Sentences with phrase «voting labour at»

Insufficient attention is being given to the most potent reason for voting Labour at the next general election.
I asked whether she would consider voting Labour at the next election.
Taking a mandate from his small base (compared to the UK population and also the nine million people that voted Labour at the last general election), he and Momentum are sweeping the nation with a message of progressive change.
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.
Only ten per cent of Labour Party members support Brexit, but up to one - third of people who voted Labour at the last general election want to leave the EU.
68 % of ethnic minorities voted Labour at the last election compared with 31 % of white voters.
Swing voters: Six focus groups of people who voted Labour at the 2005 election but for a different party in 2010 were conducted between 16 and 24 August 2010 in London, Leeds, Manchester and Birmingham.
It's aimed at a group that will invariably vote Labour at the next election.
But the survey for the Evening Standard also found three quarters of people intending to vote Labour at the 2020 election believe Mr Corbyn would make both the best party leader and Prime Minister.
Compared to their usual voting behaviour, Harris then asked how likely people were to vote Labour at the next election.
It's important not to over-egg this — only 3 % of hardcore Labour voters said there was no way they would vote Labour at the next election.
Around one - third also say they are less likely to vote Labour at the next election if Mr Corbyn is still in charge.
«Let's have a movement of our own and sign up the 9 million people who vote Labour at elections,» she said.
Former Tony Blair spin doctor Alastair Campbell told the BBC he would struggle to vote Labour at a general election with Mr Corbyn as party leader.
I was there on the ground and was amazed at how much of their vote seemed to be coming from working and lower middle class voters, eurosceptic and socially conservative people, many of whom will have voted Labour at some point in the near past.
I think something like 70 % of EMs were estimated to have voted Labour at the last general election.
Among people who voted Labour at the last election Corbyn's position is even worse, only 27 % say he would make the better Prime Minister, 29 % say Theresa May.
Nearly eight out of ten Loyalists said they had always voted Labour at general elections.
So here we are again Thatcher mark 2 and people at the bottom people out of work people like me will not be rushing out to vote labour at any time soon because you do not speak for us any more..
Let's not forget, the majority of trade unionists didn't even vote Labour at the last election, let alone want to fund the party.
Corbyn who was voted in with 121,000 (49 %) of full party members obviously has grass roots support but the Labour party is not yet run by a dictatorship and it needs to be remembered that MPs represent not just Labour party members but the 9 million poeple who voted Labour at the last election.
YouGov have no way of knowing if any particular Scottish poll, their sample is biased towards Labour die - hards, or towards those who vote Labour at UK level, but SNP for Holyrood.
This was actually partially demonstrated in Owen Jones latest YouTube video when he visited Nuneaton, a lot of the voters there who said they currently support UKIP but «might» vote Labour at some point in the future but won't support the Tories.
But among people who voted Labour at the last general election, Mr Smith's 32 % backing trails Mr Corbyn's 37 %.

Not exact matches

At last year's general election the party fell short of gaining the sort of Leave - voting Labour seats they needed for a majority.
«Watch out for Remain - voting areas swinging towards Labour and Leave - voting areas swinging towards the Tories, much as happened last year,» said Curtice, professor of politics at the University of Strathclyde.
This is particularly in evidence at the moment and we typically find that 10 % fewer Labour than Conservative voters are certain to vote.
The voting period for the Labour leadership will open in mid-August and close on 10 September, with the winner announced at a special conference two days later.
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!
Forecasting that the Ukip vote, which stood at 4,154 in 2015, would split between Labour and the Tories, Gill adjusted her strategy, and was aided by the momentum of the national campaigns.
While some, such as @LeaveEUOfficial, have blamed it on Labour wanting to get the Muslim vote, as far as I can tell, none of these politicians are Muslim, and at least some of these politicians don't have much of a Muslim constituency.
I do not trust any party at the moment, Labour Tory Liberals, all are after the votes and the fact have gone out the window.
«Donations to the Labour party buy votes at your conference, candidates and MPs in this House and pay for the votes that gave him his job,» Cameron replied.
She challenged analysis that talked up Labour success at the election pointing out that the Conservatives piled on voters in many northern seats that had voted Leave, among older voters and among the working class.
How do I show labour that my vote counts, writing to them is a waste of time, complaining at meetings has now become a dead end.
Citizen Corbyn, elected with more votes than the Tories have members as he's fond of warning sceptics, will parade his grassroots legitimacy at Labour's conference in Brighton next week where he's guaranteed a hero's welcome from the army of activists who feel this time they've really got their party back.
YouGov's research for the Sunday Times newspaper put the Liberal Democrat vote share at just nine per cent, with Labour on 41 % and the Conservatives on 34 %.
In April 1975, the special conference at Blackpool which debated Labour's position in that year's referendum on continued EEC membership voted 2 - to - 1 in favour of exit.
At the time of writing, despite an overwhelming vote of no confidence among Labour MPs, he clings on, citing a democratic mandate of party members.
Last year, Corbyn's support soared after caretaker leader Harriet Harman instructed Labour MPs to abstain from voting against the Conservative's welfare bill at the second reading.
But, polls show that at least 40 % of the British public, many of whom voted Labour in the last general election, agree with me.
Members of the House of Lords came in for criticism in January when it was revealed that average attendance at votes in the upper house was 55 per cent for Labour peers, 54 per cent for Liberal Democrats and just 29 per cent for Conservatives.
The Tories may have polled two million more votes than Labour, but at least half of that difference can be attributed to differential turnouts, and most of the rest to missing voters.
A BBC projection highlighting how the results would look if they were repeated at a general election showed Labour would win 29 % of the vote, compared to the Tories 25 %.
Ultimately therefore the decision to extend voting rights to younger people will depend on both whether Labour wins the next election and crucially whether the party sees it as advantageous to increase its vote share slightly at the expense of becoming more reliant on a coalition of disparate interests.
«It's down to two fundamentals: Theresa May's strong performances at Prime Minister's Questions and Chuka Umunna proving Labour's split at the first set of votes.
But given the special circumstances at this vote Scotland's seven Labour MPs ought not to get as comfy as some of their predecessors did.
Labour is enjoying its strongest polling since Gordon Brown's honeymoon, as a new survey shows Conservative voters are growing less likely to vote at the next election.
What I don't really see is how the Labour party holding three pilots in this Parliament, or even selecting all of its candidates in some form of primary at the next election or the time after would make any really significant difference to arguments for or against first - past - the - post, the Alternative Vote, AV +, AMS, STV and various hybrids thereof.
thats my problem at the moment voting for Labour or Cameron is now more about personalities and we know who is going to win that one.
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