23 per
cent of those polled believe that there will be a minority Conservative Government (down slightly from 24 per cent).
The charity consulted 1,167 youngsters aged between 11 and 15, with 73 per
cent of those polled believing children would be safer if classes on the subject was provided.
Not exact matches
Our RBC RRSP
poll in 2011 determined that only half — about 51 per
cent —
of Canadians
believe they are on target or ahead
of where they need to be in terms
of retirement savings.
In 2002, an Ipsos - Reid
poll found that 86 per
cent of Canadians
believed that the federal government should do something to alleviate public concerns about media concentration.
Canadians
believe in the value
of housing with 84 per
cent identifying a house or a condominium as a good investment, according to the 22nd Annual RBC Home Ownership
Poll...
The results
of our latest
polling indicated no significant change in views regarding the short - term economic outlook for the UK: 35 per
cent of respondents
believe the UK economy will deteriorate slightly over the next six months, while 22 per
cent believe it will remain stable.
Christian Aid has taken a stand after a new ComRes
poll found that 80 per
cent of public agree it is morally wrong for banks to profit from investments that pollute the environment, while 77 per
cent believe banks should be stopped from doing so.
A Lowy Institute
poll this year found 57 per
cent of Australians
believe there is too much Chinese investment here.
... The YouGov
poll, commissioned by the Labour Uncut blog, shows that a majority (53 per
cent)
of current Tory supporters
believe their party has got better since the last election, with only 11 per
cent saying it has got worse.
The
poll of Unite members from across the UK also reveals that 70 per
cent of respondents
believe that government reforms will lead to privatisation.
The results support an ICM
poll for the Guardian on Tuesday, which revealed that just 22 per
cent of voters
believed Israel had acted proportionately to the kidnapping
of two
of its soldiers during an invasion by Hizbullah, which started the conflict.
The
poll for the Times found that 66 per
cent of Labour members
believe that Corbyn is doing «well» — even higher than the 59 per
cent who voted for Corbyn in September, with many
of those who voted for Andy Burnham now getting behind the leader.
Although a majority (53 per
cent)
of those
polled believe Britain's economic problems are related to a «culture
of greed» in financial institutions, the Conservatives are wary
of imposing much tougher regulation.
A YouGov
poll in today's Sunday Times found that 62 per
cent of voters
believe Brown should have accepted defeat on Friday with just 28 per
cent saying he was right to hang on, writes Channel 4 News.
A YouGov
poll in the Sunday Times found that 62 per
cent of voters
believe Brown should have accepted defeat on Friday with just 28 per
cent saying he was right to hang on.
Ninety - five per
cent of respondents to an Adfero
poll said they
believed Tony Blair's support for the US - led invasion has had a negative impact
of international perceptions
of Britain.
It came as a
poll by Ipsos MORI found 55 per
cent of Britain
believe the only way
of controlling immigration is be leaving the EU — and almost half said the issue would be key to how they vote.
According to today's ICM
poll for the Sunday Telegraph, 52 per
cent of people
believe that a hung Parliament would be bad for Britain; only 24 per
cent would welcome the result with another 24 per
cent undecided.
Some 40 per
cent of voters
believe Mr Corbyn offers a positive difference from other politicians while 37 per
cent think he is being treated unfairly by the media, the
polling found.
72 per
cent of British adults
believe Ed Miliband should spend more time outlining what Labour would do in government if they won the next General Election, according to an ITV News Index
poll.
In the UK in February, a BBC
poll of 1001 people found that just 26 per
cent believed human - made climate change was an established scientific fact, down from 41 per
cent only three months earlier.
A national opinion
poll conducted immediately after the 2012 Olympics found that 55 per
cent of respondents
believed that the public expenditure
of the Games had been well worth the investment.
Only 38 per
cent of people
believe that the government should build more grammar schools and encourage more schools to select on academic ability, according to a YouGov
poll.
According to a YouGov
poll, 31 per
cent of teachers
believe their schools have not implemented a performance - related pay (PRP) despite it being a statutory requirement for more than two years.
Public Opinion A YouGov
poll found that only 38 per
cent of people
believe the government should build more grammar schools and encourage more schools to select on academic ability, which suggests there isn't a huge amount
of public support for the idea.
While 23 per
cent of people
polled believed that grammar schools should be forced to accept children
of all abilities, 35 per
cent said they
believed that grammars improve social mobility, with only 19 per
cent thinking they damage social mobility and a further 27 per
cent saying they make no difference at all.
The
poll found that 79 per
cent of teachers
believe there is no good evidence for increasing selection in education, and 81 per
cent believe there is no evidence for opening new grammar schools.
A
poll of 900 National Education Union members by the Child Poverty Action Group found that 60 per
cent of staff
believe all eligible children in their school are getting the free meals they are entitled to, while 21 per
cent think some are not.
A recent
poll of over 750 teachers by Teacher Tapp found 82 per
cent of teachers
believed the profession should remain «graduate only».
The online
poll, conducted in July for CIBC, found that 67 per
cent of parents were willing to pay for two - thirds
of their children's post-secondary education while, on average, their kids
believed their parents were footing only a third
of the bill.
The
poll released Thursday also said 53 per
cent of respondents
believed that RESP contributions were tax deductible, which they are not.
When I got home, I was stunned by a new Harris
poll that showed that the percentage
of Americans who
believed in anthropogenic climate change had plummeted from 71 per
cent to 51 per
cent in just two years.
Meanwhile, Oliver might want to check the results
of a new
poll conducted by Forum Research Inc. that indicates that Canadians overwhelming
believe climate change is real (81 per
cent) and, to a lesser degree, that it is caused by human activities (54 per
cent).
In a March 2015 Gallup
poll, 79 per
cent of Americans said they
believe the government should focus more on solar power, followed closely by 70 per
cent supporting an expansion
of wind power.
In August 2004, a
poll by Zogby International showed that 49 per
cent of New York City residents, with a margin
of error
of 3.5 percent,
believed that officials
of the U.S. government «knew in advance that attacks were planned on or around September 11, 2001, and that they consciously failed to act.»
A recent Rasmussen U.S.
poll found that 69 per
cent of 1,000 respondents
believed it at least «somewhat likely» that climate scientists had falsified their research data to support the case for catastrophic human - caused global warming (CAGW).
A total
of 88 per
cent of the GPs
polled believed that patients not being able to access legal or specialist advice about their problems would have a negative impact on their health either to a great extent (48 per
cent) or to some extent (40 per
cent).
26 per
cent of Canadian corporate counsel who answered the
poll said they
believe CASL will have material cost impact on compliance;
But even more dramatic is a new 1,000 - person
poll by the Strategic Counsel that shows 63 per
cent of Canadians
believe that judges should be elected.
According to a recent
poll by Devry Smith Frank LLP legal firm, 74 per
cent of respondents
believed they can divorce amicably.
A recent TREB news release points to a 2012 Angus Reid
poll which, it says, finds that 75 per
cent of Ontarians want the final sale price
of their home to remain confidential, and that the same percentage
of consumers
believe that their personal information should be kept confidential by Realtors.
By the way, the Royal Bank survey is «big picture positive», reinforcing that 83 per
cent of those
polled by Ipsos Reid
believe a home is a good investment and that one in four owners or renters intend to buy in the next two years.
However, the
poll also shows that 81 per
cent of Ontarians
believe it is more difficult to own a home now than it was for their parents, and 89 per
cent of Ontarians in general are concerned that home ownership will become even more difficult in the future.
In Toronto, where last year the city tacked a new land transfer tax on top
of the existing provincial levy, the Toronto Real Estate Board (TREB) released a
poll that shows 60 per
cent of Torontonians
believe that the city is not being run as efficiently as possible.