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YES, It Can Be Done: Ipsos Polling Aces US Election Outcome
Last Ipsos/McClatchy Poll Released Showed 53% Democrat, 46% Republican and Mirrored Popular Vote Outcome of 52.6% Democrat, 46.1% Republican
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Caution: Understand the Potential of the Market Before You Enter
Gauging the Potential of New Consumer Goods Products Based on Market Permeability
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Housing Intentions Hold Steady
We keep hearing the tales of gloom and doom--investments plummeting, stock market rollercoaster rides, mortgage woes. The economy is in trouble. And no doubt, it proved a decisive issue in last month's Federal Election and will shape this week's U.S. Election. But when it comes home, how are Canadians reacting to it all?
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Financial Services Team Gets "Bullish" With Newly Recruited Loyalty Expert
Financial Services Research Expert Jeff Repace Heads to Ipsos Loyalty
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After Final Presidential Debate, Undecideds Favor Obama - Obama 53%, McCain 47%
McCain's Performance Rated As Much-Improved (53% Better than other debates), But Obama Still Seen As Debate Winner (56% Obama / 44% McCain)
Undecided voters perceive Obama as stronger on key issues -- change (Obama 67%/McCain 33%), helping the middle class (Obama 69%/McCain 31%), healthcare (Obama 67%/McCain 33%) and creating jobs (Obama 62%/McCain 38%) -
Obama Widens Lead in Presidential Race- Obama 48%, McCain 39%
McCain Seen As More Negative Campaigner - McCain 53%, Obama 30%; More Than Half Report Negative Campaigning is Not Effective (39% Effective; 57% Not Effective)
Health Care (32%), Energy (31%) Trump Defense as Key Funding Priorities for Next President -
After Second Presidential Debate, Undecideds Move Toward Obama - Obama 57%, McCain 43%
Nearly Two Thirds (61%) Think Obama Performed Better in Town Hall Debate
Undecided voters perceive Obama as stronger on key issues -- change (Obama 69%/McCain 31%), helping the middle class (Obama 73%/McCain 27%) and creating jobs (Obama 63%/McCain 37%)