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PoliticsHome | Only the latest five entries on the PhiWire are visible to non-subscribers
PoliticsHome | Only the latest five entries on the PhiWire are visible to non-subscribers
PoliticsHome | Only the latest five entries on the PhiWire are visible to non-subscribers
PoliticsHome | Only the latest five entries on the PhiWire are visible to non-subscribers
PoliticsHome | Only the latest five entries on the PhiWire are visible to non-subscribers
PoliticsHome | Only the latest five entries on the PhiWire are visible to non-subscribers
PoliticsHome | Only the latest five entries on the PhiWire are visible to non-subscribers
PoliticsHome | Only the latest five entries on the PhiWire are visible to non-subscribers
PoliticsHome | Only the latest five entries on the PhiWire are visible to non-subscribers
PoliticsHome | Only the latest five entries on the PhiWire are visible to non-subscribers
PoliticsHome | Only the latest five entries on the PhiWire are visible to non-subscribers
PoliticsHome | Only the latest five entries on the PhiWire are visible to non-subscribers
PoliticsHome | Only the latest five entries on the PhiWire are visible to non-subscribers
PoliticsHome | Only the latest five entries on the PhiWire are visible to non-subscribers
PoliticsHome | Only the latest five entries on the PhiWire are visible to non-subscribers
PoliticsHome | Only the latest five entries on the PhiWire are visible to non-subscribers
PoliticsHome | Only the latest five entries on the PhiWire are visible to non-subscribers
PoliticsHome | Only the latest five entries on the PhiWire are visible to non-subscribers
PoliticsHome | Only the latest five entries on the PhiWire are visible to non-subscribers
PoliticsHome | Only the latest five entries on the PhiWire are visible to non-subscribers
Monday 19th July 2010 | 17:00
A large majority of voters do not expect the coalition government to last a full parliament, according to new PoliticsHome research.
The news goes against the predictions and promises of the coalition that this government will last a full five year term.
A PoliticsHome poll conducted over the weekend found that under a quarter of people think the coalition will last more than four years, and over half think it will not last beyond three.
The largest group (twenty eight per cent) think that the coalition will last between one and two years.
Even among supporters of the coalition parties there is a consensus that the agreement will not last a full term.
Thirty eight per cent of Conservative supporters think that the current coalition government will last over four years, along with thirty per cent of Lib Dem supporters.
PoliticsHome interviewed 1,036 voters by email from 16-19 July 2010. Results are weighted by age, gender and political party identification to reflect the population of Great Britain.
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