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SNP out in front in Scotland as Starmer’s satisfaction ratings fall
New Ipsos polling for STV News shows the SNP on a 31% share of General Election voting intention, nine points ahead of the Labour Party.
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Starmer remains ahead of Farage in head-to-head of who would make best PM, but majority of Britons unsure what he stands for
In a head-to-head with Nigel Farage, Keir Starmer continues to lead on who the British public think would make a better Prime Minister (32% Starmer vs 26% Farage) – although his lead is down compared to March (Starmer +11) and 35% say neither would make a good PM / it would make no difference. However, just over half (53%) say that it is not clear what Starmer stands for. In contrast, almost two-thirds of Britons (64%) say it is clear what Nigel Farage stands for.
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Three quarters of Britons concerned about fuel price increases, as Israel / Iran conflict continues
Three quarters (75%) of Britons say they’re concerned about impact of Israel / Iran conflict on fuel prices.
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Reform's Ipsos record 9-point lead over Labour, as public satisfaction with government nears lowest point recorded under a modern Labour administration
Labour’s 25% voting intention is the lowest share Ipsos has recorded for Labour since October 2019.
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Introducing our new voting intention methodology
Why Ipsos is shifting to online random probability KnowledgePanel for Voting Intention polling.
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Community as a Superpower: Why Refugees Seek Belonging
Our Managing Director, Public Affairs Trinh Tu reflects on why refugees seek belonging using the findings of this year's World Refugee Day survey.
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Migration, Skills, and Public Trust: Rethinking the UK's Policy Approach
The Government should take this opportunity to reconsider the role of immigration in addressing labour market demands through the implementation of its Immigration White Paper.
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Public Support Holding Steady for Refugees Despite Global Fragility
A new survey by Ipsos, released for World Refugee Day, highlights the resilience of public support for refugees while also revealing significant concerns to be addressed.
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Seven in ten Britons think abortion should be legal in all or most cases – but this reduces to less than half of young men
Seven in ten (71%) Britons think abortion should be legal in all or most cases – but this reduces to less than half (46%) of men aged 16-34.