Sentences with phrase «polls suggest»

This ex-leader wants his party to set its stall out on Europe, set it out clearly, and make the case loudly — even if the opinion polls suggest that won't be a popular move.
Though polls suggest a Labour majority if the election were to take place tomorrow, support for the opposition is often higher at mid-term.
Polls suggest they could win six per cent in the general election too, a significant increase on the 0.9 % they won in 2010.
The polls suggest that Walker has little chance of becoming mayor in a few weeks time, but that isn't her real aim.
Two new polls suggest that former Rep. Anthony Weiner of New York may follow in Sanford's footsteps in winning political redemption.
Polls suggest he is on course to win the seat for the party, which campaigns for the UK to leave the European Union.
But repeated polls suggest that there is no clear candidate among Labour's senior figures who could be guaranteed to turn the party's position around if he or she took over as prime minister.
But the latest opinion polls suggest heavy losses for the party on May the 2nd.
(CNN)- Two new polls suggest dead heats in the Senate battles in Colorado and Wisconsin, two states where Democrats are trying to hold onto seats.
Nigel Farage believes efforts to discredit him and his party are failing - and the polls suggest he may well be right.
Those results generally align with views of both party insiders, though Democrats think Ayotte's margin over Trump is smaller than it appears because the GOP presidential nominee is drawing more support in New Hampshire than public polls suggest.
Currently, opinion polls suggest the Conservatives will win a maximum of 14 % in the Parliamentary election, which would cost them two or three seats, and probably push them into fourth place.
Polls suggest he still holds a comfortable advantage in a race Democrats believe they have already won.
Yet Labour's equivocal stance on further devolution to Scotland risks alienating its core vote; and recent polls suggest that the Party is on the verge of electoral meltdown in Scotland.
Peter Kellner: The polls suggest neither Labour nor the Conservatives will win an overall majority.
There is an economic crisis and yet the opinion polls suggest the Tories are ahead on the economy.
Opinion polls suggest that David Cameron's lead will grow as soon as he succeeds Tony Blair, his Budget flopped with voters, his nose excavation habits have become a pick of YouTube (thanks to Guido) and his former Cabinet colleague Charles Clarke is desperately organising a leadership challenge to him.
Both findings are well within the margin of error so don't get too excited — recent YouGov polls suggest the underlying picture is that Labour have a wafer thin lead over the Tories for first place, and the Lib Dems have a wafer thin lead over the Greens for fourth place.
His party is targeting a potentially useful 20 seats, although polls suggest it is struggling to make headway.
Polls suggest his support among Labour's rank - and - file remains strong enough to see off the challenge of Angela Eagle, who will tomorrow launch a bid for the leadership.
It comes as a series of new polls suggest that the party are making no progress in the marginal seats they need to win from Labour in order to form the next government.
The Tory leader was keen to downplay the idea that polls suggest the country wants a «Cleggified Cameron», saying voters might well end up with a Lib Dem - Labour coalition instead.
Far from there being the long - predicted «swing back» to the Tories as the election nears, Lord Ashcroft's polls suggest that Labour have actually cemented their position in many of the target seats they need to win.
Even by recent polling standards, the figures for the EURef have been unusually varied but current online polling puts the race within a few points either way, while telephone polls suggest a single - figure Remain lead.
If the vote is very tight — as polls suggest it will be — Aberdeen could prove decisive.
Three of the four forecasting models with vote shares are expecting the Tories to underperform their polling averages, despite the party's historical tendency to do better the polls suggest.
The Christian Science Monitor has noted that Tea Party activists «have been called neo-Klansmen and knuckle - dragging hillbillies», adding that «demonizing tea party activists tends to energize the Democrats» left - of - center base» and that «polls suggest that tea party activists are not only more mainstream than many critics suggest», [178] but that a majority of them are women, not angry white men.
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.
Huge swings to the SNP in national polls suggest that even some MPs who must have thought they had a job for life are threatened.
Recent opinion polls suggest that since 2010 the Conservatives have suffered a small set back and Labour have made a correspondingly modest recovery.
But getting ex-Labour Brexit voters still wary of the «nasty party» to vote Conservative won't be as easy, as the tightening polls suggest.
The latest opinion polls suggest the Scottish National Party could edge Labour out of government and form an alliance with the Liberal Democrats to govern the Scottish parliament.
With less than a week to go before the Welsh election, two opinion polls suggest Labour will lose its majority.
We will have to wait to find out what Scotland chooses: at the moment, the opinion polls suggest that although there is support for further powers for the Scottish Parliament, creating a new state is something only about one 3rd the Scottish voters actually want.
The polls suggest that the voting public is losing patience with the government's economic handling.
Polls suggest Cuomo enjoys a sizeable lead over Astorino, who is little known in many parts of the state.
I feel that the electorate, or what used to be called the «silent majority,» will have spotted this and the LibDems and Conservatives will fare much better in May than the current opinion polls suggest.
Polls suggest that UKIP support has risen steadily since the general election from 3 % in 2010 to 11.5 % now, with a 4 % rise since last year.
So while polls suggest Democratic voters have not yet picked their favorite among the crowded field — the cross examination portion of the debate — in which nearly all the candidates chose to grill Eric Schneiderman — served to illustrate who they deem the biggest threat.
Of course, as opinion polls suggest, this electoral strategy may work on 22 May.
Yet things might actually be worse for the Liberal Democrats in Hallam than the national polls suggest.
UKIP and the Greens will fare somewhat worse (than polls suggest) as their novelty appeal will diminish.
One possible development in this scenario is that several months into a Con - Lib government (coalition or otherwise) the polls suggest both Labour and the Liberal Democrats would win more seats if there were another general election.
More recent polls suggest that most of the public want and expect debates at the 2015 election, now that the precedent has been set.
These polls suggest a quite remarkable swing away from the Liberal Democrats in Hallam, much larger than the national swing away from the party.
The polls suggest that if an election was called tomorrow, it would be Jeremy Corbyn who ended up in number 10.
Current polls suggest support for staying in Europe is at a recent high.
Opinion polls suggest that the public believes the change has come about for party political reasons.
If Ashcroft's polls suggest the SNP really are set for a clean slate, then the Tories will have much to comfort themselves with.
But polls suggest that many voters blame George W Bush rather than Barack Obama for the mess, and I suspect that many see Romney's economics as part of the same «trickle - down» tradition that they associate with the Credit Crunch.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z