Below are the latest Opinion Polls Showing the current voting Intentions between the Tories and Labour .
Despite one of the worst UK governments ever Labour have completely failed to gain a lead even what now appears (outside Wales and Scotland) a two horse race.
vote: polls that include data from Northern Ireland have had Northern Irish data removed in the table below, to show figures from Great Britain (i.e. England, Wales and Scotland) only.
Compare this with the run up to the Labour Landslide of 1997
Even with the Liberal Democrats in the mix Tony Blair was streets ahead of the Tories a year after the 1992 General Election.
I have never truly believed that it was the Blue-Toryism of New Labour that was responsible for this.
If Labour had a young dymamic left leaning leader in 1997 then they would have still have won against the Major government , which compared to Mrs May's looks "strong and stable".
The problem is the Corbyn is not really providing any real concrete opposition to the Tories.
Even if he is a Hard Brexiter himself he surely should be providing a constructive scrutiny of the government plans instead of letting the Tories walk a Hard Brexit through the commons and leave it up to Plaid. SNP. Greens and Lib Dems to do so.
Indeed Corbyn seems at time to be concerned, with beating the Left leaning SNP government in Scotland than the Tories in Westminster.
Labour claim that they have the most Left Wing leader in decades . but it is leader who seems incapable of a vision of a what a future Labour government post Brexit will do.
The Tories are on the Ropes not just over Brexit . but at times it seems Corbyn seems to be retreating to his corner in the belief that the Tories will simply collapse with no punches thrown at them.
Despite one of the worst UK governments ever Labour have completely failed to gain a lead even what now appears (outside Wales and Scotland) a two horse race.
vote: polls that include data from Northern Ireland have had Northern Irish data removed in the table below, to show figures from Great Britain (i.e. England, Wales and Scotland) only.
[hide]Date(s) conducted |
Polling organisation/client | Sample size | Con | Lab | Lead | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2–7 Mar | Ipsos MORI | 1,012 | 43% | 42% | |||||||
5–6 Mar | YouGov | 1,641 | 41% | 43% | 2% | ||||||
2–4 Mar | ICM Research/ The Guardian | 2,030 | 43% | 42% | 1% | ||||||
26–27 Feb | YouGov | 1,662 | 41% | 42% | 1% | ||||||
19–20 Feb | YouGov | 1,650 | 40% | 42% | 2% | ||||||
16–19 Feb | ICM Research/The Guardian | 1,662 | 42% | 43% | 1% | ||||||
12–13 Feb | YouGov | 1,639 | 40% | 41% | 1% | ||||||
6–12 Feb | Kantar Public | 2,448 | 39% | 39% | Tie | ||||||
6–9 Feb | BMG Research | 1,507 | 40% | 40% | Tie | ||||||
6–8 Feb | Opinium/The Observer | 2,002 | 42% | 39% | 3% | ||||||
5–6 Feb | YouGov/The Times | 2,000 | 43% | 39% | 4% | ||||||
2–4 Feb | ICM Research/The Guardian | 2,021 | 41% | 40% | 1% | ||||||
28–29 Jan | YouGov/The Times | 1,669 | 42% | 42% | Tie | ||||||
26–29 Jan | Survation | 1,059 | 40% | 43% | 3% | ||||||
19–23 Jan | Ipsos MORI | 1,031 | 39% | 42% | 3% | ||||||
10–19 Jan | ICM Research/The Guardian | 4,117 | 41% | 41% | Tie | ||||||
16–17 Jan | YouGov/The Times | 1,672 | 41% | 42% | 1% | ||||||
12–14 Jan | ICM Research/The Guardian | 2,027 | 40% | 41% | 1% | ||||||
11–12 Jan | Opinium/The Observer | 2,008 | 40% | 40% | Tie | ||||||
7–8 Jan | YouGov/The Times | 1,663 | 40% | 41% |
Compare this with the run up to the Labour Landslide of 1997
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Even with the Liberal Democrats in the mix Tony Blair was streets ahead of the Tories a year after the 1992 General Election.
I have never truly believed that it was the Blue-Toryism of New Labour that was responsible for this.
If Labour had a young dymamic left leaning leader in 1997 then they would have still have won against the Major government , which compared to Mrs May's looks "strong and stable".
The problem is the Corbyn is not really providing any real concrete opposition to the Tories.
Even if he is a Hard Brexiter himself he surely should be providing a constructive scrutiny of the government plans instead of letting the Tories walk a Hard Brexit through the commons and leave it up to Plaid. SNP. Greens and Lib Dems to do so.
Indeed Corbyn seems at time to be concerned, with beating the Left leaning SNP government in Scotland than the Tories in Westminster.
Labour claim that they have the most Left Wing leader in decades . but it is leader who seems incapable of a vision of a what a future Labour government post Brexit will do.
The Tories are on the Ropes not just over Brexit . but at times it seems Corbyn seems to be retreating to his corner in the belief that the Tories will simply collapse with no punches thrown at them.
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