Everyone expected Hillary Clinton to come out swinging. Days earlier, Donald Trump had called her an “enabler” of her husband’s philandering–just the latest taunt from a man whose inflammatory comments about women are increasingly aimed at one woman in particular.
But when Clinton met with voters on May 9 at a bakery in Aldie, Va., a spread of untouched muffins and croissants became a symbol of the bait she wouldn’t take–not yet, anyway.
With the nationwide riots having subsided, and a stream of initial convictions already coming through, a retrospective look at data from YouGov’s AI-powered news tracker shows how the unrest captured the public’s attention more than any other topic.
The unrest was initially sparked by the tragic murder of three young girls in Southport on 29 July. On that day, the public’s attention had been focused on the Olympics, with 30% of Britons reporting it as the story they had heard about most over the past few days.
European country that lies in the Mediterranean sea. It was home to a revolutionary artistic and cultural movement known as the Renaissance, which began in the 14th century. Italy is made up of 20 distinct regions.
Trivia Some of the most famous attractions in the world are located in Italy, including the Venice Canals, the Colosseum, the Sistine Chapel, the Leaning Tower of Pisa, and Florence's Santa Maria del Fiore. University of Bologna ,the world's oldest university, was founded in the country in 1088.
This is the largest Labour lead since YouGov tracking began in 2010YouGov’s latest Westminster voting intention figures show that Labour’s political dominance in London continues. Labour now sit 40 points ahead of the Conservatives with 58% of the vote, +3 from our previous poll early last year, while the Tories have fallen to 18% (-5).
This marks Labour’s largest lead over the Conservatives since YouGov started tracking London voting intention in 2010.
When he popped out of his mother’s womb 79 years ago in rustic Daura, now in Katsina State, nobody could have predicted that he would bestride the country, nay the world, like a colossus. Who could have predicted that a honest man, Mai Gaskiya, had come forth? Who could have foretold that he would rule the country twice, first as a soldier, and later, as a civilian, a democrat? And who could have prognosticated that he would perhaps be the politician with the greatest crowd in the history of the country, for a long time to come?