party to remain on the ballot.
Backed up by polling showing Labour streaking ahead in London, it's easy to see the basis of this trend, even if certain seat - specific results look odd - lots of ethnic minority voters, lots of young voters and students, lots of young professionals, and lots of angry Remainers make for lots of Labour votes.
The polls all point to a hung Parliament and one in which Labour have just enough seats (even if they come third in the popular vote) to do a deal with the Lib Dems.
Before I am accused of Anglo - centricity, a note: although voters across the UK have today been voting in the European elections, those results will not be declared until after polls have closed across Europe, on Sunday evening.
Last week's byelection in Henley was predictable and surprising in equal measure: predictable because it showed that David Cameron, riding high in the polls as the government falls from grace, can win a safe seat on his home turf; but surprising because the Conservative vote didn't go up by much compared with the 2005 general election, even though the party is a full 14 % higher in the national polls.
Even white Catholics — another major element of New York's suburban and upstate vote — reported rising acceptance in Pew and Gallup polls.
Being utterly bored with what passes for news in the media, in particular the endless opinion polls supposedly showing voting intentions 3 months before the general election — and how many of those questioned actually know why they will be voting for the party they choose; even more importantly, how many of those questioned even understand what democracy is or how politics works in this country — I thought a little light relief was called for.
But polls show that overhauling Medicare is unpopular with the public, and even while the overall budget plan has wide GOP support in the House, Senate Republicans are still discussing what to do with it as a vote looms this week.
Looking at the breakdown of support in this most recent poll, Liberal Democrat supporters, usually always strongly in favour of AV, have become even more pro-AV, with 84 % saying they would vote in favour of AV.
Even with narrowing polls, it is as well to remember that this general election, like all others, will be decided in the marginals; calculations based on broad swings in the national vote - share have inbuilt inaccuracy in a first - past - the - post system.
A poll in Labour marginals shows that nearly half of voters were more likely to vote Tory if Cameron backed a 50,000 cap on immigration - The Sunday Times Yesterday evening's ToryDiary
In the last week or so the polling website May2015 has convincingly put forward the thesis that even if the Tories win the most seats and votes on May 7, Ed Miliband is the likelier Prime Minister.
Not unexpectedly, some groups are even calling for the right to take voting directly to «the cloud» in the hope of accommodating absentee voters and attracting those not inclined to make the trip to their local polls.
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