So, let's check out the Liberal Party of Canada. The most viewed video -- with 46,981 views -- is "Jack Layton A New Kind of Strong - New Democrats TV Ad. The video's description says, "A New Kind of Strong - New Democrats TV Ad.
The Guardian (and The Observer) endorsed the LiberalDemocrats. 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...
UK Election 2010: Nick Clegg and the LiberalDemocrats Win the Facebook Election Editor's note: This column is part of a series dedicated to looking at the digital strategies and tactics being employed in the U.K elections.
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 share of vote, with Conservatives getting 35 percent, LiberalDemocrats 28 percent, and Labour 28 percent; Yesterday, they projected Conservatives would get 34.2 percent of the vote, LiberalDemocrats 27.5 percent, and Labour 26.3 percent.
Finally, the LiberalDemocrats' Facebook fans jumped from 65,236 to 78,750 in the past week. According to the general election 2010: poll of polls in guardian.co.uk, Conservatives lead with 35.75 percent, Labour is second with 28.00 percent, and...
If the election were held yesterday (and it won't be held until May 6), then Conservatives would have won 33.5 percent of the vote, LiberalDemocrats would have won 28.7 percent, and Labour would have won 26.3 percent.
That's a fair question, considering the measurable impact that the televised debates among the leaders of the Labor Party, the Conservatives, and the LiberalDemocrats have had on the polls leading up to the May 6 election.
And so it was for Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg after the first TV leaders debate. Editor's note: This column is part of a series dedicated to looking at the digital strategies and tactics being employed in the U.K elections.
Finally, the LiberalDemocrats' Facebook fans jumped from 36,822 to 65,236 in the past week. Labour and LiberalDemocrats are tied with 28.0 percent, roughly were they were a week earlier. The most popular LibDem video with 22,023 views is Liberal...
Since last week's first British televised leaders' debate, the LiberalDemocrats have jumped from 19.50 percent to 30.38 percent in the guardian.co.uk's General Election 2010: poll of polls. This is a response to today's all out assault by...
LiberalDemocrats Use Serious and Funny Videos in UK General Election With two more TV debates to come, the result of the general election is wide open -- as is the shape of the British political system given that the LiberalDemocrats and their...
LiberalDemocrats Use Serious and Funny Videos in UK General Election Tomorrow on Search Engine Watch, Mark Pack of the LiberalDemocrats will look at the role of traditional and new media in British politics.
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...
A quarter of voters who watched the three leaders on the ITV programme say they will switch their vote, with most changing to the LiberalDemocrats. Alastair Stewart of ITN hosted Prime Minister Gordon Brown of the Labour Party, Conservative Party...
This morning, Mark Pack explained why and how the LiberalDemocrats are using humor in the UK general election. The LibDems are using serious as well as funny videos in their campaign. Image via Wikipedia
The LiberalDemocrats, being the third party in U.K.politics, have been painting the Conservative and Labour parties as part of the same old traditional political consensus that agrees on far too much.
Editor's note: This is the first in a series of columns dedicated to looking at the digital strategies and tactics being employed in the U.K elections from three perspectives: Labour, the Conservatives, and the LiberalDemocrats.
The LiberalDemocrats' Facebook fans jumped from 11,167 to 15,231. Since undecided voters are "largely ambivalent" about Labour's Gordon Brown, the Conservative's David Cameron, and the LiberalDemocrats' Nick Clegg, "it will be a matter of...
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. Image via Wikipedia