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Economic confidence falls to lowest since 2008 but half think government handling the coronavirus crisis well
The March 2020 Ipsos Political Monitor finds that just under half of people think Boris Johnson is handling the coronavirus crisis well.
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Majority of people want borders closed as fear about COVID-19 escalates
More of us now believe someone close to us will be infected by the coronavirus pandemic.
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Boris Johnson’s honeymoon slips
Ipsos's Political Pulse shows decline in favourability towards the Prime Minister since election victory
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Keir Starmer remains most favoured among Britons
As the Labour leadership contest continues, each of the remaining candidates has seen a marginal increase in their name recognition but few still claim to know much about them.
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Social media data links the impact of coronavirus epidemic and global economic fears
As coronavirus erupts into people’s lives, new research by Synthesio finds that online conversations move from general concerns to personal unease.
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Ipsos Global Trends 2020: Understanding Complexity
Ipsos Global Trends 2020: Understanding Complexity provides a single-source dataset of over 200 questions Ipsos asked of people in 33 markets, on global opinions, attitudes and behaviours around brands, technology, society, consumerism and much more, and combines it with expert analysis by trend specialists.
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Ipsos Research Highlights - February 2020
This month's Ipsos research highlights includes Boris Johnson's political honeymoon, concern about the environment worry hits a 30-year high and the launch of Ipsos Global Trends 2020.
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Ipsos Issues Index - January 2020
The Ipsos Issues Index for January 2020 reveals that public concern about Brexit and the NHS fell post-election, while environmental worry hit a 30-year high.
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Ipsos Issues Index - 2019 year in review
According to the Ipsos Issues Index, Brexit was the biggest issue for Britain overall across 2019, but worry about the NHS surged ahead of the General Election.
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The Perils of Perception 2020: Global study explores how wrong people are about the causes of death
Ipsos’ latest Perils of Perception study highlights public misperceptions about the proportion of people who die from diseases, violence, transport injuries and other causes.