POLLS SUGGEST LABOR LANDSLIDE, SCRAMBLING TORIES IN U.K. VOTE.Byline: Ray Moseley Chicago Tribune Chicago Tribune Daily newspaper published in Chicago. The Tribune is one of the leading U.S. newspapers and long has been the dominant voice of the Midwest. Founded in 1847, it was bought in 1855 by six partners, including Joseph Medill (1823–99), who made the paper The Labor Party is headed for a landslide victory In politics, a landslide victory (or just a landslide) is the victory of a candidate or political party by an overwhelming majority in an election. Landslides can occur when one candidate or party is perceived as far superior to its opponents, through unfair in Thursday's national election, and within the ruling Conservative Party a scramble already is getting under way for the succession to Prime Minister John Major as party leader. That was the conclusion of Britain's leading newspapers Sunday, based partly on poll findings that have demonstrated a resurgence of support for Labor in recent days. The pro-Conservative Sunday Telegraph said the Conservative high command has admitted privately that victory is almost certainly beyond Major's grasp. It said the Conservatives' only remaining hope is for a hung Parliament, in which no party would have a majority, but even in that eventuality e·ven·tu·al·i·ty n. pl. e·ven·tu·al·i·ties Something that may occur; a possibility. eventuality Noun pl -ties , Labor would probably form the next government. The pro-Labor Observer, which conducted a special poll in constituencies in which the Conservatives hold power by only a narrow margin, said up to eight Conservative ministers could be defeated. Other newspapers agreed that at least three are almost certain to lose their seats. The wide-ranging predictions of a landslide landslide, rapid slipping of a mass of earth or rock from a higher elevation to a lower level under the influence of gravity and water lubrication. More specifically, rockslides are the rapid downhill movement of large masses of rock with little or no hydraulic flow, prompted Labor leader Tony Blair Noun 1. Tony Blair - British statesman who became prime minister in 1997 (born in 1953) Anthony Charles Lynton Blair, Blair to issue a warning to his supporters to take nothing for granted. He said any assumption of victory could lead Labor supporters to stay at home Thursday and ensure a fifth consecutive Conservative government. But disarray within the Conservative Party deepened as Edwina Currie Edwina Currie Jones née Cohen, (born 13 October 1946) is a former British Member of Parliament. She served from 1983 to 1997 as a Conservative Party MP, including three years as Junior Health Minister, before resigning in 1988 because of a controversy over salmonella in eggs. , a former Conservative minister, predicted a Labor majority of around 100 seats. She blamed Major for the impending im·pend intr.v. im·pend·ed, im·pend·ing, im·pends 1. To be about to occur: Her retirement is impending. 2. defeat. When people ``compare the records of Blair and Major, Blair comes across better,'' she wrote in the Sunday Express. Currie is on the pro-European wing of the Conservative Party and holds that Major has failed to stand up to the so-called Euroskeptics. She said only a miracle could save her own seat. Four polls published Sunday showed Labor ahead of the Conservatives by margins ranging between 15 and 24 points. The polling firm ICM ICM Intercom ICM Integrated Crop Management ICM International Congress of Mathematicians ICM Information Classification and Management ICM Intelligent Contact Management (Cisco) ICM International Creative Management , which gave heart to the Conservatives last week by reporting Labor's lead had shrunk to just 5 points, had them back to 15 points ahead Sunday. The various poll results indicated Labor could emerge with a parliamentary majority of 165 seats or more. The Observer said the majority could approach 200. Yet the polls suggest that many voters remain undecided, and some who are leaning to Labor could change their minds. Therefore some pollsters and politicians expect the Labor margin of victory may be narrower than polls suggest. |
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