Search
-
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.
-
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.
-
Meat-eating and the Foot & Mouth outbreak
A MORI poll commissioned by CIWF in the run up to Easter, revealed a stampede away from beef, lamb and pork in light of the foot and mouth crisis with a massive six million (14% of the adult population) people eating more chicken.
-
Annual E-Government Survey Shows Nearly Two Thirds Want Online Transactions
The public's willingness to deal with the government electronically has leapt as citizens come to appreciate the convenience of online access, according to MORI's research for KPMG Consulting's annual benchmark e-government survey. The survey reveals a fundamental change in the public's understanding of the potential of electronic channels, with twice as many people now wanting to carry out online transactions (renew a passport, for example) as those simply wanting to access public service information online.
-
"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.
-
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
-
Reckless Optimism Leaves Brits On The High Wire
Survey exploring people's views on saving, debt and living standards.
-
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.