ATJ
Well-Known Forumite
How do you vote 'very strongly' for or against something?
It considers a number of votes on the same topic over a period of time and will be affected by whether they missed a vote or abstained.
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How do you vote 'very strongly' for or against something?
I suspect UKIP has taken support from both Labour and the Tories (mainly the Tories) but Labour has made good any defections from picking up Lib Dem votes which I imagine will collapseSo the mini poll here shows that UKIP have split the Daily Mail vote down the middle
Bring it on
A vote for UKIP may be a vote for Labour but a vote for Labour is a vote for the SNP!
I dont think it will be as cut and dried as that, I think realistically there will be a coalition regardless of victor but on a policy by policy basis. SNP will look for what's best for Scotland in the end and I can't see that effecting the rest of the uk. I would prefer labour not to align with the DUP if anyone.
I dont see a fag paper between any of them at the moment
We don't know yet, we find out on the 7th of May, or soon after.Who's Victor?
Bnp got double the greens? That's depressing!I suspect UKIP has taken support from both Labour and the Tories (mainly the Tories) but Labour has made good any defections from picking up Lib Dem votes which I imagine will collapse
2010 Result
Name Party Votes % +/-
Jeremy Lefroy Conservative 22,047 43.9 +4.7
David Kidney Labour 16,587 33.0 -10.2
Barry Stamp Liberal Democrat 8,211 16.3 +2.0
Roy Goode UK Independence Party 1,727 3.4 +0.1
Roland Hynd British National Party 1,103 2.2 +2.2
Mike Shone Green 564 1.1 +1.1
Majority 5,460 10.9
Turnout 50,239 71.2 +4.2
Bnp got double the greens? That's depressing!