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Watching the `blinking light'
Ben Marshall analyses the evolution of our seasonal house price sentiment tracker survey for the Halifax and its seasonally-themed infographic.
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Personal allowances rise the most popular of conference season tax pledges
Polling from Ipsos shows that tax pledges from each party were welcomed by the British public, but with the rise in personal allowances the stand-out favourite.
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Can research match the new marketing model?
Jane Bainbridge of Research Live looks at the arguments posed at the recent Ipsos ASI event.
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Voting UKIP no longer seen as a wasted vote, as the party reaches its highest ever vote share
October's Ipsos Political Monitor shows that, in the aftermath of Douglas Carswell's by-election win for the party, more of the British public now disagree that voting UKIP in a general election is a wasted vote than agree.
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Slight cooling of house price expectations, buying sentiment falls
The latest Halifax Housing Market Confidence Tracker conducted by Ipsos finds 68% of the public expecting the average UK house price to rise in the next 12 months, down from 71% last quarter.
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Hard Evidence: are Gen Y really Thatcher's children?
Generation Y, the youngest adult generation, have recently been called Dave’s No 1 Fans, but as he speaks to Tory conference, it seems this may not be entirely true. Bobby Duffy blogs for The Conversation.
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All to play for
Mumsnet, the UK's largest website for parents, sister site, Gransnet and Ipsos have published a joint report `All to Play For' - an in-depth study into women voters and who's winning the battle for their vote ahead of next year's election.
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Small lead for No, but referendum result still looks extremely close
Ipsos's final Scottish referendum poll for the London Evening Standard shows the `No' campaign with a very narrow lead, in line with other polls in recent days.
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Labour are the most popular party, but their leader lags behind
The Ipsos Political Monitor for September 2014 shows Ed Miliband is still to convince the public of his own qualities, despite presiding over the most popular party.
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Show me the E-money: Technology makes controlling money a pleasure not a chore
The rise of Bank of Me: Ipsos Marketing pan-European research for MasterCard reveals that, far from being a chore, people like monitoring their money - and women have power over the purse strings.