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Huff Post

Huffington Post

2 February 2024

Huffington Post

Luke Tryl of the More in Common think tank, which regularly tests public opinion through polling and focus groups, told HuffPost UK: “What has cut through with the public is the vacillation on the £28bn policy.

“People say Labour can’t seem to make their minds up - we heard it multiple times last week. No one is worried about the cost of it or the policy itself, they just want Labour to make their minds up about it.”

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BBC News

28 January 2024

BBC News

Write-up by Laura Kuenssberg, of 6 focus groups conducted by More in Common, featured on her programme 'Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg'

Telegraph

The Telegraph

22 January 2024

The Telegraph

Voters no longer see Rishi Sunak as an asset to the Conservatives, polling has shown.

A survey by the More in Common think tank published on Sunday night showed 26 per cent of respondents agreed with the statement that the Prime Minister was an “asset” to his party, while 43 per cent disagreed.

When asked the same question in October, 37 per cent of people said Mr Sunak was an asset to the Conservatives and 33 per cent said he was not.

The New Statesman Emblem

New Statesman

15 January 2024

New Statesman

Glass-half-full Tories might note that their party is attracting a plurality of transfers from Reform supporters but nowhere near all or even half of them. The More in Common think tank has found a similar rate of transfer to the Tories from Reform supporters but 40 per cent said they would stop voting altogether.

Inde

The Independent

13 January 2024

The Independent

Luke Tryl, UK director of More in Common, said in normal times the Tories scraping by in Wellingborough would signal “something deeply worrying and wrong” for the party.

But after a series of historic by-election defeats for the party last year, Mr Tryl said Labour would be disappointed with anything other than a win.

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The Guardian

12 January 2024

The Guardian

Op-ed from UK Director Luke Tryl "The rightwing populist party could play an outsize role in the next UK election – and cost the Conservatives dearly"