Search
-
Ipsos-Reid/Cook Political Report Survey: Democratic Presidential Primary/Caucus Participants Prove Fickle At This Stage
Very Few Demand Hillary, But Plurality Picks Her When Given Option
Ipsos-Reid/Cook Political Report Survey Asks Likely Democratic Presidential Primary/Caucus Participants First Choice Among Likely Candidates, Then Asks What Voters Would Do If Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) Runs
Only 2% Volunteer New York Senator Hillary Clinton As Their Choice, But When Given The Option, Many Defect From First Choice And 46% Back Her -
Ipsos-Reid/Cook Political Report: Memo to State of the Union Speechwriters: Americans Volunteer the Economy, War, Job Issues, Health Care, Education as Top Problems
Survey Asks Adults to Report in Their Own Words The Most Important Problem Facing the Country, and the Biggest Challenges Facing Their Own Families
-
Cable and Satellite Programming Research Veteran Joins Ipsos
Lynne Bartos To Join Marketing Research Firm's Technology and Communications Team
-
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.
-
Internet Use Continues To Climb In Most Markets
Web Access Not Just Routine, But Essential, Ipsos-Reid Study Shows
-
On the 10th Anniversary of NAFTA . . .
More Americans (48%) Believe They're NAFTA Winners, Compared to Canadians (38%), Mexicans (30%)
However, Canadians (44%) Most Likely To Want Closer Trade and Economic Ties with NAFTA Partners, While Americans (39%) Most Likely to Want Status Quo . . .
And Mexicans (33%) Most Likely to Want Less Trade, Economic Ties