The phrase
"labour voters" refers to people who support the Labour Party in politics. They are individuals who tend to vote for candidates from the Labour Party during elections.
Full definition
There liberal minded people voted for us in 1992, There are plenty
of labour voters who voted for us in 1992..
In contrast, of the 65 % of 2010
Labour voters who voted NO in the referendum, 75 % stayed with Labour in 2015, while only 13 % voted SNP.
The boundary changes haven't made a vast difference to the seat directly, although there may be more
Labour voters in the newly added part of the seat.
The poll shows core
Labour voters saying they are less likely to back Labour, not definitely deciding to abandon it.
There was also significant support for a second referendum, with 51 % of
potential Labour voters backing another vote.
I am confident that most potential
Labour voters want to see both a more diverse Labour party in parliament, and also a Labour government radically different from the last one.
The issue is still highly political, with Conservative voters opposing the ban by 44 - 35 % and
Labour voters supporting it by 64 - 25 %.
But the context is very different, particularly because the comments have been made about a voter - and a lifelong
Labour voter at that.
Other potential
Labour voters opted not to care, on the basis that the party did not really seem to care either.
Of course, there are also traditional
Labour voters turning away from the party specifically because of him.
These sentiments may well appeal to fringe left - wing activists, but the questionable language is unlikely to win over floating and
moderate Labour voters - you would think.
The trend is obvious and often commented upon, but what is consistently missed is the disconnect between what potential
rural Labour voters want and what they are offered.
In other words, some potential
Labour voters hope you will greatly increase public spending, and others fear that you will.
This has led to a decline in total voter register of about one million and many of the missing are likely to be
potential Labour voters.
Yesterday Bassetlaw MP John Mann said he was echoing the views of
many Labour voters in his area by calling for Brown to stand down for the good of both the country and the party.
But there is also widespread support
among Labour voters for limiting child tax credits in future to two children per family, and lowering the cap on total benefits to # 23,000 a year in London and # 20,000 a year outside London.
David Davis has made an open bid
for Labour voters in his unique by - election campaign over civil liberties.
The Independent found that a third of
Labour voters think Theresa May would be a better Prime Minister than Jeremy Corbyn.
Even if a more multiparty culture were to be established, it is likely AV would essentially exist as a grand anti-Tory alliance,
with Labour voters who refuse to vote Lib Dem tactically at the moment likely putting them back into contention in rural English seats.
A poll out yesterday revealed that almost half of
Labour voters do not know where their party stands on the referendum.
The party's political problem has now taken on historical significance
as Labour voters who are worried about immigration are backing Brexit, putting Britain's membership of the European Union on the brink.
Bickley hopes to win over disillusioned
Labour voters by focusing on Jeremy Corbyn's vulnerabilities.
Despite this, all polls on the Labour leadership have shown that Brown is still seen as the best choice for the next Labour leader, especially
amongst Labour voters and Labour party members.
«The Dukakis strategy» — of painting Ed Miliband as remote
from Labour voters on issues like immigration, welfare and crime — seems intuitively right to me.
Conservative voters dislike him because they think he is left - of - centre —
while Labour voters reject him as too far to the right for their taste.
Predictably the answers are strongly partisan, 67 % of
current Labour voters think he will be a good Prime Ministers while only 13 % of Tory voters do.
Ukip sensed a chance at victory among the
disaffected Labour voters in the seat, which in various guises has been Labour for the past 50 years, ever since housing estates were built to relocate thousands of poor residents from central Manchester back in the early 1960s.
Linking with the above, showing that winning former
Labour voters back from UKIP didn't and doesn't require making concessions to the right.
Any attempt to win
over Labour voters, or voters in the North or Scotland appears to have been abandoned.
It occurs that I should probably source that - Observer, 23 Dec 2007, column by Denis MacShane entitled «An open letter to Nick Clegg»: «Before the 2001 election, I
urged Labour voters in seats where Lib - Dem candidates were best placed to beat off Conservatives to vote tactically.
Even taking into account the split between those favouring independence and those favouring the status quo, that's a funny way for
disillusioned Labour voters to punish Scottish Labour under Dugdale for not being leftwing enough (though her manifesto was distinctly leftist).
She also claimed that the leader has put in danger Labour's chance of success in upcoming council elections by going against the grain of popular opinion among
Labour voters on the EU debate.
As in Scotland when pro-independence
Labour voters switched to the SNP because of Labour's support for Cameron rendering Scottish Labour a pointless electoral alliance that can never be elected again.
That much is clear on the doorsteps, where even traditional
Labour voters know Mark and know how hard he works on behalf of the people he represents.
If the Conservatives need to worry about still being seen as a party that cares only for the rich, Labour need to beware of potential middle class
Labour voters seeing the party as one only for the dispossessed and poor.
There's already a limit to the number of Labour votes that they can squeeze (especially with
core Labour voters looking to return to or stick with Brown).
This reluctant embrace of austerity proved to be fatal — it had the effect of
alienating Labour voters in Scotland and it failed to convince English voters about Labour's economic competence.
Labour's awkward compromise in this area makes it look like they can't decide, while
Labour voters especially applaud the Tory approach to a get tough policy on welfare — they are often the people who see abuse of the system at first hand, and for them, fairness is about stamping on scroungers and shirkers.
This time, far fewer
Labour voters made the Lib Dems their second choice, while Lib Dem supporters were slightly more likely to give their second preference to the Conservatives rather than Labour.