Search
-
Help The Aged Poll Reveals Growing Strength Of 'Grey Power'
Britain's older voters have the potential to make a decisive impact on the next general election. Those aged over 64 are potentially four times as powerful a group as younger voters (aged 18-24) - they are twice as likely to vote, and there are twice as many of them. Their priorities are distinct from those of younger electors, and how each party addresses their concerns may play a central role in the next general election.
-
Foresight Ageing Population Panel
Public Opinion is like an 800lb gorilla. It sleeps a lot and much of the rest of the time sits happily chewing on leaves. However, if you poke it with a stick, it gets angry. Public Opinion is pretty irritated at the moment.
-
Confidence In Government Ability To Achieve Uk Online Internet Goals Plummets
Parliamentarians Increasingly Concerned About The Net's Disadvantaged Claims World Internet Forum Survey
-
Tory lead!!
MORI's poll for the News of the World published yesterday and conducted on Thursday and Friday puts the Conservatives ahead of Labour, the first poll (by any company) to do so since sterling crashed out of the Exchange Rate Mechanism eight years ago.
-
The Liberal Democrats at the General Election:One Step Forward or Two Steps Back?
Over the last three years, the Liberal Democrats - like the Conservatives - have been faced with the challenge of adapting to life under a new Government. But the two parties have had to respond in very different ways.
-
Putting Consumers At The Heart Of Public Services
Putting Consumers At The Heart Of Public Services
Issue No.7 - September 2000 -
Labour's Heartland Revival
MORI's monthly poll for The Times published last week received a lot of attention and secondary reporting, mostly concentrating on the four-point drop in the Conservative voting intention share, to its lowest level since April. But the finding that may be by far the most politically significant was much less widely reported. Over the last four months there has been what may amount to a sea-change in the attitudes of Labour supporters to voting. One reading of the figures would suggest it may presage the difference between significant Tory gains that may secure William Hague's position to fight a second election, and another Labour landslide.