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Support for House of Lords Reform 1977-1998
Trends in public opinion towards electing the House of Lords, restricting its powers, etc
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Finance Directors Say Options For Raising Capital Are Too Restrictive
A new MORI survey among Britain's leading Finance Directors reveals widespread unhappiness with the current restrictions on listed companies' ability to raise capital. Among Finance Directors of the Top 1,000 companies 71% say Boards' access to capital-raising options should be less restricted. This rises to 81% among the FTSE 100 companies.
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People's Panel Up And Running - First Results Published
Minister for the Cabinet Office, Dr Jack Cunningham, today published the results of the first wave of research by the People's Panel - the world's first national panel, set up as a cross-public sector research resource into the effectiveness of government services.
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Political Attitudes in Great Britain for October 1998
Research study conducted for The Times Newspaper
MORI interviewed a representative quota sample of 1,775 adults aged 18+ at 153 sampling points across Great Britain
between 23-26 October 1998. -
Survey On Support For Elected City Mayors
I would like to ask you about the way local councils are run ...
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Poll Shows Investors Confidence Holds Firm
Investor confidence in shares remains strong despite recent stock market volatility, according to a MORI poll commissioned by the London Stock Exchange.
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Royal Family Poll
Attitudes to the Monarchy and the Royal Family just over a year after the death of Diana - MORI poll for The Sun.
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Most People Would Rather Stay In Bed Than Save A Life
As the clocks go back, a new survey reveals that most of us will spend the extra hour in bed, in the garden or at home watching TV.
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Supporters Attitudes Towards Glenn Hoddle
A poll of football supporters for the Mail on Sunday on Glenn Hoddle's long-term future as England coach
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Sterling To Resume Downtrend
Sterling's recent recovery against euro-area currencies is likely to prove temporary. The pound remains very overvalued compared to its long-run norm in real terms, and the weakening economy implies that the UK's interest rate cushion will continue to erode - unless sterling falls very sharply.