This may help explain why none of the 11 organizations that released polls in advance of UK Election 2010 nailed the actual results: Conservatives 36.9 percent, Labour 29.7 percent, and LiberalDemocrats 23.6 percent.
According to Benjamin Cohen of Channel 4 in the UK, "Nick Clegg and the LiberalDemocrats win the Facebook election. The poll which was conducted via Facebook's Democracy UK hub shows a surge of support in the LiberalDemocrats in the past month.
The latest one on BBC News indicates that, if Conservatives get 35 percent of the vote, Labour gets 28 percent, and LiberalDemocrats get 28 percent, then Conservatives will get 278 House of Commons seats, Labour will get 261, and LibDems will get...
And so it was for Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg after the first TV leaders debate. The BBC's coverage, for example, played a key role in making the Daily Telegraph's Benedict Brogan take to his site's blog to defend one of its stories, though...
Yesterday, the guardian.co.uk general election 2010: poll of polls showed the Conservatives with 34 percent (down more than 5 points from the previous Sunday), Labour with over 28 percent (down less than 3 points from the previous Sunday), and the...
This morning, Mark Pack explained why and how the LiberalDemocrats are using humor in the UK general election. Lib Dems: Ready to talk budget deficit (bbc.co.uk) The LibDems are using serious as well as funny videos in their campaign.
How do the approaches taken by Labour, the Conservatives, and the LiberalDemocrats differ from what we've seen elsewhere? Finally, let's look at the LiberalDemocrats official website. According to BBC News, Prime Minister Gordon Brown has...