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Ipsos/Cook Political Poll: A Politically Weakened President Approaches Decision on War
Bush Support Drops Dramatically
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Ipsos-Reid/Cook Political Report: The Gender Gap, Other Gaps, and the Undecided Voters
Cook Political Report/Ipsos-Reid Survey Shows Bush Reelect Margin is +14 Overall (43% Definitely Vote to Reelect Bush Minus 29% Definitely for Someone Else);
Gender Gap is 14 Percentage Points (Bush Margin +22 with Men, +8 with Women);
Age, Region, and Marriage Gaps Wider Than Gender Gap at Outset of 2003 -
Ipsos-Reid/Cook Political Report: Two-in-Three Voters Continue to Approve of Bush's Job Performance
In First Post-Election Cook Political Report/Ipsos-Reid Survey, Strong Approval of Bush Performance Overall. On Bush Approval, the Marriage Gap Matters Most. On Direction of the Country, the Familiar Gender Gap Reappears.
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Move Over Single's Bars, Online Dating Taking Hold
A Majority Of Americans (52%) Think That People Have A Better (44%) Or At Least Equal (8%) Chance Of Meeting Someone Online Than At A Single's Bar
Four-In-Ten (40%) Think That A Relationship Initiated Online Has A Better (32%) Or Equal (8%) Chance Of Success Than One Initiated In A Singles Bar
Three-In-Ten (29%) Would (27%) Or Might (2%) Recommend Online Dating As An Alternative Way Of Meeting Other Singles To Their Single Friends -
Ipsos-Reid/Cook Political Report: Which Will Drive The Midterm Vote: Bush's Recovering Standing, Or Consumers' Continuing Concerns?
Congressional Party Control Preference All Tied Up Again, After Democrats Took The Lead In August
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One-Fifth (21%) of American Workers Are Personally Aware of Fraud in their Workplace
However, While Eight-in-Ten (80%) Employees Say They Would Report on A Co-Working Stealing from Employer . . .
Of Those Who've Had the Chance Less Than Half (43%) Actually Did
Inflating Expense Accounts (50%), `Cooking the Books' (50%), and Pocketing Cash Sales (48%) Seen as Biggest Problems -
Ipsos-Reid/Cook Political Report: Stock Market Jitters Drive Down Some Scores
Stock Market Jitters Drive Down Some Scores But Congressional Preference Effects Are Muted
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American Reaction to "Friendly Fire" Incident in Afghanistan
Seven-in-Ten (71%) Americans Say President Bush Should Personally Call Families of Canadian Soldiers Killed