Not exact matches
Several major evangelical
figures, including Jerry Falwell Jr., and Franklin Graham, both of whom serve on Donald Trump's unofficial evangelical advisory council, have spoken in support of Moore, and, according to the
latest Fox News
poll, 65 percent of white evangelicals in Alabama still plan to vote for him.
The
latest YouGov / Sun
poll puts the Conservatives on 35 %, Labour on 32 %, with similar
figures for the other parties as in the Ashcroft
poll.
A moving average of UKIPs
polling figures does seem to indicate that their support peaked in
late 2014 / early 2015, but looking back beyond that I also note that they've declined and recovered before, so it's possible that the trend might reverse itself.
What do the
latest opinion
poll figures suggest in relation to the likely number of seats that each party will win in that contest?
I arrive at that
figure by taking the current CON - LAB lead of 7 % in the
latest polls and adding an expected 2.5 % underestimate in the Conservative lead over Labour based on my analysis of historical
polling errors.
Today, Cameron can't look beyond the next set of Ukip
polling figures or the
latest backbench rebellion.
The
latest Survation
poll meanwhile has topline
figures of CON 40 % (+3), LAB 43 % -LRB--2), LDEM 8 % (+2).
The headline
figures from the
latest opinion
polls may be fascinating but they are a poor guide to the likely outcome of the election.
Before discussing the views of party members and supporters in more detail, let me address the obvious riposte — in the light of the
polls» performance in this year's general election, why should we trust these
latest figures?
Our
latest voting intention
figures in our daily
polling for the Sun have the Conservatives on 37 %, Labour on 42 % and the Liberal Democrats... (Comments: 0)
[121] In Scotland, support for the SNP continued to grow with
polling figures in
late March reaching 54 %, with the Labour vote continuing to decline accordingly, [122] while Labour retained their (reduced) lead in Wales,
polling at 39 % by the end of the campaign, to 26 % for the Conservatives, 13 % for Plaid Cymru, 12 % for UKIP and 6 % for the Liberal Democrats.
The
latest voting intention
figures in our daily
polling for the Sun have topline
figures of Conservative 35 %, Labour 43 %, Liberal Democrat 10 %.
Meanwhile, Andrew Grice - presumably writing before the
figures of the
latest poll emerged - states in the Independent:
Our
latest voting intention
figures in our daily
polling for the Sun have the Conservatives on 37 %, Labour on 42 % and the Liberal Democrats on 9 %.
The
latest voting intention
figures from our daily
poll for the Sun have the Conservatives on 37 %, Labour on 43 % and the Liberal Democrats... (Comments: 0)
The
latest voting intention
figures in our daily
polls for the Sun have the Conservatives on 39 %, Labour on 44 % and the Liberal Democrats... (Comments: 0)
Our
latest YouGov daily
polling for the Sun has topline
figures of Conservative 37 %, Labour 42 %, Liberal Democrats 8 % and others on 13 %.
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.
Here are the
figures, comparing what we found in our
poll for the Sunday Times a month ago just before the Liberal Democrat conference, and our
latest survey, conducted a week after the end of the Conservative conference (and immediately before Liam Fox's resignation).
The
latest voting intention
figures in our daily
polls for the Sun have the Conservatives on 39 %, Labour on 44 % and the Liberal Democrats on 8 %.
According to the Center's
latest survey, 19 percent of all adult Americans now own some form of tablet, marking a nearly twofold increase over
figures from a
poll conducted in mid-December.
Gallup and Pew
polls show that the percentage of Americans that believe in climate change now hovers around 50 percent, but Krosnick's
latest poll — which asked the question in a more detailed way — suggests the
figure is 83 percent — up from 79 percent in 1997.
A
poll released by the Pew Research Center in
late 2010 found that 39 percent of American adults believe that marriage has become obsolete, a
figure that has risen from 28 percent in 1979.