Sentences with phrase «not win the next general elections»

«David Cameron will not win the next general election.

Not exact matches

Jeremy Corbyn — all but certain to be re-elected as Labour leader next weekend - really believes he can win the next general election, despite having the worst ever poll ratings for a leader of the opposition, not just at this stage, but at any stage, of a parliament.
Miliband's best hope to win the 2015 general election is to simply not speak for the next two years.
Ed Miliband could not dream of an easier set of circumstances in which to win the next general election.
It seems hard believe that he wouldn't want to consult the people he wants to have «four million doorstep conversations over the next four months to win the general election on the ground.
For his part, Mr Davis - who had led the seven - month race until the party conference in Blackpool - said he looked at the debates between them as «not just a contest for the leadership, but a preamble to us winning the next general election».
The next general election will not be won or lost because of an announcement on Twitter or a YouTube video, but the way politicians do their job and the way voters are getting their information is changing.
«If we can exhibit such bravado in love and unity, there is no way the New Patriotic Party (NPP) can not win next year's general elections
With what I have heard over the last 72 hours, I am not convinced that with you as leader we can win the next General Election and rescue the British people from what I expect to be the incoming right - wing reactionary Tory Government.
I wouldn't be at all surprised if they topped the poll in the next round of European elections, and won 4 - 5 % of the vote in any subsequent general election.
Continue reading «Andrew Lilico: How David Cameron could win the next General Election — by not holding it in May 2015»»
The 1994 leadership election would ultimately decide not only the Labour Party's new leader, but also the next Prime Minister; Tony Blair won the leadership and became Prime Minister after winning the 1997 general election.
Now if we are driven into voting for UKIP, which does still espouse many Traditional Tory Policies, is unequivocal on a referendum on the Lisbon Treaty and which has eschewed all the Eco-rubbish which has beguiled the other political parties such as New Labour, New Conservative and the Lib Dems, this may not win any seats for UKIP at the next General Election, indeed they will be lucky to hold onto Bob Spink's seat at Castle Point under FPTP.
But Watson is fighting on other fronts, too — to stitch together a fretful party, many of whose MPs see Labour's sometimes shaky performance during the referendum campaign as fresh evidence that Jeremy Corbyn is not up to the task of winning the next general election.
Talk to senior Tory figures at the apex of the Coalition and you will hear the following: that they expect to win the next general election, but not by a huge margin.
Many people who are councillors in marginal areas, or have previously been in that position, know enough of history, or are old enough recall the 1980's, maybe they blame council election defeats of 1982, and the general elections on the Falklands, maybe they take credit for Andrew Mckintosh winning the GLC for livingstone in 1981, maybe they feel we lost in 1979 as it wasn't left wing enough, But they voted Corbyn and won't accept that we will lose by a mile in 2020 with him, even if we get half as any votes in the council elections over the next 3 years, as before, Various things can be done, Blue labour needs to work with Labour first, like compass before them, anti neo liberalism, felt Blair lost his way after his first 6 years, Yes progress has a large following and ability of resources, but since 2007 it's been redundant
In conclusion we need a new leader who can unite the party not divide it and who can reach out to the whole country and give us a reasonable chance of winning the next general election.
In a speech earlier this month, Mr Gove pledged «stronger sanctions» - if the Conservatives won next year's general election - for parents who did not «play their full part in guaranteeing good behaviour».
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