More from YouGov's Sunday Times poll
The full tables for YouGov's Sunday Times poll are now up here. Latest voting intention in the AV referendum is YES 39%, NO 38%, Don't know 22%, so still essentially neck and neck (if it hadn't been weighted by likelihood to vote, it would have been exactly neck and neck)
On Libya it's pretty even on whether people think military action is right or wrong - 40% think it's right, 39% think it's wrong - we've seen this bounce back and forth between being in favour and against over the last few days, suggesting the underlying position is now people pretty evenly divided. For the first time more people think the military action is going badly (38%) than think it is going well (35%) - there has been a strong downwards trend on this question over the last fortnight, at the start of which the proportion of people thinking it was going well was up in the high fifties.
Moving to health, YouGov asked how much people trusted Ed Miliband, David Cameron, Nick Clegg and Andrew Lansley on health. Ed Miliband was narrowly the most trusted: 39% trusted him a lot or a little, followed by David Cameron who 36% of people trusted a lot or a little. Compare this with Andrew Lansley - who is only trusted by 17% of people (even amongst Tory voters, only 41% trust him on the NHS).
27% of people say they support the NHS proposals, compared to 52% who oppose them. Asked what should be done next 34% think they should be abandoned, 47% say the government should change them to address people's concerns (including the overwhelming majority of Conservative supporters), only 3% think they should continue as they are.
On interns, the perception is that companies are benefitting rather more than the interns themselves (33% think it benefits companies more, 14% interns more, 44% both equally) - however people to tend to agree with the argument that internships allow an unfair advantage to children of parents with good contacts or enough money to work for free. 65% would support some sort of regulation.
Asked about whether various professions are more about what you know, or who you know, politics is overwhelmingly seen as being about who you know, not what you know (by 76% to 8%). That's followed by journalism (56% who you know, 21% what you know) and acting (55% who you know, 22% what you know). Accountancy and medicine are seen are more meritocratic - 59% think progression in accountancy is about what you know, 20% who you know, 71% think medicine is more about what you know, only 11% who you know. People were pretty evenly split on their view of the legal profession.
Finally on the Royal Wedding 3% will be attending a street party, 2% going to London to see it, 35% will be watching on the telly... 35% will be trying their best to ignore it.