Sentences with phrase «voting labour in»

Similarly Survation (with a smaller sample) recorded 76 % of 2010 Labour voters as voting Labour in 2015.
Ashcroft's poll (sample size 14,000) of voters on 7 May recorded 73 % of 2010 Labour voters as voting Labour in 2015.
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.
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.
Colin Rallings and Mike Thrasher of Plymouth University point out that just 21.6 % of the electorate voted Labour in 2005.
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.
But, polls show that at least 40 % of the British public, many of whom voted Labour in the last general election, agree with me.
The overwhelming majority of «no» voters who voted Labour in 2010 also voted Labour in 2015, as the British Election Study shows.
Of Scots who voted Labour in the 2010 general election, 35 % voted YES to independence.
While 97 % of Labour members might wish to remain in the EU, polling shows that 27 - 33 % of people who voted Labour in 2015 want to leave.
I, and many like me, who voted labour in the past definatly * can not * see the fruits of redistribution being distributed on anything like an equitable basis.
Much of their support is from the Conservative heartlands, and even the vast majority of those workers who intend to vote for them have not defected from Labour: only 17 % of UKIP voters voted Labour in 2010 (the same amount who voted Liberal - Democrat), compared with 45 % who voted for the Conservatives.
But in so doing it seems to have forgotten (or not realised) that most of those who voted Labour in 2015 — including those living in Labour seats in the North and the Midlands — backed remain.
Amongst those who say they voted Labour in 2010, 34 % say that they voted Yes in the referendum.
The poll's figures for general election voting intentions are not as bad but still not good: although the headline figures are Con 31 %, Lab 36 %, LD 9 %, UKIP 15 %, of those who voted Labour in 2010, 9 % are said to be intending to vote UKIP.
Almost inevitably, those who voted Labour in 2011 particularly react adversely to the former prospect, Conservatives to the latter, while in both cases they are joined in switching towards Yes by some voters who did not vote at the last Scottish Parliament election.
If they stayed with the party when the economy was in a mess and Gordon Brown was leader, surely they can be counted to vote Labour in 2015.»
«I have deliberately been speaking to people who didn't vote Labour in the general election last year - to ex Tory or Lib Dem voters.
Generally, I wonder if the «yoof» vote might be transitory, «I voted Labour in 2017 but I'm still paying tuition fees, stuff this for a game of soldiers»?
It does not do Oakeshott, or his ideas of a progressive alliance, much good if Liberal Democrat supporters do not vote Labour in the seats where he has donated money to Labour, or vice-versa.
Just under half (49 per cent) of Unite members said they would vote Labour in an election tomorrow; 23 per cent would vote Tory.
«Labour seems to have forgotten (or not realised) that most of those who voted Labour in 2015 — including those living in Labour seats in the north and the Midlands — backed remain,» he wrote in The Guardian last week.
A YouGov poll yesterday found ten per cent of voters would be more likely to vote Labour in the next general election if Mr Hain were deputy prime minister.
New polling by Lord Ashcroft confirms that Ed Miliband was one of the biggest reasons why people who voted Labour in 2010 decided to vote for the Conservatives in 2015.
Many of them chose to vote Labour in June precisely to punish the Tories for their hard Brexit stance.
Thirty per cent of those who voted Labour in 2010 are now prepared to vote SNP.
We can see this by exploring the responses of those who voted Labour in 2010.
Around 70,000 people who voted in the leadership election did NOT vote Labour in May's general election.
Alternatively, a Corbyn victory could position the party to harness and direct support from a new, young radical constituency (much of which either didn't vote or didn't vote Labour in the election).
Of course the response was highly skewed by the loyalty of Conservative and Labour supporters — interesting that 12 per cent of those who voted Labour in 2010 think Cameron a better PM, and 9 per cent of those who say they will vote Conservative in the next election think Brown was a better chancellor than Osborne.
Don't vote Labour in seats where the Lib Dems best challenge Cameron.
As John Curtice put it here last week: «Labour seems to have forgotten (or not realised) that most of those who voted Labour in 2015 — including those living in Labour seats in the north and the Midlands — backed remain.
In the Labour - held seats, only 60 % of those who voted Labour in 2010 said they would do so again this year; more than one third (35 %) said they would support the SNP.
Just under half (49 %) of Unite members said they would vote Labour in an election tomorrow; 23 % would vote Tory.
In theory, a left - wing candidate such as Corbyn would be well suited to picking up these voters, many of whom have indeed voted Labour in the past.
June's election saw young people turning out to vote in record numbers, with 60 % 18 - 24 year olds having voted Labour in June, whilst 61 % of over 64s voted Conservative.
Worse still, the polling shows that since the last election over a quarter of 2010 Labour voters (26 %) have decided not to vote Labour in 2015.
Generally, our data shows that people were more likely to vote Labour in 2015 when they thought the party was more left - wing, and less likely to vote Labour when they thought it was centrist.
It is even negative among people who voted Labour in May; his net score with them is minus six.
But there's a bigger issue: is Labour in touch with its core vote and with those people who voted Labour in 1997 but have abstained since?
Of the nine million people who vote Labour in May around four million withhold their backing for Corbyn and McDonnell on the economy (Comments: 128)
Those who voted Labour in May have switched from backing military action by 52 - 26 % a week ago, to opposing it, by 42 - 35 % today.
Fewer than half of people who voted Labour in 2015 - and just 56.9 % of people who intended to vote Labour in June - thought Jeremy Corbyn would make the best Prime Minister.
If the SNP could attract the Anti-cons who vote Labour in the West, they might even get a majority.
It found that 6 % of those who voted Labour in 2015 said it was much more likely they would vote Labour; 5 % said a little more likely to vote Labour, making a total of 11 %.
8,606,517 voted Labour in 2010 and 9,347,324 voted Labour in 2015.
Never voted labour in my life and laughed out loud when I read poor old Roger statement that Michael foot, the biggest political buffoon in my lifetime, would win the Greatest leader poll Roger, Roger, Roger, what sort of life you been leading out there, and Kinnock the greatest celtic leader?
Neil Kinnock wanted to be liked tried to appeal to groups that Labour hadn't in the past courted, the police, the city, small businessmen, liberals, Ed has tried to appeal to a group that haven't voted labour in 12 years union activists and guardian readers, while only loosing a few progress types, will the Tories manage to portray him as kinnock no, 2, but those people in the city, those sceptical of unions or the police who stopped voting Tory in97 ′ have never gone back to the Tories to see.
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