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MORI Political Monitor March 1997
MORI's first political survey after the election date was announced on 17 March: Data on voting intention, satisfaction with party leaders, issues facing Britain, economic optimism, party identification.
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Loughborough - Labour's barometer
Q1 How do you intend to vote at the General Election on May 1?
(If undecided or refused at Q1)
Q2 Which party are you most inclined to support?
Base: 602 -
M&S takes top management and governance awards
Marks & Spencer has won the MORI / PA Consulting Group's Sundridge Park Management Centre 'Quality of Management Award'. The award is given to the British company which Britain's captains of industry, city institutions and business journalists perceive as having the most impressive quality of management for future development, according to MORI survey findings.
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MEPs Push for Single Currency in 1999
Members of the European Parliament (MEPs) are keen to press ahead with the single currency according to MORI's annual survey of MEPs. This is in contrast to the British public who are increasingly uncertain about the single currency (MORI poll for the Times Newspaper, 17 April).
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MEPs See Approach in Bosnia, Unemployment and BSE as Harmful to EU's Standing:
The European Union's reputation has been diminished by its handling of Bosnia, on job creation and in the handling of the BSE crisis, according to a MORI survey of MEPs for The European.
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Kids Confused over Food Facts
A recent MORI survey of 8-11 year olds in England and Wales shows that children's
awareness of key farming and food facts is inconsistent. -
Children Want to Spend More Time with Dads
Almost one in five children are unable to name any shared activities undertaken with their fathers in the past week and they are much less likely to have undertaken any domestic and educational activities with their fathers than with their mothers.
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Poll Findings And How To Report Them
The BBC censor political poll findings. They say they don't, but their journalists and editors complain privately they do, and the evidence is there, from the Today programme to What the Papers Say to the news broadcasts. They've thrown the baby out with the bath water, and ignore the only systematic and objective measure of British public opinion, and replace it with vox pops, phone-in ('voodoo') polls, interviews with party spokesmen and their own spin.
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Small change, big hassle
The public see, small change as a big hassle!, according to a recent MORI survey for VISA International.