Although I was told, in no uncertain terms that quotes were made this morning from the Guardian, it appears it was actually the Comres poll for the Telegraph and its comments that were repeated in that paper.
Full Facts have now investigated the way that was presented (in the Telegraph) and found the Telegraph’s poll figures on suspending parliament are misleading as I suggested they were. fullfact.org/europe/telegraph-suspending-parliament/
The Telegraph claimed (as did others picking up on their report) that "Boris Johnson has the support of more than half of the public to deliver Brexit by any means, including suspending Parliament, according to a poll."
Full Facts concluded that this is incorrect. "The poll showed that 44%, not a majority, agreed with the statement." They also found there were other issues with the poll.
On the front page, as you can see, they have claimed that half the public has supported Johnson. They calculated this by totally inappropriately excluding "don't knows".
The question itself would have been struck out of any questionnaire put together under normal standards. Full Fact report that the question was:
“Do you agree or disagree with the following statements?
“Boris needs to deliver Brexit by any means, including suspending parliament if necessary, in order to prevent MPs from stopping it.”
They query the fact that "implicit in the statement is the idea that parliament will definitely stop Brexit. Not delay, but stop Brexit. This essentially inflates the perceived risk to Brexit of not proroguing parliament."
In their view, by making it seem that leaving the EU in this way Brexit might be delivered might lead more people to agree with the statement.
The Telegraph does admit in the article that this only represented of people in Great Britain - excluding the people of Ireland, who voted to remain.
A poor show from anyone's point of view I would have thought.