The initially high public support for the war in Chechnya has declined.
In the year since the "axis of evil" speech, popular support for war has declined by at least 10 points.
The work will help to show whether popular support for the welfare state against private alternatives has declined.
But as job and wage insecurity have grown, public support for free trade has declined.
And corporate support declined nearly 3 percent, to $19.4 million.
Since then, public support for the agreement has declined on both sides.
Their support had declined by the time of the 1922 election, and fell to six seats.
But that support has been declining, and a large number of voters remain undecided.
Its support declined from nearly a third of the electorate in 1988 to only percent in 1991.
Conservative support in the larger cities has been declining for more than 25 years.