Election


Politics Survey

NHS leads economy and immigration as top vote-deciding issue

Ipsos's first Political Monitor of 2015 shows that the Conservatives and Labour are neck-and-neck, with Labour's vote share increasing five percentage points to 34%.
Politics Survey

Can you win an election debating transport policy?

As a political battleground, the UK’s transport sector is becoming increasingly high profile. Tom Fife-Schaw asks if debate on transport policy can be a vote winner.
Politics Survey

Hard to call: The next election and the private sector

2015 looks set to be riddled with uncertainty for the UK’s private sector. Tom Fife-Schaw looks at what British business should be looking out for after May
Politics Survey

Vote shares for main parties unchanged, but Green vote hits record high

Conservatives retain poll lead. Farage's satisfaction rating falls.
Politics Survey

Economic Optimism falls to its lowest level since July 2013

Ipsos's Political Monitor for December shows a majority believe the Conservatives would cut too much if they win the 2015 general election.
Politics Survey

2014 on course to have lowest ever combined voting shares for Conservative and Labour

New polling and analysis from Ipsos shows that after 11 months of the year, 2014 is on course to have the lowest combined voting share for the Conservative and Labour parties since we started regular polling in 1978.
Social Media Survey

What can Twitter's reaction to the UK autumn statement tell us?

Steve Ginnis of Ipsos and Carl Miller of Demos write in the Guardian on our analysis of tweets during Chancellor George Osborne's autumn statement.
Politics Survey

Europeans remain financially insecure as Britons hold steady

Ipsos' latest Financial Security Monitor, a monthly survey carried out across 24 countries around individuals' financial security, shows European countries continuing to feel relatively financially insecure - six out of the eight bottom countries in our FS Monitor are EU member states.
Politics Survey

Who are the Green party's supporters, and should Labour be worried?

As with UKIP, the Green party has the potential to cause some electoral headaches for the traditional parties, says Gideon Skinner in the New Statesman.