Gordon Brown has continued his political slide into the parliamentary recess, with the latest
opinion poll putting his personal approval rating at an all - time low.
The results of the local and European elections look set to go to the wire, with the last batch of
opinion polls putting Labour and Ukip neck - and - neck
A new ComRes / IoS
opinion poll puts the Lib Dems on 13 per cent - the lowest level in a ComRes survey since before the election.
With Murdoch sticking his oar in, no money in the Labour bank, and repeated
opinion polls putting Brown behind Cameron - a snap election can't be on the cards at this stage.
The 2015 election bore strong similarities to 1992, with
opinion polls putting the Labour and Conservative parties neck and neck during the campaign, only for John Major's Conservatives to win the actual contest with an overall majority of 21 seats.
Not exact matches
An Angus Reid
opinion poll released in December found only 25 % of voters supported the Tories,
putting them in a tie for second with the Liberals.
On October 30, 2004, Ipsos - Reid released a public
opinion poll that
put support for Ralph Klein and his Progressive Conservatives at 50 percent.
An
opinion poll by research company INSA / YouGov, published on Sept. 11,
put support for Angela Merkel's CDU / CSU at 36.5 percent.
Public
opinion of the Liberals is up,
putting them back on par with the Tories, according to a new Ipsos
poll.
If you take a view contrary to the
poll's suggested
opinion, then you will be the one
put on the defensive — even if your
opinion is based on a weighing of relevant facts and evidence.
Opinion polls released a week ago
put them neck - and - neck.
The
opinion polls are
putting the Tories roughly ten points below their
poll ratings in 2009, which suggests that there are ten per cent of voters to be picked up by the other parties.
Polling finds that electorate cares most about two issues, cats vs dogs (with cat supporters polling 40 % and dog supporters 60 %); and the right to put patty above the cheese in a cheesburger (with the righteous cheese - down freedom lovers unfortunately losing in the public opinion polls 2
Polling finds that electorate cares most about two issues, cats vs dogs (with cat supporters
polling 40 % and dog supporters 60 %); and the right to put patty above the cheese in a cheesburger (with the righteous cheese - down freedom lovers unfortunately losing in the public opinion polls 2
polling 40 % and dog supporters 60 %); and the right to
put patty above the cheese in a cheesburger (with the righteous cheese - down freedom lovers unfortunately losing in the public
opinion polls 20/80 %)
The French president, François Hollande, has warned that Europe risks «regression and paralysis» if Eurosceptics and nationalists gain the upper hand in next year's European parliament elections, as an
opinion poll for the first time
put the anti-immigrant National Front (NF) well ahead of his country's mainstream parties.
«If he [Mr Brown] wants to defend that [42 days] he should
put someone up against me and on the basis of the
opinion polls he should at least be able to dent my majority if not defeat me,» Mr Davis argued.
I don't
put much store in
opinion polls, but if true it would only indicate roughly what you would expect to happen at this point in the parliament - 32 % isn't that much lower than Labour got in the 2005 General Election and all it would suggest is that the Liberal Democrats are having a reversal - tactical voting could see them holding onto many of their current seats, indeed it is even possible that if they got 17 % of the vote that if it focused in an area that they could actually end up with more seats, where the switches in support are occuring is crucial - if they are focused then if the Conservative Party were to get 39 % then it might still result in them getting fewer seats than Labour or in extremis winning a 150 seat majority or so?
It marks a remarkable come back for the Better Together campaign, which was rocked by an
opinion poll 10 days ago
putting the Yes campaign ahead.
These are both signs that Labour MPs - forbidden by Labour rules from «chicken running» to safer seats - are, perhaps, fearful of losing their seats when
opinion polls are
putting the Conservatives so far ahead.
An
opinion poll for The Sunday Telegraph
puts the Tories 17 % ahead.
The governor pointed to public
opinion polls that indicate New Yorkers are behind his budget, saying: «If you take that barometer then you would say people accept the budget that I
put out and the track that I
put out.
Republican pollster Bill McInturff of Public
Opinion Strategies
put it bluntly: «Lots of them are simply lousy
polls; they don't accurately reflect younger voters, African - Americans and Latinos.
By last night, Labour had persuaded the media to expect «heavy losses» in the European elections, and that the party could come fourth — even though not a single
opinion poll had ever
put the party lower than third.
The YouGov
opinion poll, which began after Gordon Brown finished his keynote address yesterday,
puts Labour on 44 points, eleven points ahead of the Conservatives on 33.
And yet, if you look at the
opinion polls over this period almost all of them show Conservative support in the low thirties and Labour support in the high thirties — a sufficient gap to
put Miliband into Downing Street.
Based on the
opinion polls they look good; last year a
poll by Survation
put Ukip second while a more recent snapshot this year by Lord Ashcroft suggested that Ukip are on course to win the seat.
In this episode of
Poll Hub, Dr. Lee M. Miringoff, Director of The Marist College Institute for Public Opinion and Dr. Barbara L. Carvalho, Director of The Marist College Poll, discuss with political journalist and tech entrepreneur Jay DeDapper, the poll's decision to go into the three Rust Belt States that helped put President Donald Trump over the top in the 2016 elect
Poll Hub, Dr. Lee M. Miringoff, Director of The Marist College Institute for Public
Opinion and Dr. Barbara L. Carvalho, Director of The Marist College
Poll, discuss with political journalist and tech entrepreneur Jay DeDapper, the poll's decision to go into the three Rust Belt States that helped put President Donald Trump over the top in the 2016 elect
Poll, discuss with political journalist and tech entrepreneur Jay DeDapper, the
poll's decision to go into the three Rust Belt States that helped put President Donald Trump over the top in the 2016 elect
poll's decision to go into the three Rust Belt States that helped
put President Donald Trump over the top in the 2016 election.
Still, for those getting rather bored with the voting intention figures, we can look ahead to several potentially significant events — many commentators have suggested Gordon Brown is
putting great weight in the G20 summit this week to give his premiership a boost, beyond that is the budget, which could work either way, and past that we have the local and european elections, which often lead to realignments in the national
opinion polls.
I don't
put much faith in
opinion polls, pollsters always claim to have solved past apparent flaws, but they haven't said exactly how they now how reluctant a particular parties supporters may be to support that party, how exactly they quantify it, indeed a lot of the assumptions
opinion polls make seem to be based on
opinion themselves.
A new
poll suggests Democrats in 12 Senate battleground states have made significant gains with their messaging to key demographics,
putting the races at a «tipping point» where the
opinion of women — specifically unmarried women — may provide the path for Democrats to maintain their hold on the Senate this November.
Conservative leader David Cameron has
put a brave face on a dramatic decline in his the party's
opinion poll lead.
«Surveying over 10,000 people, the
poll gives an insight into voting intentions for the next Scottish elections,
opinions of party leaders and achievements of the Scottish Parliament, while
putting support for independence at 26 per cent, the no vote at 65 per cent and just 10 per cent undecided.»
YouGov, which is running a daily
opinion poll for the Sun, has been asking voters what would be most likely to
put them off voting for the Liberal Democrats.
Blood: I took a close look at this same issue by
putting together two statewide, nonpartisan voter
polls in Massachusetts, and then by interviewing 48 top
opinion leaders who have the clout to influence what does and doesn't happen at our state house and the U.S. Capitol.
A recent public
opinion poll showed Andrew Cuomo skating to victory unless the Working Families Party
put up a candidate who offered voters a better choice, in which case much of Cuomo's lead was projected to disappear.
In addition the bias itself was later
put down to the fact that the
opinion polls had included too many Labour supporters who had lost the right to vote by moving.
Polling shows that a vast majority of Canadians now oppose the seal hunt which costs the nation $ 2.3 million annually — so it's a wonder why legislation hasn't been
put forth that reflects the peoples»
opinion of the cruel practice.
Swelly has enjoyed growth on Messenger, Buchroithner said, because in addition to there being no need to download a bot, when you share the bot with a friend inside Messenger, one tap of the
opinion poll or Swelly icon
puts them in a chat window with Swelly bot in order to answer their friend's question about which dress or pair of shoes to wear.