Search
-
Voting by Newspaper Readership 1992-2010
Voting by regular readers of each title at recent general elections
-
How Britain Voted in 2010
Profile of voting behaviour at the 2010 general election broken down by age, gender, social class and housing tenure
-
Voting intentions (Westminster) - all companies' polls 2005 - 2010
Voting Intentions between the 2005 and 2010 General Elections, as measured by all companies and the newspapers in which they were published.
-
How Britain Voted Since October 1974
Demographic breakdown of voting from MORI's election aggregates of polls (corrected to the final result), 1974-2010
-
Banning Election Coverage and Opinion Polls - trends in support 1979-2010
Q During an election campaign do you think there should or should not be a ban on...?
...party election broadcasts on TV and radio?
...all coverage of the election on TV and radio?
..all coverage of the election in newspapers?
...publication of opinion polls? -
Ipsos Final Election Poll
Ipsos's Final Election Poll for the Evening Standard indicates that the UK may be on course for a hung parliament, with the Conservatives the largest party but short of an overall majority.
-
Worcester's Weblog: Boring Election - A Myth?
Sir Robert Worcester comments on the received wisdom that elections time is boring for the majority of the public.
-
Ipsos Political Monitor February 2010
Among those who are "absolutely certain to vote", 37% say they would vote Conservative, 32% Labour and 19% Liberal Democrat, our February Political Monitor shows.
-
2009 Members of the Scottish Parliament Survey findings
A year ago, MSPs were overwhelmingly pessimistic about the near-term prospects for the Scottish economy. Views now are more mixed - one in six Government Members believe prospects will improve compared to half of Opposition Members.
-
Faster, Better, Cheaper: Making Money in a Digital World
What future does media branding have in the new world of unlimited choices? The need for fast and accurate research into how consumers are thinking and behaving has never been greater. The economic stakes have never been higher. Companies that fail to
change are unlikely to survive. But those who invest now in understanding what their customers want are likely to be best-placed to lead, rather than to lag these changes.