Sentences with phrase «since polling day»

But the immediate task is to rebuild the Lib Dems as a campaigning party, continuing to grow the membership — which has jumped by 18,000 since polling day — and winning back council seats before attempting to get more MPs elected in 2020.
More than 21,000 have joined since polling day and it's still going strong.
It has also added over 10,000 new members since polling day, partly reversing the decline it suffered in the early years of coalition.

Not exact matches

I'm curious as to how AHA escapes their own assertion of bias since they have a specific opinion on religions as well and on what topics they feel an evangelical research firm should poll, but those are different blog posts for another day.
Seems a lot of christians like to hit the polls these days and vote away the rights of gays, but that's ok since they don't SAY they're doing it, right?
They dropped out of the poll and have been ranked just once since Jan. 1, but the Aggies are in position to avoid having to play five straight days to win the SEC Tournament next week, improving their chance of a second NCAA bid in seven years under coach Billy Kennedy.
The main goal of the Democratic party's field organizing is to get their supporters off their butts and to the polls, either on Election Day or (even better) beforehand — absentee ballots are field - organizing gold, since every early ballot in the bank represents a voter who WO N'T need to be hassled in person or over the phone before November 4th.
President Donald Trump's approval rating has rebounded to its highest level since the 100 - day mark of his presidency, according to a new CNN poll conducted by SSRS, even as his approval ratings for handling major issues remain largely negative.
Online polling is growing more responsive since the days when YouGov was set up and the ability to contact several thousand members of the public daily - built up thanks to the respectability afforded by a politically - balanced editorial position - gives PH a step advantage in being able to provide authoratitive data.
Two polls released today show that Trump will mark his 100th day in office with the lowest approval rating in both surveys since they began decades ago.
It's also the highest he's enjoyed in Post-ABC polling since his first 100 days in office.
I recall the same paper and company produced a similarly misleading poll in 1997, finding the Conservatives just 5 % behind Labour 10 days before John Major led the Tories to their worst defeat since Waterloo, Tony Blair securing a 179 - seat majority.
This week, the Telegraph's James Kirkup produced an informative graph that showed with only one exception, in every election since 1992 Labour has ended up with worst support on polling day than at the 100 day from the election mark.
The expectation for the link between final day polls and the outcome is that the Conservatives will over-perform their polling average by the same degree as they have over-performed their polling average in elections since 1979 (roughly one percent).
This study is now 50 years old; each election since 1964 has been graced by an in - depth survey of voters conducted after polling day, while in -LSB-...]
However churlish it may be to say so, though, one thing is nonetheless crashingly obvious: Labour should have been taking this stance since it left office, not a few weeks before polling day.
Although the party experienced a brief rise in the polls after this, its popularity soon slumped to its lowest level since the days of Michael Foot.
The Labour leader needs to remind himself of this fact and also bear in mind that he can't afford to lose his bloc of ex-Lib Dem voters, who have ensured his party has had a poll lead since 2010 and who won't be keen on an opposition that brings back the nasty «British jobs for British workers» rhetoric of the New Labour days.
It's been a long time since any state has gone to the polls and elected US Senators from different parties on the same day.
Prof. Yakubu observed that since the next polls were only 470 days away (from 3rd November, 2017), early passage of the legal framework for the conduct of elections in the country would assist the Commission in planning adequately.
It is possible that, as polling day approaches, the electorate will after all galvanise around the big two, since they alone can form governments.
With the last few days newspapers having been an orgy of Cameronia, it is rather unsurprisingly a good poll for the Tories — for the first time since the beginning of the general election campaign it shows the parties neck and neck: CON 36 % (+1), LAB 36 % -LRB--1), LD 18 % -LRB--2).
For three days our daily polling has shown the two main parties within 1 point of each other, compared to the slightly larger Conservative leads before the spending review - this suggests a small but genuine narrowing of the Conservative lead since the cuts were announced.
The poll is the first publicly released survey of Central New Yorkers since the first TV ads from both campaigns began to air in what likely will be a nonstop ad blitz through Election Day.
The poll, conducted over four days last week, is the first to account for the breadth of negative coverage Cuomo's received in the weeks since the publication of a 6,000 - word story in the New York Times on July 23 that detailed the administration's handling of the ethics commission, which the governor abruptly shuttered in April this year.
For example, last week's YouGov / Sunday Times poll, showing a ten - point Conservative lead, the highest since January, could have been dismissed as a rogue poll, had it not extended a trend detected earlier in the week, with the Tory lead growing steadily from four points to eight points in the days following Alistair Darling's Budget.
By the time polling day in Glasgow North East comes, a year will have passed since the SNP's John Mason won a totemic victory against Labour in Glasgow East.
Ask AFL - CIO President Richard Trumka about the climate for unions on this Labor Day weekend, and he starts with something positive: a new Gallup poll showing public support for unions at its highest point since 2003.
In just five days since the last Quinnipiac poll, Weiner has dropped 10 percentage points, to 16 percent support among those polled.
This is the lowest score our daily polling has given to the Conservatives since the General Election (although we have recorded a higher Labour lead in the meantime, on days when there was lower support for the Liberal Democrats or minor parties).
History is against her, too: since the days of Fiorello LaGuardia, only three incumbent mayors have been beaten at the polls.
This number represents a 162 percent increase in «I do's» since 2005, when Harris Interactive conducted a similar phone poll that found an average of 90 eHarmony members married every day.
With the S&P 500 Index posting its biggest two - day rally since June in the run - up to Tuesday's vote, investors were clearly betting on Hillary Clinton to win the White House based on the Democratic candidate's recovering poll numbers in the campaign's final days.
This latest round of revelations comes just days before a Calgary convention of the Conservative Party, which has lost support in the polls since the scandal broke in May and are now trailing the opposition Liberals.
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