Sentences with phrase «voting labour»

This is fun... so now Brown has a Six Year Spending Plan rather than a Three Year one and only by voting Labour can we get it varied!
Of course I'm voting Labour.
The view Tony Blair has destroyed the Labour Party, by his critics is often met with, the last election Neil Kinnock fought, he got 34.5 %, the last election Blair fought he got 35.3 %» all be it, on a lower turnout, those who'd been in the party for years, who resigned over Iraq, stopped voting labour in 2005, even though Blair was on his way out, lost MPs who were against Iraq, their seats
«We are not clear enough about what we think the 2020s and 2030s are going to look like, what the challenges are going to be, and why voting Labour in 2020 is going to make a big difference to people's lives,» he says.
Today, send an unmistakable message to the Tories by voting Labour in the local elections.
For that was when The Telegraph dropped the bombshell news that Labour's top celeb supporter had «disclosed how she may avoid voting Labour for the first time in her life».
«Doing so is not impossible: in my research, very few ruled out voting Labour again even at the next election (though most thought it very unlikely that they would be persuaded in time).
Only 2 said they would be voting Labour again for the foreseeable future.
If he comes he will be knocking on doors with me of the very people who tell me they are not voting Labour because of immigration, and let him them listen and think and he will need to do it long enough to realise that he is not being set up because the more houses you do the more you realise that the message is consistent.
The chart reveals a striking correlation between wanting to control immigration and voting Tory on one hand, and wanting access to the single market and voting Labour or Lib Dem on the other.
Research by YouGov for the Scottish Sun suggested 46 per cent of voters north of the border could back Nicola Sturgeon's party in the May 7 election, with 29 per cent planning on voting Labour.
58 % say they are open to voting Conservative but that compares with 70 % who are open to voting Labour.
The poll firstly asks if respondents might consider voting Conservative at the next election — 42 % say they might, technically enough to win the next election, but a comparatively poor figure compared to the 56 % who might consider voting Labour and the 50 % who might consider voting Lib Dem.
It's about making sure the Tories do what they're supposed to do over Brexit: voting Labour doesn't do that.»
Why do I get the feeling when labour lose the election, it won't be recognised, we haven't a clue on the economy, but it'll be said by Abbott, that this mug, out off people who were thinking of voting labour and made them vote Tory instead
People thinking of voting Labour reasonably expect a Labour government to look after THEM, not to look after every human being on the entire planet.
sorry but while corbyn is in charge, I'm not voting labour.
What is particularly horrifying about Denham's analysis was that in his account, he heard for the first time from his constituents about why they might not be voting Labour ** during the short campaign period **.
Polling research has shown that there were 8 % of voters who considered voting Labour but didn't.
I have quite a number of Scottish Catholic friends who have now switched from voting Labour to SNP!
The survey partially confirmed the stereotype of the Church of England being the «Tory party at prayer», with Anglicans typically voting Conservative and Catholics voting Labour.
I might have to consider voting labour for the first time in my life if it might keep you guys out.
As I found in Project Red Alert, my research on Labour's prospects at the end of last year, a third of those who would consider voting Labour say the party hasn't yet learned the right lessons from what went wrong during its time in government, and can not yet be trusted to run the country again.
At present they are probably voting Labour because they oppose independence, but will that still hold good when politics returns to normal after the referendum?
Never mind all those rational arguments for voting Labour.
Of these «soft Joiners», four in ten say one of the concerns they have about voting Labour is that they might spend and borrow more than the country could afford.
Not that many SNP voters indicate a willingness to consider voting Labour next May, even though a majority (53 %) say that they have voted Labour at some point in the past.
Ot this great amount of liberal Or Respect voters who'll return labour too power, in fact the Libdem supporters now voting Labour would have turned had Balls or David M been leader,
And it's likely the number of happy campers will further decline at the 2016 Holyrood election where the argument that voting Labour will stop the Tories is an irrelevance.
18 % of current Conservative supporters said they would, 30 % of UKIP supporters said they'd consider voting for Ed Miliband's party and a sizeable 46 % of current Liberal Democrat supporters said they would consider voting Labour as well.
The blanket opposition to hunting is one of the surprising reasons (to city - dwellers) that many rural people simply won't consider voting Labour: «they just don't understand our way of life».
Because Labour could, potentially, win if the previously Labour but now non-voters can be persuaded to start turning out and voting Labour again, but only if the non-voting support base is fairly large, and without that sort of analysis over larger areas it's hard to judge — it's definitely partially true in my ward, Labour had disappeared electorally years ago, but won the seat in 2012, despite most other parties getting similar votes to normal (and our support mostly going to an Independent we were tacitly backing).
Only around one in five (21 %) of those who state they will vote for the SNP also say that they would «seriously consider» voting Labour in May.
Still — that's a useful list from Sunder of the 21 people across the country who will be voting Labour next time round.
Miliband began his campaign by launching a «manifesto for business», stating that only by voting Labour would the UK's position within the European Union be secure.
Insufficient attention is being given to the most potent reason for voting Labour at the next general election.
As you can see, there is absolutely no mention of a street where «nobody spoke English, nobody had ever heard go Jeremy Corbyn, but they were all voting Labour
There is one woman quoted who had not heard of Corbyn and another man quoted who had heard of him, didn't like him, but was still voting Labour because of the local candidate.
«The northern correspondent of the Guardian wrote last Saturday that she knocked on the doors of a street in Oldham where nobody spoke English, nobody had ever heard of Jeremy Corbyn, but they were all voting Labour,» he told the BBC.
I asked whether she would consider voting Labour at the next election.
«I'm quietly confident, in a non-complacent way, that the people who are flirting with the Greens, a large number of them will end up voting Labour - for positive reasons, because we've got radical policies on the environment, we've got very good policies on addressing inequality, the housing crisis, the NHS.
Around 65 per cent of younger people voted for Jeremy Corbyn's Labour Party earlier this year and YouGov has observed that «age seems to be the new dividing line in British politics», with older people tending to favour the Conservative Party and younger people generally voting Labour.
At last year's general election the party fell short of gaining the sort of Leave - voting Labour seats they needed for a majority.
We already know your tax will go up if you vote Labour on Thursday,» he said.
Happy you picked up on my apaulig Gramor and ilitrate finking.For the record Love Arsenal Hate Wenger Vote Labour Would not wish to shag Teressa May even if it meant life or Deaf
* Read this article by the excellent David Conn — another good reason to vote Labour next year
Colin Rallings and Mike Thrasher of Plymouth University point out that just 21.6 % of the electorate voted Labour in 2005.
After Bercow intervenes, Cameron says the choice at the next election is simple: if you want to join the single currency or give power away, vote Labour!
Butwhen the female vote is broken down, just 32 per cent voted Tory while 38 per cent voted Labour.
So Labour need to get to the disaffected voters who maybe voted Labour in the past and not anymore; they also need to get to those who are not even interested in politics.
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