Sentences with phrase «standard voting intention»

BPIX don't give the detailed voting intention figures, but at present Labour are 7 points ahead of the Conservatives (whatever that may mean — we don't know how people are answering the standard voting intention — when they say how they'd vote in a General Election tomorrow are they already taking into account who they expect to be the next leader?
As in 2011, Lord Ashcroft has asked voting intention twice in the poll, first asking a standard voting intention question, then asking people to think specifically about their own seat and asking how they would vote there.
Interestingly comparing the standard voting intention question and the constituency question a quarter of Conservative voters say they will actually vote Lib Dem in Hallam, suggesting significant Tory tactical voting propping up Nick Clegg.
In this set of seats there is no consistent pattern in the difference between the standard voting intention question («if there were a general election tomorrow, which party would you vote for?»)
Boris was the favourite among those who said they would vote UKIP in the standard voting intention question (by 43 % to 33 % over Cameron).
In the standard voting intention we found Labour on 41 %, with the Conservatives on 36 % and the Lib Dems on 9 %.
This is not necessarily a bad thing — certainly I have grave doubts about polls done in Lib Dem constituencies that just ask a standard voting intention question.
In three of the seats I found UKIP ahead by up to six points on the standard voting intention question, and they were tied with Labour in Dudley.

Not exact matches

Standard opinion polls do not include under - 18s, and little is known about their voting intentions.
Not confimed yet, but apparently a new YouGov poll for the Standard has topline voting intentions, with changes from their last poll, of JOHNSON 47 % -LRB--2), LIVINGSTONE 37 % (nc), PADDICK 10 % -LRB--2), Others 5 %.
MRP clearly has a future, although don't expect to see the standard newspaper voting intention poll using a sample of 7000 any time soon.
First it asked people their voting intention using the standard question, THEN it asked them their voting intention again saying «thinking about your own constituency and the parties and the candidates who are likely to stand there, which party's candidate do you think you will vote for in your own constituency at the next general election?»
On the standard question, voting intention in those Con - v - Lib Dem seats is CON 33 %, LAB 24 %, LDEM 18 %, UKIP 14 %.
This is likely to be because best Prime Minister questions are strongly influenced by party allegiance, and the questions seem to have been asked as part of a standard ICM omnibus poll, which doesn't weight by past vote unless there are voting intention questions.
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