A majority in the Labour movement believe the coalition will prove so unpopular that Labour will
win the next election without having to change fundamentally.
The ComRes poll found that half the country believes Labour would have a better chance of
winning the next election without him.
Not exact matches
We might
win the
next election outright, with or
without boundary changes, but the odds are against it.
Most dangerously of all, they think the coalition will prove so unpopular that Labour will
win the
next election almost by default,
without needing to change.
He
won election in 2013
without capturing the borough and doesn't need us to
win re-
election next year.
None the less, the
next election and future ones can't be
won without a presence on the ground.
Moreover, the collapse of the Liberal Democrats — particularly in urban Britain, Scotland and the north of England — gives Labour MPs extra hope that they can
win outright at the
next election,
without needing any Lib Dem help.
Republicans have a significant opportunity in
next year's
election to
win on the education issue by continuing their push for a reform - based education agenda and arguing against the idea that more money
without real structural reform can fix the ills of our education system.
But for those of us who follow Hansen, Spratt, Monbiot, and many others in the tail of a much more serious climate change story: non-linear, with positive feedbacks, tipping points, time lags and thresholds, we need a much more robust and focused scientific consensus now,
without waiting years for the
next IPCC reports, in time to
win the crucial 08
election because the solution must be now, global and America must be a leader.