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Who Do You Recognise? (The Dolly The Sheep Poll)
Q On this card are a number of figures currently in the public eye. Please can you tell me who you think is on picture (A-F)?
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Labour Supporters and Public Services
Q1a How would you vote if there were a General Election tomorrow?
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Single European Currency Tracker, September 2001
Our latest MORI poll suggests that public opinion remains heavily against EMU entry. The balance of opinion against EMU entry is still higher than when Labour first took office. Even Labour voters are split fairly equally between those who support and oppose EMU entry, while more than three-quarters of Conservative voters are against EMU entry.
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MORI Political Monitor, August 2001
Political Attitudes in Great Britain for August 2001, including questions on the Conservative leadership election and on attitudes to private sector provision of public services
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New Labour's Last Challenge?
Older voters are the group least supportive of New Labour, and winning them over is perhaps Tony Blair's biggest remaining political challenge. For much of the time, far more attention is paid to attracting the support of young voters, especially first-time voters, than is paid to attracting the votes of those who have retired. There is a superficial attraction to this: after all, young voters are generally less strongly attached to their party allegiances - if, indeed, they have any at all - and ought to be easier to swing. If their loyalties can be captured at a young age, perhaps they will subsequently offer their party a lifetime of voting service.
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Use of the Internet in the UK Election
Q1 Which of these, if any, do you personally use … ? and which others?
[By "PC" we mean a desktop, laptop or any other computer you may use; by "the internet" we mean using the internet/world wide web via any device] -
Britain's Change Of Heart On Profit
The latest edition of MORI's Corporate Image survey suggests public hostility towards profitability is waning and that two decades of animosity towards business success may be coming to an end.
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New Study Shows Support Among Irish For Increased Expenditure On Overseas Aid
MORI/UNFPA study reveals:
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Politics On The Canvas(s)
The first question that everybody was asking themselves after the general election result came through was why the turnout was so low. There has been plenty of discussion of the question since, culminating last week in the publication of the Electoral Commission's first report on the election, which among other sources draws on two MORI surveys for the Commission. [Attitudes to Voting and the Political Process]
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Why Can't We Enjoy the View?
More and more it seems that Britain's green and pleasant land is being sacrificed to 'progress'. Here, Sir Robert Worcester tells of his hatred of the electricity pylons that scar our landscape.