Sentences with phrase «leave vote»

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We also touched on some of the limitations of the technology, which has the potential to leave some votes on the table and also can hit the point of diminishing returns fairly quickly.
On average there is a small difference in the 2016 Leave vote between the places that do (51 %) and do not (53 %) have elections.
Then leave your vote in the comment section... Or, maybe write a description of your own from a mixture of the two.
Well, criminals sent down leave their vote outside the prison gates.
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A specifically anti-Brexit alliance would risk further seepage of Leave votes to the Tories - and well off Tory Remain - voters in the Home Counties are just as likely to stick with «strong and stable» Theresa May as they are to switch to Tim Farron.
In the leadership election, soft left votes went to the hard left candidate precisely because they did not have a candidate, though I myself, firmly soft left, voted for Burnham and Cooper as unity candidates.
Lawyers who want good benchers chosen by lawyers can specialise — by leaving the voting to those with the time and inclination to inform themselves.
Karen Koslowitz leaves the voting booth after casting her ballot at the Forest Hills library Tuesday afternoon.
We'll leave votes open for 48 hours, then announce our winner back here on this post, so be sure to click back to it on Friday.
Theresa May's Conservatives hope to pick up most of the benefit, particularly in Leave voting areas.
But what if the CPC had left the vote subsidy alone?
Sarah Woolaston, the Conservative MP for Totnes and formerly a GP, left Vote Leave because she said it was making claims about the amount Britain could spend on the NHS which were «untrue».
Assuming Davis leaves the vote up for 24 hours, we should know tomorrow.
There is a portrait of the current assembly with members waiting to enter and leave the voting lobbies.
Labour made a net gain of just two from the Conservatives, whilst the Liberal Democrats collapsed in suburban England and their south - western heartlands as the centre - left vote fragmented and centre - right voters moved over to the Tories.
Senior Labour MPs are also worried about a strong Leave vote in Wales too.
And that is crucial — while every one of Scotland's voting areas voted Remain, Aberdeenshire saw a higher leave vote than average, with several wards overwhelmingly backing leave.
As John Curtice has wisely pointed out, if, as some polls suggest, the swing to Labour is greater than the national average in the Remain voting capital, then it must be lower than average in Leave voting provincial England.
This is a very winnable «semi marginal» for the Tories - Graham Jones» 10.3 % majority must be put in the context of a 21 % Ukip vote share from 2010 and a very large Leave vote.
We should have been able to quickly agree to argue strongly that although immigration was an issue in the campaign, the combined strength of Remain and liberal Leave votes meant that it should not be interpreted as a mandate for huge cuts in immigration.
Failing to address this vulnerability could leave our voting system open in the future to damaging allegations which can destroy public confidence.
Had the centre - left vote not been split between Lab / Lib / Green, a majority should have been possible in 2010 (certainly Labour would have held my constituency).
Given the subsequent Leave vote in the 23 June 2016 referendum, this is set to be the last time the United Kingdom participated in a European Parliament election.
«As a Remain - supporting MP representing a heavily Leave voting constituency, I am in a bit of a predicament,» he said.
20 days ago, David Cameron announced that he would be stepping down as Prime Minister and we faced the prospect of a General Election, against a Party led by some of the most right wing Tories ever, and with UKIP buoyed by huge Leave votes in our Labour heartlands, including in places like Clifton.
Plenty who were inclined to Leave voted Remain because they couldn't be on his side.
Polling expert Professor Sir John Curtice said the Tories were performing relatively well in areas with a substantial Leave vote in the 2016 referendum, where they are picking up votes from UKIP, which did not stand candidates in many areas, while Labour were performing better in places where the Remain vote was stronger and with a higher proportion of younger voters.
But even then I would have thought that it was fairly obvious that the Tories were likely to far better in Leave voting seats, and Nottingham South was 52 % Remain.
Clayton Johnson, Sr. leaves the voting booth after being among the first to vote on Election Day at Martin Luther King Jr..
The BBC published maps of the Remain and Leave votes on 23 June.
The Ukip leader, who is from Merseyside and admitted he had few links to Stoke, had gambled that the seat was winnable on the basis of the constituency's 69 % leave vote in last year's EU referendum.
However, Curtice, the country's best - known pollster whose general election exit poll accurately predicted last year's shock result, told BI that the Conservatives could pick up control of key councils which backed the Leave vote, in areas such as Basildon, Pendle, and Rugby.
More worryingly, markets are now starting to price in the impact of a Leave vote on the rest of the European Union.
«A Leave vote could still have a very large impact,» the Institute for International Finance's managing director Hung Tran said in a note Monday.
One of the biggest reasons that traders were complacent about the possibility of a leave vote was that the betting markets, which are often believed to be more reliable than polling, suggested remain would carry the day.
It is my religious upbringing that has me a left voting independent.
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However, with cultural angst high on the agenda, dissatisfaction with the incumbent government on the rise and a Eurosceptic campaign that is more sophisticated than some realise, it does appear likely that whatever the result, the Leave vote will be fairly strong.
Moreover, the sentiment was also reflected in the Leave campaign grassroots, as represented by one William Oliver Healey who, on 25 of May, a month prior to the referendum, launched a Petition to Parliament reading: «We the undersigned call upon HM Government to implement a rule that if the remain or leave vote is less than 60 % based a turnout less than 75 % there should be another referendum.»
Mr Cameron has previously said he would trigger Article 50 as soon as possible after a leave vote but Boris Johnson and Michael Gove who led the campaign to get Britain out of the EU have said he should not rush into it.
But the leave vote has catapulted them into positions of power and influence.
Britain would be the first country to leave the EU since its formation — but a leave vote will not immediately mean Britain ceases to be a member of the 28 - nation bloc.
The next Labour leader will need to be overtly liberal / democratic republican... in order to win back centre - left votes that defected to the liberal democrats over the last decade.
While he has become the face of the leave vote since June, this reflects the reality of Michael Gove and Boris Johnson's respective positions.
There's certainly much more to be said about the economic repercussions of the Leave vote, which, alongside changes in party leadership is a genuine «leap in the dark,» but it is important to address directly and forcefully the question of popular anger that led to the success of Leave.
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