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MORI Political Monitor July 1998
Political Attitudes in Great Britain for July 1998, including questions on House of Lords reform and standards in public life
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Political Attitudes in Great Britain for June 1998
Research study conducted for The Times Newspaper
MORI interviewed a representative quota sample of 1,760 adults aged 18+ at 148 sampling points across Great Britain
between 25-30 June 1998. -
Men Around The World Share Many Similar Attitudes - And Misperceptions - About Erectile Dysfunction
New survey emphasises need for better communications and education
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The UK and EMU - Difficult Hurdles
Our latest poll suggests that public opinion remains anti EMU, and that there has been no significant pro-EMU dividend from the UK's EU Presidency. The chances of an EMU referendum in the next year or two remain low.
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Political Attitudes in Great Britain for May 1998
Q1 How would you vote if there were a General Election tomorrow?
(If undecided or refused at Q1)
Q2 Which party are you most inclined to support? -
Base: 1,832 -
Blair's First Year Poll
Research study conducted for The Sun Newspaper
MORI interviewed a representative quota sample of 804 adults aged 18+ across Great Britain between 24-26 April 1998.
Interviews were conducted by telephone. -
Political Attitudes in Great Britain for April 1998
Research study conducted for The Times Newspaper - published 24-27 April 1998
MORI interviewed a representative quota sample of 1,926 adults aged 18+ at 164 sampling points across Great Britain
between 30 April 1998. -
London's charities look to new Greater London Authority and Mayor to save capital from chronic problems
Twelve of London's largest charities say the first task of the new Mayor for London and GLA should be to "bang heads together" to solve vital issues like homelessness and public transport, according to a MORI survey commissioned by London Electricity.
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Conspiracy, Controversy or Control?
Which? Online launches annual Internet report into consumers' Internet attitudes
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Citizens Worldwide Want Tough Environmental Action Now
Laws "don't go far enough," world public says in largest environment survey