Sentences with phrase «of labour voters»

People who supported Mr Clegg's party in May are the least likely to agree that those with the broadest shoulders are bearing the heaviest burden of the cuts — 22 per cent, compared to 23 per cent of Labour voters and 39 per cent of Tory voters.
Energised Tory vote: 96 % of Tories plan to vote compared to just 77 % of Labour voters (ComRes, Independent).
In other words, around a half of all Labour voters declined to condemn the Conservative - led government.
This view is shared by majorities of supporters of all three main parties: 77 % of Conservatives, 73 % of Labour voters and 65 % of Liberal Democrats.
Farage resonated with a large section of labour voters, particularly on issues such as immigration.
Its first finding is that only 47 % of Labour voters - yes Labour voters, not the whole population - believe Labour is «fairly likely» or «very likely» to fulfill its manifesto pledges if returned to government.
Mr Cameron was praised as a good prime minister by 40 per cent of Liberal Democrats — despite his electoral destruction of their party in 2015 — and even by 15 per cent of Labour voters.
«I must be one of the 87 per cent of Labour voters who support being in the single market and customs union.»
According to the Guardian, half of Labour voters don't know the party wants to stay in.
has faced criticism after a poll last week showed that half of Labour voters do not know where the party stands on the
In his victory speech, Mark Reckless said the large number of Labour voters who switched their support to him showed «the radical tradition, which has stood and spoken for the working class, has found a new home in UKIP»
Almost half of Labour voters wrongly believed the party was either split or backing Brexit, or said they did not know the party's stance, according to a poll in the Times this week.
It's hard to say, but the trend does seems to be moving away from Blair — back in July Populus found 48 % of Labour voters wanted Blair to stay on past the next election and only 24 % wanted him to go before 2006.
More than a third of Labour voters now believe the party has the wrong leader, according to a ComRes poll in the Labour - supporting Sunday Mirror.
In all these cases the policies weren't just popular amongst Conservative and Liberal Democrat supporters, they were also backed by a majority of Labour voters.
Past vote weighting of phone polls invariably involves making the sample more Conservative and less Labour and the cross-breaks of the ComRes poll for the Indy shows that answers to this question are very closely correlated with voting intention — 72 % of Tory voters answer Cameron & Osborne and 80 % of Labour voters answer Brown & Darling.
The poll also indicates that 10 % of Labour voters in the last General Election would switch their allegiance to Ukip next year.
The former shadow health minister Jamie Reed told the Sunday Times (#): «The vast majority of Labour MPs are keen to listen to and represent the ambitions and views of Labour voters and ex-voters.
These plotters with no self - awareness attack Corbyn when a third of Labour voters opt for Brexit at a time when Nicola Sturgeon is being seen as a strong leader when the same amount of SNP voters did likewise.
Paul Kenny, 2 / 3rds of current labour members, support remain 50/50 of labour voters at the last election support remain, and all those ex labour members?
RANDOM STAT: Brexit is the top issue for 57 % of Tory voters and 59 % of Lib Dems - but just 32 % of Labour voters.
On the EU, for about the 100th time, 63 % of Labour voters voted remain, compared with 64 % of SNP voters and 70 % of Liberal voters.
Asked specifically about the future of George Osborne, 45 % think he should be replaced compared to 24 % who think he should stay — the answers are largely on partisan grounds however, 71 % of Labour voters want him to go, 65 % of Tory voters want him to stay.
Speaking before he arrived in Glasgow, Miliband admitted that he knew Labour had to «reach out to Scotland» and ask the hundreds of thousands of Labour voters who backed independence to «come home».
Asked if they agree or disagree with various statements about Cameron, 60 % of people agree that, under Cameron, the Conservatives have «aquired a new freshness and vitality» — this includes 47 % of Labour voters and 58 % of Lib Dem voters.
And the winner of last night's by - election in Rochester, UKIP's Mark Reckless, said the large number of Labour voters who switched their support to him showed «the radical tradition, which has stood and spoken for the working class, has found a new home in UKIP».
This isn't just non-Labour voters playing silly - buggers, 45 % of Labour voters want Blair to go this year or next year.
More than half of Labour voters (56 per cent) are pleased with Mr Corbyn's performance while just 25 per cent believe shadow foreign secretary Hilary Benn, who was widely lauded for a bravura Commons speech backing military action against Islamic State in Syria, would make a good replacement, rising to 42 per cent among Conservative voters.
He cited polling from the remain campaign that shows about half of Labour voters are still unclear about the party's stance with just two weeks to go before the referendum.
The prospect of an election is what has triggered the action against Corbyn and comes as a leaked poll commissioned by the party revealed that over one in four (27 %) of Labour voters was less likely to vote for the party following the referendum campaign in which 214 Labour MPs called on people to vote to remain in the EU.
Not only do a near - unanimous 96 % of Tory voters back this goal; so do 64 % of Labour voters and 62 % of Liberal Democrats.
can someone at some point remember that the vast majority of labour voters have zero empathy with Corbyn.
Conservativehome meanwhile have another poll result from YouGov asking about the Davis by - election: 61 % of respondents thought that Labour should have put a candidate up at the by - election, including a plurality (48 %) of Labour voters.
Where the Conservatives have more grounds for optimism are some of the other questions asked in the recent polls about David Cameron — a recent ICM poll that found that David Cameron was seen as a potential PM, a person who could change the way people thought about the Conservatives and a person who over a third of Labour voters and almost half Lib Dem voters said they could vote for; another ICM poll that found that 40 % of people thought that Cameron was the natural heir of Tony Blair — these sort of findings were definitely not seen after Michael Howard became leader.
A third of Labour voters in Scotland would back a deal with the SNP if it helped to keep the Tories out of government at Westminster, according to a poll.
Even 48 % of Labour voters agree.
59 % of people agreed that Labour had «seriously lost touch with ordinary working people» (including 30 % of Labour's own supporters), 70 % that «Labour need to make major changes to their policies and beliefs to be fit for government again» (including 50 % of Labour voters), 61 % agreed that «Labour still haven't faced up to the damage they did to the British economy» and 50 % agreed that «If Labour returned to government they would put the country into even more debt».
45 % of Labour voters think would be up to the job of Prime Minister, 34 % think he would not.
He said the shift involved a Tory tendency to win in marginal seats and a greater distribution of Labour voters in seats where it was pipped by third parties, adding: «It is these last two things which has turned a system that once looked as if it was to the advantage of Labour to the Tories» advantage, and there is a boundary review to come.
More importantly 51 % of Labour voters and 62 % of Lib Dem voters think Cameron could change their view of the Tories, and 36 % of Labour voters and 46 % of Lib Dems think that Mr Cameron is «someone I could vote for».
Of the Labour voters who defected to the SNP in 2015, three - quarters believed Nicola Sturgeon's party had the policies to redistribute income from rich to poor; less than half felt the same about Labour.
However, the division were not as sharp as you might think — 39 % of Labour voters supported some degree of selection, with 11 % supporting complete selection.
As the end of the contest draws near, a survey of Labour voters for the Independent last week gave David Miliband the lead, with Ed Miliband placed second.
But with a third of Labour voters... (Comments: 98)
I personally think the AV referendum is lost because Nick Clegg (and I mean Nick Clegg personally) has alienated masses of Labour voters who might otherwise have supported it.
On the other side of the party fence, the turnout of Labour voters matters hugely.
The poll also found that 63 % of Labour voters would be «delighted or pleased» if the party came out against Brexit, with 22 % saying they would feel the same if it vowed to go ahead with leaving the EU.
But most of those who voted against him support the cap — as do two - thirds of all Labour voters.
In the mean time the third of Labour voters who voted leave will drift either to non-voting or UKIP.
Only 69 % of Labour voters trust Labour more than the coalition more than Labour to deal with the deficit, 77 % trust Miliband & Balls to run the economy more than Cameron & Osborne.
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