From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishvote of confidenceˌvote of ˈconfidence noun (plural votes of confidence) [countable] 1 PPVSUPPORT A PERSON, GROUP, OR PLANa formal process in which people vote in order to show that they support someone or something, especially the government On April 19 the new government won a vote of confidence by 339 votes to 207.2 SUPPORT A PERSON, GROUP, OR PLANsomething that you do or say that shows you support someone and approve of their actionsvote of confidence in The new investments are widely seen as a vote of confidence in the nation’s economic future.
Examples from the Corpus
vote of confidence• Arvey, knowing he was being blamed, was hoping for a vote of confidence.• On 23 November 1923 Stresemann was refused a vote of confidence.• Shortly afterwards the government survived a vote of confidence in the Dáil by 83 votes to 80.• It hardly amounted to a vote of confidence for the new regime.• When insiders buy a stock, that is a direct vote of confidence.• This was an impressive personal vote of confidence.won ... vote of confidence• The new government won a vote of confidence from the National Assembly on May 29 by a majority of 76.