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Economist/Ipsos June 2015 Issues Index
Immigration returns to top the list of the most important issues facing Britain in the latest Economist / Ipsos survey.
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Public Attitudes to Assisted Dying
Ipsos surveyed adults in 15 countries on attitudes towards assisted dying laws
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Lloyds Spending Power Report May 2015
The Lloyds Spending Power Report monitors sentiment towards spending, borrowing and saving amongst UK bank account holders aged 18 - 75.
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Most believe MPs should refuse 10% pay rise recommended by IPSA
Ipsos's June 2015 Political Monitor looks at whether Britons think MPs should accept (or not) IPSA's recommendations on increasing MPs' salary.
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Support for staying in the European Union at a 24 year high
Ipsos's latest Political Monitor shows that three in five (61%) would choose to `stay in' the European Union and 27% would choose to leave when asked how they would vote in a referendum.
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Labour leadership race tight as no candidate is able to open up a clear lead
Ipsos's first post-GE2015 Political Monitor
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Hearts and Minds: misperceptions and the military
Ipsos and King's College London are releasing a new international survey that highlights what the public in Britain, the US, France, Australia and Canada get right and wrong about the military and the armed forces.
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Guest blog: Build, build, build (but don't forget quality)
Ben Marshall, Director of Ipsos gives us the public’s perspective on the importance of design in his latest blog for Shelter.
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Design influences public support for new build homes
By a margin of more than four to one the British public say that in principle they support the building of local new homes in the future on brownfield land, but levels of support vary sharply according to the potential design of those homes.
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Positive selling sentiment wavers with small dip in house price optimism
The fourth monthly wave of the Halifax Housing Market Confidence Tracker in 2015 shows that two thirds of Britons (63%) expect a rise in the average UK property price over the next year, significantly lower than the 67% who said this in March 2015.