Search
-
When Did You Decide How To Vote?
Q When did you decide which party to vote for? Was it before the campaign began, in the first week of the campaign, around the middle, within the last week, or within the last 24 hours?
-
Interest in Election News 1992 - 2010
Q How interested would you say you are in the following? News about the election
Q Thinking back to the campaign, how interested would you say you were in news about the General Election? -
2010 Post Election Poll
Ipsos's first poll since the General Election on May 6th shows that the public are, on balance, optimistic about the new coalition government.
-
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
-
Ipsos Election Polls
With almost all the results counted, the results of the 2010 General Election closely mirror the predictions in Ipsos's final week polling.
-
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.
-
Reuters Marginal Constituencies poll - Wave 5
The last of our polls in key marginal constituencies, Ipsos's new poll for Reuters points suggests that the Conservatives are inching towards a majority with a 7% swing from 2005 in these key battleground constituencies.
-
The Ipsos Worm Explained
For all three debates, Ipsos has measured the reaction of undecided voters to what each leader says. The Today Programme has now used this data to create the best and worst possible political speeches.