Sentences with phrase «voting intentions of others»

Not exact matches

But Bricker cautions that voting - intention surveys and consumer research are so different that the transferability of conclusions from one to the other is low.
Three Democrat senators declared their intention to break ranks with other Senate Democrats on the Foreign Relations Committee, ahead of the vote.
Our online polling is also being adjusted in a comparable manner to our telephone polling, where supporters of the Green Party or UKIP have their secondary voting intention reallocated to other parties where no Green or UKIP candidate is on their ballot paper or undecided refused or would not vote.
One of the major talking points has been Lord Ashcroft's recent polls of 16 Scottish constituencies, which attracted special attention because unlike the other polling companies it drilled down to constituencies rather than just voting intentions as a whole.
The actual voting intention figures, with don't knows and won't votes excluded, is CON 49 %, LAB 20 %, LDEM 21 %, Others 10 % — representing a swing of 10.9 % from the last general election.
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 %.
On current voting intentions the equivalent entire voting block of Scotland & Wales, in UK voting terms are going to vote for someone other than LAB / CON / LIB.
The problem is that, as a traditional driver of voting intention, constitutional reform ranks behind just about every other measure you can think of - even more so in a recession.
A new ComRes poll for Tuesday's Independent has headline voting intention figures, with changes from last month, of CON 40 % -LRB--1), LAB 27 % -LRB--6), LDEM 18 % (+2) and Others 14 %.
Today's daily YouGov tracker for the Sun has topline voting intentions of Conservative 36 %, Labour 42 %, Liberal Democrats 9 % and others on 14 %.
In the first three waves of the BES we randomized the placement of the vote intention question to be either at the start of the survey or at the end after all other questions.
YouGov also asked how people would vote in a re-run between Boris and Ken — 49 % would vote Boris, 33 % Ken (respondents were not offered the chance of voting for other candidates, so this was not a genuine voting intention polls by any means, but since the London electoral system does redistribute votes between the top two candidates it offers a rough guide).
As far as I can recall the last proper ComRes poll of London voting intentions was in March (there was one that asked which candidate people were inclined to support in September, but it was a small sample and wasn't really comparable), and showed Ken very narrowly ahead, so this suggests a move towards Boris though, given the difference in the question now that other candidates are known, I wouldn't read too much into that.
Although the Times (and other Scottish news media) lead on the poll's findings in respect of independence and devolution (anti-independence, pro-devo-max which was also the most popular in a 3 - way choice), the poll's findings on Westminster voting intentions are rather more spectacular.
Although the Times (and other Scottish news media) lead on the poll's findings in respect of independence and devolution (anti-independence, pro-devo-max which was also the most popular in a 3 - way choice), the poll's findings on Westminster voting intentions are rather -LSB-...]
As I've said before, all reputable pollsters will put voting intention questions at the start of a poll to make sure other questions don't skew the answers.
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