Sentences with phrase «seats gained from»

Not exact matches

Even after losing seats in Germany's legislature, the Reichstag, from July to November of 1933, the Nazis had gained control of 44 % of seats — enough to form a coalition.
Transat is also surveying other airlines for examples of gaining more revenues from ancillary fees such as checked baggage, reserved seating and other measures already in place in Canada.
Pochettino has insisted that Tottenham will not gain an advantage from playing the semifinal at Wembley Stadium, their temporary home for the season but he admitted the 90,000 - seater arena now feels like home.
Only time will tell on whether Joey Barton will still be at the club come September, or whether Alan Pardew is able to spend a large bulk of the funds gained from the sale of Andy Carroll back in January on a player that would really get the fans up and out of their seats.
The baby bounce is gained from the spring that leads from the seat to the door.
Over the last 6 years we have gained a great deal of experience in extended rear facing car seats and now offer one of the widest selection of ERF in the South West stocking rear facing seats stocking the Multi-Tech 2, Max - Way, Max - Fix, and Dual - Fix from Britax, plus the complete range of rear facing seats from BeSafe include Izi Combi, Izi Kid and the new Izi Plus & Kid i - Size, plus the fantastic Cybex Sirona and Axkid Minikid.
«Under First Past the Post this would likely be disastrous for them, splitting the Labour vote and allowing the Conservatives or UKIP, or whoever, to gain more seats from them.
Based on 2014 seat change to vote swing ratios, this would mean around 13 seats reverting from Republican to Democrat, undoing the 2014 GOP gains on 2012.
Four parties are likely to clear the 5 per cent hurdle to gain a portion of the 225 party - list seats: United Russia, the centrist «party of power,» which currently holds 238 seats in the Duma; the Communist Party of the Russian Federation (KPRF), a leftist opposition party (92 seats); the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia (LDPR), a nationalist party dominated by its firebrand leader, Vladimir Zhirinovsky (56 seats); and A Just Russia (JR), a leftist party engineered by the Kremlin to capture votes from the KPRF — but which also included a small number of liberal legislators in the 2011 - 2016 Duma (64 seats).
The answer for the losing parties is to work harder to win more votes» From 2005 to 2010 the Lib Dems gained votes nationally... and lost seats.
The Tories secured the votes of most former Ukip supporters, which prevented the party from losing even more seats, and helped it secure a handful of gains well away from the capital.
If she gains more seats in the upcoming election, May is much less susceptible to rebellions from her own MPs, and she will find it easier (though not necessarily easy) to pass any agreement that she makes in Brussels.
Although I don't have the precise figures available Lab gained roughly two seats from the Tories for every three they took off Lib Dems.
Aside from holding both Orkney and Shetland, the party managed to gain two seats from the SNP.
They were undone, however, by a collapse in the Liberal Democrat vote which meant the party lost more seats to Labour where Labour was the second - placed candidate than they gained directly from the Lib Dems where they were the challengers.
[49] None was elected, and the party suffered the loss of the two seats it was defending, one that it had gained from a former BNP member who had defected to the party and another from an ex-Tory.
Under First Past the Post this would likely be disastrous for them, splitting the Labour vote and allowing the Conservatives (or UKIP, or whoever) to gain more seats from them.
I believe that the BNP will gain a definate one but possibly two seats from labour and the Ukip will be represented by Farage - who will support the tories!!
Historically, on a good election night for the Tories, the Liberals always do badly — Clegg's only chance of gaining seats will be from Labour in the North because he will certainly lose seats to the Tories in the South.
Labor retained its most marginal seats and gained La Trobe and McEwen from the Liberal Party in 2010, ending the chances of a Coalition majority.
On this basis alone we should expect both Labour and the Lib Dems to lose substantial numbers of council seats while the Conservatives should make gains from their 3 - point recovery.
They were partly compensated for by gains of 6 seats from Labour, 1 from the Liberal Democrats, 1 from UKIP in England.
The Green Party is predicted to gain a second seat in Bristol West, again at the expense of Labour, while Plain Cymru are also predicted to take Ynys Môn from Labour.
The Conservatives lost a seat to the Liberal Democrats, meanwhile Labour gained one from the Liberal Democrats.
Democrats held the state Senate from 2002 until the 2010 elections when Republicans gained five seats and took control of the chamber.
Stroud is the only seat (held or gained) by a Labour candidate in 2017 from a total of six covering its county.
They will be harbingers for House Republicans, who are looking at gains anywhere from six to a dozen seats.
Practically the entire net gain of 45 seats for the Conservative gains will come from Labour - Leave seats as shown in table P3.
This model starts from the premise that winning a general election in Britain means gaining most seats in the House of Commons, not the most votes in a general election.
Research from the Fabian Society shows that in order to secure a majority in 2020, Labour needs to gain at least 106 seats in very different parts of the country.
Under proposals by the Welsh Boundary Commission, three Conservative seats will be abolished, one will be lost, and two would be gained from Labour.
Among the seats the SNP gained from Labour, Strathkelvin and Bearsden saw a 20 % swing towards the nationalists, Paisley saw a swing of 13 % in their favour and Linlithgow registered an 11 % swing towards the SNP.
Elsewhere North Norfolk switched from Lib Dem to Conservative control, after the Tories gained 11 seats from their colleagues in the national government.
North Norfolk switched from Lib Dem to Conservative control, after the Tories gained 11 seats from their colleagues in the national government.
The British Election Study found that Labour gained more Leave voters from other parties than it lost to the Tories, including 18 percent of 2015 Ukip voters - a proportion that must have been lower in safe Tory seats, but correspondingly higher in the safe Labour heartlands where scooping up Ukip voters was the Tories» entire strategy for success.
Firstly, in Conservative - vs - Labour marginals the Conservative vote is largely unchanged from the general election, but the Liberal Democrat vote has dropped to the benefit of Labour, this means on a uniform swing Labour would gain about 28 seats from the Conservatives (though these would be seats that the Conservatives gained at the last election, so in practice the Tories would be helped by the incumbency bonus of the new MPs).
And yet he's the one has the most to gain from the electoral system he called a «miserable little compromise,» in most seats and whenever AV delivers another hung parliament.
Last week I questioned whether CCHQ was taking the Oldham East and Saddleworth by - election seriously amidst concerns brought to me by many that the party wanted to maximise the chances of the Lib Dems gaining the seat from Labour.
The Conservatives have gained more seats from the Lib Dems than they have lost to Labour.
Allen was elected as the Labour MP for the Nottingham North constituency at the 1987 general election, gaining the seat from the Conservative's Richard Ottaway with a majority of 1,665 votes.
The Tories gained three seats from Labour out of 15 the party was defending in swing town Nuneaton, long been given as an example of which way the wind's blowing.
The «Lib Dem fightback» began as the party gained two Holyrood seats from the SNP and massively boosted their vote share in Orkney and Shetland.
Virtually all the Conservative - held marginals are being defended by MPs who gained their seats (mainly from Labour) in 2010.
Yet there was fury from Labour MPs including John Mann, who said the party should be gaining seats everywhere - not losing them.
The old Regent «s Park and Kensington North seat loses all of its Kensington wards as part of the re-organisation of seats in west central London, instead gaining Lancaster Gate and Bayswater from Cities of London and Westminster.
«In English council elections we have gained seats from both Labour and the Tories, and have won in areas which were previously no - go areas for the Lib Dems.
And as every Tory seat bar one is in England or Wales, this adjustment increases the number of Tory marginals that Labour could hope to gain (and, also, reduce fractionally the number of seats that the Tories regain from the Lib Dems).
To gain an overall majority, the Conservatives need to gain 101 seats from Labour, 13 from the Lib Dems and two from the nationalist parties.
Even the anticipated «Bigotgate» backlash failed to hurt Labour in Rochdale, where the party actually gained a seat from the Lib Dems.
The Labour Party made significant gains in the February 2011 election, almost doubling their share of the vote nationally and increasing their number of Dail seats from 20 to 37.
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