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Britons prefer Prince William to the Queen, says poll | Britons prefer Prince William to the Queen, says poll |
(about 3 hours later) | |
Britons prefer Prince William to the Queen, according to an opinion poll. But both royals are significantly more popular than the UK's best-known politicians. | Britons prefer Prince William to the Queen, according to an opinion poll. But both royals are significantly more popular than the UK's best-known politicians. |
Of more than 2,000 people surveyed by ComRes for the Sunday Mirror and Independent on Sunday, 68% expressed a favourable view of the young royal compared with 63% for his grandmother. | |
The Prince of Wales lagged well behind on 43%, but even the heir to the throne enjoyed a better rating than any of the Westminster figures. | The Prince of Wales lagged well behind on 43%, but even the heir to the throne enjoyed a better rating than any of the Westminster figures. |
The London mayor, Boris Johnson, came closest to a regal score on 41% – with David Cameron pipping Ukip's Nigel Farage by 28% to 26%. Fewer than one in five said they saw the Labour leader, Ed Miliband, in a good light (19%) – fewer than the foreign secretary, William Hague (25%), and on a par with the chancellor, George Osborne. | |
After their recent spat, Theresa May retains more public favour than Michael Gove (16% to 9%), with the education secretary also attracting many more dislikes. May is significantly better liked by Tory supporters. | |
Reflecting his party's woeful poll showings, the Liberal Democrat deputy prime minister, Nick Clegg, is admired by only 13%. | Reflecting his party's woeful poll showings, the Liberal Democrat deputy prime minister, Nick Clegg, is admired by only 13%. |
The poll showed a narrowing of Labour's lead over the Tories to 34% against 32% – the smallest gap for almost two and a half years in ComRes online research. | The poll showed a narrowing of Labour's lead over the Tories to 34% against 32% – the smallest gap for almost two and a half years in ComRes online research. |
Ukip and the Lib Dems shed a point each to stand at 18% and 7% respectively. | |
Religious freedom was named by only 12% of voters as one of the most important "British values" – after Gove pledged they would be promoted in the classroom in the wake of the "Trojan horse" controversy. The most popular value was freedom of speech (48%) followed by respect for the rule of law (34%), fairness (27%), tolerance (27%), a sense of humour (26%), equality (24%), politeness (22%), political freedom (20%) and responsibility (14%). | |
Aspiration – often cited by political leaders as a fundamental British value – was picked by 3%. | |
ComRes interviewed 2,034 British adults online from 11 to 13 June. | |
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