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Public increasingly see politicians as stoking culture wars, study finds
The research findings, by the Policy Institute at King’s College London and Ipsos, reveal six in 10 people now agree politicians invent or exaggerate culture wars as a political tactic.
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Queen Elizabeth II 1926-2022
A big change since The Queen came to the throne is that there are now regular objective measurements of the popularity of the Monarch and the Monarchy, writes Dr. Roger Mortimore.
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Woke, cancel culture and white privilege – how the UK’s culture war debate is evolving
New research by Ipsos and King's College Policy Institute shows that the public increasingly feel the country is divided by “culture wars”.
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Half of Britons expect utilities bills to go up a lot in next 6 months
Many also expect rises in cost of shopping and fuel while 3 in 4 Britons are following stories about cost of living closely
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Pharmaceutical and banking companies and governments are now seen as more trustworthy
In a major new Ipsos report analysing trust, the Ipsos Global Trustworthiness Monitor 2021, we find that, despite popular belief, we are not experiencing a ‘crisis of trust’.
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PAMCO data release provides first print readership in over a year
PAMCo have released updated GB print readership estimates for the first time in more than a year on October 29th, with fresh data collected using a new ‘online first’ research design developed by Ipsos.
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UK’s culture war divisions exaggerated but real, say public – as shown by views on equal rights, cultural change and class, and online bubbles
The second in a series of comprehensive surveys by Ipsos and the Policy Institute at King’s College London on awareness of and attitudes towards the "culture wars" debate.
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Public split on whether ‘woke’ is compliment or insult, and unsure what ‘culture wars’ means – despite huge surge in media coverage
The first in a series of comprehensive surveys by Ipsos and the Policy Institute at King’s College London on awareness of and attitudes towards the "culture wars" debate.
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Marcus Rashford most likely to be doing a good job at holding the Government’s Coronavirus response to account, according to Britons
Marcus Rashford, Piers Morgan and TV and radio journalists are seen to be doing well at holding the government to account while MPs and political parties are not doing so well.
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The 2019 General Election: a retrospective
Lucy Thompson reports from "Election 2019: The Brexit Campaign”, the latest retrospective in a series of political communications events, of which one has been held after every UK General Election since 1979.