Sentences with phrase «polling data before»

The aggregate of the polling data before the election suggested that DT had a 30 % chance of winning: The fundamental problem is not with the polls but with the pundits.
«But for the letter he wrote on October 28th I would have won,» she said, citing polling data before and after it was released.

Not exact matches

Only one poll conducted since the attacks has been published, so most of the changes in the opinion poll data, and the models that are built on them, reflect polls conducted late last week; shortly after the Conservative manifesto launch and mostly before Theresa May's announcement of a cap on social care funding.
The first figure is based on data from ICM, Survation, YouGov, ORB, ComRes, Opinium, and Kantar, who have conducted regular polls throughout the campaign and, crucially for our analysis, conducted polls both shortly before and shortly after the Conservative manifesto was launched.
This prediction takes account of both recent YouGov polling data and the lessons from history about how public opinion moves in the final weeks before general elections.
This Marist Poll data was collected from Tuesday, October 26, 2010 through Thursday, October 28, 2010 with five days still to go before Election Day.
Surging Republican presidential candidate Marco Rubio, a senator from Florida, has vaulted into second place in the key state of New Hampshire, just five days before its first - in - the nation primary, polling data released yesterday showed.
We need more data on who really showed up to the polls before we can say this conclusively, but it's difficult to see how Labour got the numbers it did without a big increase at least in youth turnout.
Voting intention with Blair still in charge is CON 37 %, LAB 37 %... but this is probably just as unrealistic as the hypothetical polls from before Brown was leader, if Blair was still PM he'd probably have been tarnished by Northern Rock and the loss on benefit data which would have damaged him.
For the first one, we need a poll of Labour party members, and we don't have a recent one (there is some data from a YouGov poll of party members for Tim Bale & Paul Webb, but that was done straight after the election before the candidates were clear).
Today, researchers at the annual meeting of AAAS (which publishes Science), previewed data from a recent poll showing that when the word «human» is replaced with «elephant» in the evolution question, 75 % of Americans agree — about 25 percentage points higher than before.
It's also worth noting that while the poll was conducted after the data leak had been in the headlines for a few days, it was before Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg embarked on a media blitz aimed at mending the company's reputation.
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