Sentences with phrase «poll also»

The poll also raises a question for parents.
This year's poll also finds that President Trump's policy preferences widen the...
In addition to policy prioritisation, the YouGov poll also asked parents about their experiences of Ofsted reports.
NEA's poll also indicated concern with how these new assessments will be used in accountability — and 81 percent of their respondents favor a moratorium or grace period on accountability provisions, with the most popular duration being two to five years.
That poll also found that while two - thirds of respondents had participated in trainings around CCSS, just 26 percent said the trainings were helpful.
In addition to measuring the public's attitudes toward interracial dating, the poll also measured the extent to which people have dated someone with similar or different racial and ethnic backgrounds from their own.
The poll also found that 16 % of Canadians had found love online, with the younger demographic having more success.
The poll also found that 72 percent of men said they always bring condoms on the first date.
The poll also revealed that 56 percent of daters turn to the internet rather than to friends and family to get relationship advice.
And the poll also found that just 20 % of people asked actually paid to use these dating apps — that's a whopping 80 % using the free services offered by the platforms.
The poll also asked singles about the effect scammers have on the way they interact with online dating.
Our poll also asked participants to indicate whether they felt they are attractive or not, and then to prioritise certain factors of attraction like their date's sense of humour, job, wealth and education.
Our poll also asked respondents for the types of financial habits they find most annoying within a couple.
The poll also indicated distinct party - line divisions regarding which government officials and agencies were to blame for failing to prevent the attack.
Nature's poll also gauged where the sequence has had the greatest effect on the science itself.
The poll also found that 52 % of New Yorkers approve of the way Mayor de Blasio is handling his job.
The poll also suggests Gillibrand could face a tough 2010 race, depending on who Republicans field to run against her.
Today's poll also found 35 percent oppose the NY Safe Act.
While the primary is still more than six months away, the poll also shows the number of undecided voters has now dipped below 30 percent as the campaign season heats up, with debates and rallies now scheduled multiple nights a week.
The poll also showed that City Council Speaker Christine Quinn remains the leading early Democratic contender for mayor going into 2013.
The poll also had a series of questions about the Labour leadership which collectively are pretty good news for Gordon Brown.
The poll also showed strong backing for tax cuts and opposition to tax rises.
According to Tim Montgomerie on Conservative Home, the poll also shows that «24 % told GfK NOP that they would prefer Charles Kennedy to return as leader and slightly more (7 %) preferred LibDem Home Affairs spokesman Nick Clegg to the embattled Sir Menzies (6 %)», though I'm not sure what sort of question or structure this was in response to.
The poll also put Vallone as the most recognized candidate, with Avella in second place followed by Katz, Peralta and Comrie.
In comparison, the average YouGov lead in the week before the Autumn Statement was 8 while the November's ICM poll also had Labour 8 points up.
The poll also found that 90 % of those surveyed support expanding the current maximum three - day firearm background check waiting period to 10 days, while 85 % back a bill to keep guns out of the hands of all convicted domestic abusers.
Voters who responded to the poll also expressed more support for banning the sale of assault - style weapons nationwide, by a 65 - to - 32 margin.
Labour's gain of 7 % against the previous month's poll (from 35 % to 42 %) for Westminster seats largely at the SNP's expense is the outstanding feature, but the poll also shows an improvement of 4 % (from 32 % to 36 %) for Holyrood constituencies, also at the SNP's expense.
And the poll also asked voters if they support the controversial MTA Payroll tax.
The Siena poll also has Hillary Clinton leading Bernie Sanders by 10 percentage points among the state's likely Democratic voters ahead of Tuesday's primary.
The Post-ABC poll also finds that 58 percent of adults say stricter gun control laws could have prevented the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, but there is no rise in support for banning assault weapons compared with two years ago and the partisan divide on this policy is as stark as ever.
The poll also indicates New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo - who has received plaudits of late for his investigations into Wall Street bonuses - would trounce Patterson in a Democratic primary, 53 - 32 percent.
The poll also found that 55 percent of Democratic voters have an unfavorable impression of the former congressman, a 19 - point jump from last month's poll.
The poll also indicates Paterson would lose by 30 points to Republican former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani in a hypothetical general election contest.
The ICM poll also contains a clear warning for the chancellor: two - thirds (65 %) do not believe his promise, made last week, that the deficit can be cut after the election without raising taxes.
The poll also found that while 43 percent said the mayor is honest and trustworthy, 45 percent said he is not.
The poll also asked about three prominent elected officials who may challenge de Blasio.
The new Siena poll also showed a significant decline in Cuomo's favorability ratings since January.
The poll also found 55 percent of registered Democrats now have an unfavorable impression of Weiner, while 30 percent see him favorably.
The poll also shows that in a Democratic primary runoff, de Blasio leads: 54 - 38 percent over Quinn; 50 - 41 percent over Thompson; 72 - 22 percent over Weiner.
The poll also suggests Gillibrand would have a difficult primary race, should Rep. Carolyn McCarthy decide to run: McCarthy has a narrow 4 point edge over Gillibrand, 33 - 29 percent.
The poll also asked supporters if the state should extend the current «Millionaire's tax», and they support it by more than 2 - 1.
The poll also asked about how voters think of Senator Chuck Schumer, who's been in office since 1999.
The poll also indicates that 10 % of Labour voters in the last General Election would switch their allegiance to Ukip next year.
But, the poll also asked if voters understood what they were protesting, and only 60 percent said they understood the views «fairly well» or «very well.»
The poll also shows that three potential challengers in the 2017 mayoral race — City Comptroller Scott Stringer, Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams and Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz, Jr. — are within a few percentage points of the incumbent.
The poll also reveals several sharp demographic divides.
The poll also shows that, right now, scandals are costing Weiner.
The poll also reports Cuomo leads over both Republican challengers Dutchess County Executive Marc Molinaro and state Senator John DeFrancisco, as well as fellow Democrat Cynthia Nixon, in his bid for reelection.
The poll also finds that just slightly more than one third of New Yorkers, 39 percent, like the job the governor is doing in office.
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