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MORI Political Monitor, July 2001
Political Attitudes in Great Britain, July 2001, including questions on the Conservative leadership election
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Constituency Chairmen Poll
MORI Telephone Surveys interviewed 100 Conservative Constituency Party Chairmen on the 2001 Conservative leadership election.
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Tory Leadership
Michael Portillo's exclusion from the Tory leadership race may have taken both his colleagues and the media by surprise, but it was following the trend of public opinion over the last few weeks which has seen him lose much ground.
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How Britain Voted In 2001
MORI's estimates of how the votes - and the non-votes - were spread in the 2001 general election.
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70% of Britain Fears US-Driven Arms Race
A majority of the British public believes that America's controversial plan to build a missile defence system will start a new arms race, make nuclear disarmament harder to achieve, and may even make the United Kingdom a military target, according to a new opinion poll.*
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Low satisfaction with public transport services
The Commission for Integrated Transport is to invite public transport operators to a seminar on customer care after a nationwide opinion poll rated transport services and staff attitudes at the bottom of the service sector.
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People Willing To Pay To Improve Transport, Says Major CfIT Survey
Transport is now the most important local issue across the country with people looking for radical solutions funded by higher public investment, according to one of the country's largest transport surveys published today by the Commission for Integrated Transport.
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Only 1 in 9 Thinks Private Sector Will Improve Public Services
Only 1 in 9 voters believes extending private sector involvement will improve public services, according to a new opinion poll.
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Healthy Old Age Is Myth For Many
A new MORI survey published today (9 July) shows that many millions of British people have unrealistic expectations of a healthy old age.
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What Shy Tories?
A brief word on the importance of the low turnout and its effect on the polls. MORI's final poll projection for The Times was Conservative 30%, Labour 45%, Liberal Democrat 18%; the "poll of polls" (average of all the companies' polls conducted during the final week) was Conservative 31%, Labour 45% and Liberal Democrats 18%. Both close to the final result (32.7%:42.0%:18.8%), and within the standard 3% margin of error for all parties - though, naturally, we would like it to be even closer.