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Electorate Under The Microscope
As the pace of the election build-up has temporarily slowed, let us take the chance to look over the details of the battlefield - that is, the minds of the British electorate.
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The Wrong Package
The public services in Britain follow their own agenda, not what people want them to do. This is the finding of an opinion poll commissioned from MORI by the Adam Smith Institute. The conclusions are published today as a report entitled The Wrong Package, and co-authored by Dr Madsen Pirie & Professor Robert Worcester.
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How Expert Are The 'Experts'?
Sir Robert Worcester wrote this article for the April issue of Parliamentary Monitor before the postponement of the election from the expected May 3 was announced. Now we know that the Reuters 'Experts' were wrong even on the prediction of the election date, where he agreed with them, his remarks on the reliability of the pundits seem more relevant still.
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MPs Put People Before Profits
Tony Blair's stand against proposed manufacturing job losses is likely to find strong support among Government MPs, according to MORI's regular survey of Members of Parliament.
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Direct Line Gets A Political 'Thumbs Up' For A Ban On Home Insurance Bundling
Direct Line has received a welcome boost to its campaign to outlaw the practice of tying home insurance sales with mortgages, after new research has revealed that over half (56%) of MPs surveyed 'strongly agree' with the need for a ban.
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"Britain Out" - new poll findings put politicians on the spot over EU
More people wanted to come out of Europe than to stay in, according to a MORI poll for the British Democracy Campaign. Of those who expressed an opinion, 52% were in favour of leaving the EU right now.
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General Election 2001 - Pre-Campaign Survey
MORI poll for the Economist, including measurements of Best Party on Key issues and Most Capable Prime Minister, conducted during what was then expected to be the last week before the election was called
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How did you vote?
MORI's political polls frequently include a question asking respondents how they voted at the last general. However, although the responses are useful to us in a number of ways, we do not expect them to be an entirely accurate reflection of how the respondents did, in fact, vote. Consequently the responses of a representative sample will NOT normally match the actual result of the last election, and the fact that a sample's recalled vote differs from the election result is not evidence that the sample is unrepresentative.
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Pre-Election Poll
Poll for the Sunday Telegraph covering voting intentions, attitudes to the party leaders and whether the election should be postponed
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Tony Blair, Hear This - Pets Have Issues Too!
The nation's cats and dogs gained a new champion today when Direct Line Pet Insurance presented its Pet Manifesto in Westminster.