Yahoo Italia Ricerca nel Web

Risultati di ricerca

  1. 3 ore fa · Former Labour Leader Neil Kinnock tells her what it was like being attacked in the press in the run up to the 1992 election. Former Sun editor David Yelland reminisces about Rupert Murdoch and Tony Blair’s relationship — and said it was like a “love affair.”. He says getting the backing of Fleet Street can be a “self fulfilling ...

  2. 9 ore fa · There were a host of problems with Labour in 1992, including punitive tax policies and weakness on defence, but Sheffield crystallis­ed the electorate’s concerns about the party and Kinnock’s leadership. As Rishi Sunak embarks on his own campaign, far behind in the opinion polls, he can take some. comfort from Labour’s dismal experience ...

  3. 9 ore fa · If Starmer resembles Neil Kinnock – a Lefty pretending to be a centrist – Streeting is his Blair, the authentic moderate waiting in the wings.

  4. 9 ore fa · The 2019 United Kingdom general election was held on Thursday 12 December 2019 with 47,074,800 registered voters [3] entitled to vote to elect members of the House of Commons. The Conservative Party won a landslide victory with a majority of 80 seats, [n 5] a net gain of 48, on 43.6% of the popular vote, the highest percentage for any party ...

  5. 9 ore fa · Host Aggie Chambre digs into how much influence newspapers will have in this campaign, with comment from former Labour Leader Neil Kinnock, who explains what it was like being attacked in the press in the run up to the 1992 election, and former Sun editor David Yelland who reminisces about the "love affair" between Rupert Murdoch and Tony Blair.

  6. 9 ore fa · When John Major confounded the polls and beat Neil Kinnock's Labour party in 1992 he climbed on his soap box and had hundreds of raw, unmediated conversations with the public. He ended up being jostled in shopping centres and arguing with crowds. It helped cement his image.

  7. 9 ore fa · It meant that when Starmer took over in 2020, Labour officials thought his tenure would be like Neil Kinnock’s, Labour’s former leader before Blair who improved the party’s prospects, but fell short of election victory in 1992. A collapse in Conservative support under Boris Johnson, Liz Truss and then Sunak altered the calculation.