Sentences with phrase «ipsos mrbi»

We're back to five polling companies this week, with the usual daily polls from YouGov and one each from Lord Ashcroft, Populus, Opinium and Ipsos Mori.
The latest Ipsos Mori survey found the Ukip leader struggling to maintain his positive reputation with the public, earning a personal approval rating of -5, a drop of four per cent since last month.
Discussing the report on the Today programme, Ipsos MORI chief executive Ben Page made it clear that political polling didn't bring in much cash compared to the work done for corporate clients - and he even went as far as suggesting that pollsters might just call it a day with election surveys.
The strength of the 13 - point Labour lead is partly due to Ipsos Mori's tight filter on respondents» tendency to vote — which experienced an unusual reversal under the survey.
Ipsos Mori's research over many years has found fairness hard - wired in public attitudes towards public services (think «postcode lotteries») and welfare.
, and Ipsos Mori polling recorded his budget as the worst rated by the public since the mid-1990s.
Ipsos Mori asked which of the parties has the best team of leaders to deal with the country's problems.
The former Labour leader is said to have pointed to analysis by pollsters Ipsos MORI stating that 2.9 m «lazy Labour» supporters failed to make good on their intentions to turn out to vote.
A Harris poll for the Metro the next day gave the Tories a nine - point advantage, but an Ipsos MORI poll for the Telegraph on the same day gave them a mere five - point lead.
A recent Ipsos Mori poll showed the Tories taking their biggest lead over Labour since records began on the question of which party has the best top team.
17:32 - Gideon Skinner, head of politics at Ipsos Mori, has been chatting with Alex Stevenson.
Public appetite for reform of the banking sector extends well beyond Britain's shores, according to an international poll by Ipsos Mori released today.
The night kicks off with exit poll commentary from Leon Gunning, formerly of YouGov and Ipsos Mori.
In a sign that public attitudes towards drugs are becoming decidedly more liberal, an Ipsos - MORI poll for the Transform Drug Policy Foundation found 53 % of people want cannabis legalised, while just 14 % want tougher penalties for users.
The Ipsos MORI survey for SNP News pointed to Nicola Sturgeon's party winning all 59 seats in Scotland.
For instance, before Britain's referendum on European Union membership last year, a poll by Ipsos Mori found that voters typically estimated the number of migrants living in the UK to be 31 % of the population.
Ipsos Mori found that 49 % of voters think he should be replaced, as do 43 % of Labour voters.
Of course, Ipsos MORI plots relative positions of key issues; could it be that we simply have other, more important things to worry about now?
Index of recent Ipsos MORI monthly Political Monitor surveys and to the associated political trends
However, Ipsos MORI's June Political Monitor showed the Conservative lead to be reduced to just 2 points over Labour, down from 11 points just before the 2010 election.
New polling by Ipsos MORI shows that the British public trust politicians to tell the truth less than estate agents, bankers and journalists.
The August Reuters / Ipsos MORI Political Monitor, our first poll conducted since the riots in England, shows that three in five people (58 %) agree that «British society is broken».
Headlines claiming that the final Ipsos MORI marginals poll shows the Tories are on course for a clear victory can be safely ignored.
Once again doctors top the league of most trusted professions (89 %), as they have been since Ipsos MORI began recording it in 1983.
Ipsos MORI polling backs this up with the Conservatives holding a considerable lead over Labour throughout 2009 and 2010 in terms of being seen as the party that would be most effective in getting good value for the public money it spends.
Ipsos MORI interviewed a representative sample of 1,018 adults aged 18 + across Great Britain.
According to the Ipsos MORI Issues Index, our concern over crime is at a two decade low.
One week prior to the vote, Ipsos MORI found that 54 % of likely Leave voters considered immigration to be the most important issue guiding their vote.
We know that the public's satisfaction with George Osborne is low — twice as many are dissatisfied with his performance as Chancellor as are satisfied — lower indeed that Gordon Brown or Alistair Darling ever registered with Ipsos MORI.
However, agreement that British society is broken has fallen slightly since September 2008 (63 %), the last time Ipsos MORI asked the question.
The coalition is now two years old and a look at the latest Ipsos MORI Political Monitor has some clear indications of who the public think is benefitting from this new era of coalition politics.
Tags: Coalition, Conservatives, Economic Credibility, Ipsos MORI, Labour, Liberal Democrats., Polling
Hilary Benn, shadow communities and local government secretary, told the Ipsos MORI event at the Labour party conference last year that the coalition has made it difficult for Labour to be heard as the media focussed on coalition differences rather than what Labour's view is.
Those who worry about the volatility of Ipsos - MORI polls will have new ammunition.
Last month Ipsos - MORI had the Tories 20 % ahead but this month the lead is down to 10 %.
The latest Ipsos MORI Political Monitor show that Labour has closed the gap on the economy and the majority of voters believe coalition has been bad for both the Tories and Lib Dems
A new poll from Ipsos Mori has just been released, putting the parties on the following standings:
Tories confessed when quizzed by pollsters Ipsos - MORI.
Previous analyses have, moreover, suggested that, especially given the increased competition on the Left from Sinn Fein, other smaller left of centre parties and left - leaning independents, that it will be a struggle for Labour to win seats in most, if not all, constituencies if the party's national support levels fall below the ten percent level, as has been shown in similar analyses of recent Sunday Independent - Millward Brown and Irish Times - Ipsos MRBI polls.
In cases where party support fell to as low as 4 % or 5 % nationally, as in the case with the April 19th Irish Times - Ipsos MRBI poll, Labour would face a struggle to win seats in every constituency in the state, even in their strongest areas.
These charts are from the most recent Ipsos MORI political monitor:
Figure 1: Leader Satisfaction Among Party Supporters by Voting Intentions (dark series — among who all name a party) and subtracting that percentage from overall leader satisfaction rating (light series)(Ipsos Mori)
That's the verdict of research carried out by Ipsos - MORI and reported in the News of the World by Jamie Lyons:
«News of the World «misrepresented» incomplete Ipsos MORI research Main Search for 100 peers: Richard Balfe»
Using the Ipsos MORI polls since 2010, I calculated the percentage of the electorate who both support a party and are satisfied with its leader (and also the percentage who are satisfied with the leader but don't support that party).
An Ipsos - MORI poll from earlier in the month - conducted for Freedom to Marry - found that support grew to 74 % if all voters were reassured about religious liberties.
A new Ipsos MORI poll for the Observer shows Labour back in the lead — the topline figures with changes from MORI's last poll (conducted for the Sun a fortnight ago) are CON 40 % -LRB--1), LAB 41 % (+3), LDEM 13 % (+2).
The Ipsos MORI poll has topline figures, with changes from MORI's last poll conducted a fortnight ago, of CON 43 % (+3), LAB 32 % -LRB--5), LDEM 15 % (+3).
So, fifth criticism: FAIR POINT, but it's not just YouGov, Ipsos MORI too had the others on only 4 %
There may yet be a final London mayoral election poll from Ipsos MORI and I understand there will be one from YouGov, so we may yet get polls that show closer figures, but on the figures we've got at the moment there is an almost unbridgable gulf between them.
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