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ABC News
5/23/12
Strong Support for
Gay Marriage Exceeds Str. Opposition
... Republicans and conservatives oppose gay marriage by more than 2-1,
evangelical white Protestants by more than 3-1. While Democrats support it
by more than 2-1, the balance is tipped, as is often the case, by
independents: Fifty-eight percent support legalizing gay marriage; 43
percent do so strongly. ...
Washington Post
5/22
Obama, Romney in
dead heat
After months of
aggressive campaigning on jobs and the economy, President Obama and Mitt
Romney, his likely Republican challenger, are locked in a dead heat over
who could fix the problem foremost on voters' minds, according to a new
Washington Post-ABC News poll. ...
__
__
NPR
5/21
What It's Like To
Be Sick In America
In the lull
between the Supreme Court arguments over the federal health overhaul law
and the decision expected in June, we thought we'd ask Americans who
actually use the health system quite a bit how they view the quality of
care and its cost. … 3 of 4 people who were sick said cost is a very
serious problem, and half said quality is a very serious problem. ...
Gallup
5/21
Obama, Romney Each
Has Economic Strengths
Americans see the cost of healthcare, the federal budget deficit, and
unemployment as the most important economic issues facing the country
today, according to a new USA Today/Gallup poll asking them to rate the
importance of 10 such issues. ... Americans prefer President Obama over
Mitt Romney for handling healthcare, while Romney is favored on the
deficit and the two are about tied on unemployment. ...
New York Times: Catherine Rampell
5/19
The Beginning of
the End of the Census?
The American
Community Survey may be the most important government function you've
never heard of, and it's in trouble. ... But last week, the Republican-led
House voted to eliminate the survey altogether, on the grounds that the
government should not be butting its nose into Americans' homes. ...
National Journal: Steven Shepard
5/18
Researcher
Examines Variation of the 'Bradley Effect'
During the 2008
presidential campaign, analysts warned that then-Sen. Barack Obama's lead
might be overstated by the polls as a result of the so-called "Bradley
Effect" -- the social-desirability bias that occurs when white voters lie
to pollsters about their intention to vote for a minority candidate. But a
new research paper points to another element of such bias: In 2008, poll
respondents were more likely to say they would vote for Obama if the
person conducting the interview was African-American. ...
Pew 5/18
A Global 'No' To a
Nuclear-Armed Iran
A 21-nation Pew
Global Attitudes survey finds widespread opposition to Iran obtaining
nuclear weapons. And in most countries, there is majority support among
opponents of a nuclear-armed Iran for international economic sanctions to
try to stop Tehran's weapons program. ...
Gallup 5/18
In Presidential
Election, Age Is Factor Only Among Whites
Barack Obama
maintains a substantial edge over Mitt Romney among voters younger than
age 40, while Romney wins among those 40 and older. ...
The Herald: Shawn Cetrone
5/17
Ex-S.C. GOP
official asks for Winthrop's polling records
After Republican
criticism of Winthrop University’s widely published surveys of public
opinion, a former state GOP official has asked the school to turn over all
records related to the last three Winthrop Polls, including respondents'
identities. ...
TIPP Online 5/17
Obama Maintains
3-Point Advantage
In the latest Investor's Business Daily/Christian Science Monitor/TIPP
Poll conducted after President Obama announced his support for gay
marriage, the President continues to maintain a 3-point lead over Governor
Romney. ...
Mark Mellman 5/16
A poll question I
hate
I hate questions
asking whether people are "more or less likely to vote" for a candidate
based on some factor. I admit to using them, but rarely, and under some
form of duress. ...
David Hill 5/16
Obama is crazy for
his base
As a pollster and
political consultant, even for the other political party, it's easy for me
-- in a perverse sort of way -- to admire President Obama's all-in bid to
recapture the affections of his liberal Democratic base voter. ...
Gallup 5/16
National Mood a
Drag on Obama's Re-Election Prospects
Some six months
before voters head to the polls to choose the next president of the United
States, Gallup finds several indicators of the economic and political
climate holding steady at levels that could be troublesome for President
Barack Obama. ...
Chicago Tribune
5/15
Chicagoans like
Emanuel's job performance
Chicagoans
generally approve of Mayor Rahm Emanuel's job performance but are taking a
wait-and-see attitude on whether he's making the city a better place to
live, a new Tribune/WGN-TV poll shows. ...
Pew 5/15
Assessing the
Representativeness of Opinion Surveys
... A new study
by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press finds that, despite
declining response rates, telephone surveys that include landlines and
cell phones and are weighted to match the demographic composition of the
population continue to provide accurate data on most political, social and
economic measures. ...
Washington Post: Jon Cohen
5/15
Voters split on
Obama's gay marriage announcement
Voters divide
straight down the middle on President Obama's recent statement that he
supports allowing gays and lesbians to get married, according to a new
Washington Post-ABC News poll. As with the issue itself, views of the
president's major announcement last week are closely related to
partisanship, education and age, with Democrats, more highly educated and
younger adults generally supportive of Obama's move. ...
New York Times
5/14
Poll Sees Gay
Marriage Support Motivated by Politics
Most Americans suspect that President Obama was motivated by politics, not
policy, when he declared his support for same-sex marriage, according to a
new poll released on Monday, suggesting the impact of his decision was
undercut by the unplanned way it became public. ...
CBS News 5/14
Most Americans
support same-sex unions
A new CBS
News/New York Times Poll shows a solid majority of Americans support legal
recognition for same-sex couples - though not necessarily through the
official act of marriage - and the number of people who do support full
marriage rights for gay and lesbian couples is significantly higher among
younger generations. ...
Gallup 5/14
Acceptance of
Gay/Lesbian Relations Is the New Normal
The slight
majority of American adults, 54%, consider gay or lesbian relations
morally acceptable. Public acceptance of gay/lesbian relations as morally
acceptable grew slowly but steadily from 38% in 2002 to 56% in 2011 and is
now holding at the majority level. ...
Bill Galston, Brookings
5/11
Six Months To Go
Between now and November 6, the people will ask themselves whether
President Obama's stewardship of the economy has met their hopes -- a
judgment that will depend heavily on the performance of the economy over
the next six months. If the people decide that the president has done well
enough, he will be reelected, whatever Mitt Romney says or does. ...
New York Times
5/11
Annual Census at
Risk in House Budget Bill
One casualty of
the sweeping budget bill that passed the House on Thursday was an annual
survey conducted by the Census Bureau, a rich source of data that social
researchers say is critical to modern demography. ...
Gallup 5/11
Six in 10 Say
Obama Marriage View Won't Sway Vote
A majority of Americans, 60%, say President Barack Obama's newly announced
support for same-sex marriage will make no difference to their vote. ...
Ronald Brownstein
5/10
Understanding
Voters on Gay Issue: It's One for the Ages
One potential
complication for President Obama's embrace of gay marriage is that
minority voters at the core of the modern Democratic electoral coalition
have usually resisted the idea more than whites. But that gap is
narrowing-driven mostly by the same process of shifting generational
attitudes evident among whites. ...
Public Religion Research Institute
5/10
Evangelical Voters
Strongly Support Romney
Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney holds a nearly
50-point lead over President Barack Obama (68 percent vs. 19 percent)
among white evangelical Protestant voters, a new survey finds. ...
Resurgent Republic
5/10
Electoral
fundamentals favor Republicans
... These results
present a different perspective on the two candidates than much of the
political punditry. It is Barack Obama, not Mitt Romney, who is viewed as
outside the ideological mainstream. ...
Gallup 5/10
In Tight Race,
Obama, Romney Have Core Support Groups
Because the
overwhelming majority of nonwhite registered voters in the U.S. vote
Democratic -- 77% currently support Barack Obama for president -- likely
Republican nominee Mitt Romney must do well among white registered voters
in order to offset this advantage. ...
Ronald Brownstein
5/9
Obama's Gay
Marriage Leap of Faith
... Obama's shift
on gay marriage remains politically significant because many Democratic
leaders have resisted embracing it for the same reasons the party has lost
enthusiasm for gun control and blinked at fully pursuing comprehensive
immigration reform. In each case, the party's primary fear has been losing
support among the most socially-conservative elements of the white
electorate: blue-collar, older and rural whites. ...
Gallup 5/9
Gender Gap in
Obama Approval Constant Since Term Began
Women have consistently been more likely than men to say they approve of
President Barack Obama's job performance since his administration began in
January 2009. ...
National Journal
5/9
Public Split On
Dream Act, Rubio Alternative
... The latest
United Technologies/National Journal Congressional Connection Poll found
that a solid, if slightly diminishing, majority of Americans support key
elements of Arizona's anti-illegal-immigration law that the White House is
seeking to overturn. But the survey also found that a preponderant
majority of Americans reject the option of deporting all of the estimated
11 million immigrants here illegally. ...
Gallup 5/8
Obama Has Big
Likability Edge Over Romney
Registered voters
are nearly twice as likely to say Barack Obama, rather than Mitt Romney,
is the more likable of the two presidential candidates. ...
National Journal
5/8
Key Groups Support
Student Loans, VAWA
The Obama
administration and congressional Democrats have spent much of this spring
criticizing Hill Republicans for what they say is the GOP's opposition to
legislative initiatives including the Violence Against Women Act,
student-loan subsidies, and the Paycheck Fairness Act. A new United
Technologies/National Journal Congressional Connection Poll shows that
Democrats enjoy popular support for these efforts. ...
Pew 5/8
Egyptians Embrace
Democracy and Religion in Political Life
Despite economic
difficulties and political uncertainty, Egyptians remain upbeat about the
course of the nation and prospects for progress. ...
Gallup 5/8
Half of Americans
Support Legal Gay Marriage
Fifty percent of
Americans believe same-sex marriages should be recognized by law as valid,
with the same rights as traditional marriages -- down slightly from 53%
last year, but marking only the second time in Gallup's history of
tracking this question that at least half of Americans have supported
legal same-sex marriage. ...
Ed Goeas and Brian Nienaber (pdf)
5/7
The Race to
November Begins
... In the 2012
election, the data certainly points to an angry Independent vote that will
not be favorable to President Obama. While the President is upside down
with his job approval on a majority of issue areas, with independents, his
disapproval measurements are higher than average, and in some cases
significantly higher. ...
Celinda Lake, Daniel Gotoff, and Kristin Pondel (pdf)
5/7
Battleground 2012
... Democrats
face twin challenges: first, securing credit for their economic successes
while extending the debate over a level playing field for America's middle
class beyond taxes to include robust plans for further job creation, and
second, bringing Romney's record and vision for the future into stark
relief. ....
TIPP Online 5/7
Obama Lead Over
Romney Narrows To 3 Points
In the latest
Investor's Business Daily/Christian Science Monitor/TIPP Poll, the race
between President Barack Obama and Governor Mitt Romney tightens. Obama
leads leads 46% to 43%. ...
USA Today 5/6
Swing states'
poll: Big challenges loom for Obama, Romney
The first USA
TODAY/Gallup Swing States Poll since the GOP settled on a presumptive
nominee shows big challenges for each side: Mitt Romney in generating
enthusiasm and a personal connection with his supporters, and Barack Obama
in convincing Americans he should be trusted to manage a fragile economy.
...
New York Times
5/6
9 Swing States,
Critical to Presidential Race, Are Mixed Lot
... With just
over six months until Election Day, an analysis of the emerging electoral
map by The New York Times found that the outcome would most likely be
determined by how well President Obama and Mitt Romney perform in nine
tossup states. ...
Howey Politics Indiana
5/4
Fred Yang: Lugar
is likely to be defeated next Tuesday
... I'd argue
that, even before the third-party ads, the "outside" polls, and even the
Lugar/Mourdock campaigns themselves, the outcome was settled by two simple
actions that happened months ago. First, Richard Lugar decided to seek
reelection, and second, Richard Mourdock emerged as his ONLY challenger.
...
Washington Post
5/3
Obama leads Romney
as campaigns converge on Virginia
President Obama
leads former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney in Virginia, but voters in
the commonwealth are evenly divided on the White House's major policies, a
new Washington Post poll shows. ...
Western University
5/1
New study shows 'undecideds'
not impartial
... New research
by a team of psychologists from Canada, Italy and Switzerland shows that
undecideds are not impartial, but instead reveal a preference for
information that confirms their gut reactions. ...
Pew 5/1
Supreme Court
Favorability Reaches New Low
Public assessments of the Supreme Court have reached a quarter-century
low. Unlike evaluations over much of the past decade, there is very little
partisan divide. ...
Gallup 5/1
Obama Averages 47%
Job Approval in April
President Obama's
job approval rating averaged 47% in April, Obama's highest monthly average
since last May, when he averaged 50% after U.S. Marines killed Osama bin
Laden in a May 2, 2011, raid. ...
Frank Luntz 4/27
Five myths about
conservative voters
... I can tell you firsthand that there are widespread misconceptions
about conservative voters -- what they believe in and what they are
looking for from their leaders. Let's look closer at this key demographic
and debunk some of the biggest whoppers. ...
Yale Project on Climate Change
4/26
Public Support for
Climate & Energy Policies
Majorities of
Americans say that global warming and clean energy should be among the
nation's priorities, want more action by elected officials, corporations,
and citizens themselves, and support a variety of climate change and
energy policies, including holding fossil fuel companies responsible for
all the "hidden costs" of their products. ...
Pew 4/25
More Support for
Gun Rights, Gay Marriage than in 2004
Opinions about a pair of contentious social issues, gun control and gay
marriage, have changed substantially since previous presidential
campaigns. On gun control, Americans have become more conservative; on gay
marriage, they have become more liberal. ...
The Onion 4/24
Hoagie Expose
Leads to Ratings Slide for President
Voters describe
recent images of Obama eating a gigantic hoagie all by himself "somehow
very sad." ...
Institute of Politics, Harvard (pdf)
4/24
Young Americans'
Attitudes Toward Politics, Public Service
Approximately four months since Harvard IOP polling indicated that Barack
Obama's approval ratings among 18- to 29- year olds reached new lows,
there is evidence to suggest that the President and Democrats more broadly
are beginning to regain the approval of this important segment of the
electorate. ...
Kaiser Family Foundation (pdf)
4/24
Kaiser Health
Tracking Poll
A month of
intense media focus on the Affordable Care Act, spurred by the three days
of oral arguments in the Supreme Court over a case challenging the law,
did little to change Americans' basic view on the health reform law. ...
National Journal
4/24
Public Opinion
Could Lead to Further Gridlock
Americans are fed
up with Congress and a federal government perpetually frozen in conflict,
but voters remain sharply split over how to ease the gridlock in the
nation's capital, according to a new United Technologies/National Journal
Congressional Connection Poll. ...
Resurgent Republic (pdf)
4/23
Dispelling the
Myth of the Hispanic Monolithic Voting Bloc
... In 2008 less
than one-third of Hispanic voters supported the Republican nominee for
President. ... Compared to 2008, President Obama is underperforming among
this critically important voting bloc in battleground states where
Hispanic voters will be the determining factor. ...
Al Hunt 4/22
Romney and Obama
need these swing groups to win
This is expected
to be a close U.S. presidential election and there's a general consensus
in both camps about who, to paraphrase former President George W. Bush,
the "deciders" will be. The swing groups are constituencies that went for
Barack Obama in 2008 and voted Republican in the 2010 congressional
elections, or voting blocs in which the premium is passion not preference.
...
Washington Post: Dan Balz
4/21
Obama vs. Romney:
A tight election from the start
By the count of
one Democratic pollster, roughly 40 presidential election polls have been
released in the past seven weeks -- about one a day, with a day off every
week. What do they tell us about November? ...
Gallup 4/20
Obama Trusted More
Than Romney on Economy
Fifty percent of
Americans say they have a great deal or a fair amount of confidence in
President Obama to do or to recommend the right thing for the economy,
more than say the same about Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney
(42%). ...
NBC News: Mark Murray
4/19
Obama leads
Romney, but Republican ahead on economy
With the
Republican presidential primary season essentially over and with the
general election campaign now under way, President Barack Obama begins the
race with a six-point lead over presumptive GOP nominee Mitt Romney,
according to a new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll. ...
National Journal
4/19
Diversity Now
Coming together
and pulling apart. American race relations appear to be moving in both
directions at once as the nation hurtles through its greatest demographic
transformation since the melting-pot era a century ago. ...
NBC New York 4/19
Pollster's Phone
Call Saves NYC Woman's Life
Most people may
not enjoy getting phone calls from pollsters, but one Manhattan woman's
life was saved by such a call Monday night. ...
New York Times
4/19
In Wariness on
Economy, Poll Finds Opening for Romney
A rising number
of Americans see improvement in the economy, but a persistent wariness
about their own financial circumstances is allowing Mitt Romney to
persuade voters that he could improve their economic prospects more than
President Obama, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News poll. ...
Democracy Corps (pdf)
4/19
Ryan Budget
weakens vulnerable Republicans
Last month,
virtually all House Republicans voted for Paul Ryan's latest budget plan
("The Path to Prosperity") -- and according to the latest battleground
survey by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner for Democracy Corps and Women's Voices.
Women Vote Action Fund, they will pay the price in November. ...
Ron Brownstein
4/17
Familiar Divisions
Give Obama Narrow Edge
Four recent
national polls, including three released in the past 24 hours, generally
show the electorate dividing between President Obama and Mitt Romney along
lines of class, gender and race familiar from the 2008 race. ...
Pew 4/17
With Voters
Focused on Economy, Obama Lead Narrows
With voters
continuing to focus on economic issues, Barack Obama holds a slim 49% to
45% advantage over Mitt Romney in the latest Pew Research Center survey of
nearly 2,400 registered voters nationwide. ...
Andrew Kohut, Pew Research Center
4/17
Economy or
Personality?
... Obama and
Romney both carry so much political baggage that one or the other will
have to defy modern political history to win in November. ...
ABC News 4/16
Romney Shows
Record Shortfall in Personal Popularity
Mitt Romney has
emerged from the Republican primary season with the weakest favorability
rating on record for a presumptive presidential nominee in ABC
News/Washington Post polls since 1984, trailing a resurgent Barack Obama
in personal popularity by 21 percentage points. ...
Gallup 4/16
Romney, Obama in
Tight Race
Mitt Romney is
supported by 47% of national registered voters and Barack Obama by 45% in
the inaugural Gallup Daily tracking results from April 11-15. Both Obama
and Romney are supported by 90% of their respective partisans. ...
Gallup 4/16
Less Than Half of
Americans Consider Tax Bill Too High
As tax filing day
looms, Americans fall into two closely matched camps: those who believe
the amount they pay in federal income tax is too high (46%) and those who
consider it "about right" (47%). Just 3% consider their taxes too low. ...
Thomas B. Edsall, Columbia U.
4/16
Let the
Nanotargeting Begin
... Perhaps most
interesting, the findings emerging out of advances in microtechnology are
a window into the striking differences in the tastes and interests of
liberal and conservatives, Democrats and Republicans. Among other things,
Democrats and Republicans differ in the entertainment they prefer, the
restaurants they go to, the drinks they chose and the Web sites they
visit. ...
Gallup 4/13
Americans Favor 'Buffett
Rule' by 60% to 37%
Six in 10
Americans favor Congress' passing the so-called "Buffett Rule," which
would mandate a minimum 30% tax rate for Americans with a household income
of $1 million or more per year. Majorities of both Democrats and
independents favor the policy, while a majority of Republicans oppose it.
...
Washington Post
4/12
Drop in Republican
support for Afghan war
A majority of
Republicans say for the first time that the war in Afghanistan has not
been worth fighting, according to a Washington Post-ABC News poll that
comes as the continuing U.S. presence in that country is emerging as a key
point of contention in the presidential race. ...
Businessweek: Joshua Green
4/11
The GOP Thinks
Romney Can't Win; History Says He Can
With Rick
Santorum's exit from the presidential race, Mitt Romney can at last turn
his attention to the general election. He'll have to start by convincing
his own party that his candidacy isn't a lost cause. ...
Pew 4/11
What the Public
Knows about the Political Parties
... [A] review of
what Americans know about the political parties shows that the public is
better informed about the partisan affiliations of two popular recent
presidents -- Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton -- than it is about the
positions of the parties on key issues that dominate the current national
debate. ...
Washington Post
4/11
More expect
Court's health care decision to be political
More Americans think Supreme Court justices will be acting mainly on their
partisan political views than on a neutral reading of the law when they
decide the constitutionality of President Obama's health-care law,
according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll. ...
Washington Post
4/10
Economy malaise
looms over Obama reelection bid
With the general-election campaign beginning to take shape, President
Obama holds clear advantages over Mitt Romney on personal attributes and a
number of key issues, but remains vulnerable to discontent with the pace
of the economic recovery, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News
poll. ...
Afghan Center for Socio-Economic & Opinion Research
4/9
Half in
Afghanistan Believe the Taliban Have Moderated
Afghans express a
growing sense that the Taliban have become more moderate, and the public
broadly supports a negotiated settlement with them -- even if that means
ceding government control of some provinces, the latest Afghan Futures
survey has found. ...
Gallup 4/9
Americans Favor
Various Energy, Environment Proposals
Americans as a
whole favor a wide-ranging set of proposals for dealing with the nation's
energy and environment situations, but support varies markedly across
party lines. ...
Third
Way 4/9
Opportunity Trumps
Fairness with Swing Independents
... We find that
Swing Independents are "opportunity" voters -- preferring an optimistic,
opportunity framework on the economy over one based on fairness. Why?
Opportunity addresses their anxieties about the future, concerns that
America is slipping, doubts about how the next generation will succeed,
and questions over how we will strengthen our economy. ...
Gallup 4/9
Obama's Monthly
Job Approval Edges Higher in March
President Barack
Obama's job approval rating averaged 46% in March, up from 45% in January
and February, and significantly improved over his term-low 41% monthly
averages recorded last summer and fall. ...
Douglas Schoen
4/8
Majorities of
Americans Think Country Divided by Race
Majorities of
both whites (72%) and blacks (89%) believe the country is divided by race,
the poll finds. But twice as many blacks (40%) as whites (20%) say it is
very divided. And just 19 percent of whites say that racism is a big
problem in America, vs. 60 percent of blacks. ...
Brendan Nyhan, Dartmouth
4/6
Narrowcasting the
2012 Election
... In reality,
presidential election outcomes can almost never be attributed to a shift
in a single demographic group. Likewise, most campaigns are decided by the
popular vote, not the details of the Electoral College. For both reasons,
journalists should keep their eye on the big picture. ...
Ronald Brownstein
4/5
5-4 and 50-50
... In all, the
most predictable message of 2012 is likely to be that after a surge toward
the Republicans following the 9/11 terrorist attacks, a tide of
disillusionment with President Bush that lifted the Democrats in 2006 and
2008, and a sharp snap back toward the GOP in 2010, America has reverted
to being a 50-50 nation. ...
Howey Politics Indiana: Christine Matthews
4/5
INDIANA: GOP
primary makeup will be key
Our March 26-28
poll shows what everyone knows: Richard Lugar is in a tough battle to win
the May 8 Republican primary. ...
Pew 4/5
The rise of
e-reading
The growing
popularity of e-books and the adoption of specialized e-book reading
devices are documented in a series of new nationally representative
surveys by the Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project that
look at the public's general reading habits, their consumption of print
books, e-books and audiobooks, and their attitudes about the changing ways
that books are made available to the public. ...
Lynn Vavreck, UCLA
4/4
If You Were
Running for President . . .
... Once we know the economic context and the prediction, we can
systematically, and well in advance, strategize about how each party
should go about crafting a winning message. ...
New York Times: John Harwood
4/4
Tired of
Topsy-Turvy Politics? You May Enjoy the General
... So now that Republicans have begun rallying around Mr. Romney, does
that signal the start of a mercurial, topsy-turvy general election fight
with President Obama? Almost certainly not. ...
G. Terry Madonna & Michael L. Young
4/4
Santorum's Last
Stand
... A close look
at the last month of the campaign reveals the painful contours of the
Santorum slide. Altogether five factors have converged to turn
Pennsylvania into what could be Santorum's last stand. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
4/4
Romney Leans on
Wisconsin's Well-Off
Mitt Romney again
relied on well-off voters for a Midwest victory, leaning in Wisconsin on
support from those with $100,000-plus incomes while running only about
evenly against Rick Santorum among those less comfortable financially. ...
Mark Mellman 4/4
Following the
bouncing political polls
... Polls bounce
around. Even seemingly substantial variations often prove to be nothing
more than noise. ...
Resurgent Republic
4/3
The Economy,
Health Care and Seniors
As part of our
Target Voter Series, Resurgent Republic sponsored four focus groups among
seniors ages 65 and older in Tampa, Florida, and Grand Rapids, Michigan.
These voters self-identified as Independents, voted for President Obama in
2008, but are undecided on the generic presidential ballot today. ...
Public Religion Research Institute
4/3
Chosen for What?
Jewish Values in 2012
Jewish values,
particularly pursuing justice and a commitment to social equality, are
important for informing political beliefs and behaviors, a new national
survey of American Jews finds. ...
Clifford Young, Ipsos
4/3
Obama will be
president, again, in 2013
... Our own
political forecasting model, based on hundreds of elections around the
world, indicates that Obama has about an 85% probability of winning
reelection and re-taking the White House. Yes, there is a chance that
Obama might falter, but it is a small one and the Republican candidate has
little bearing on it. ...
Lancaster Online
4/2
Santorum attacks
Franklin & Marshall College pollster
G. Terry Madonna
laughed Monday when he heard an Internet search of his name and the term
"Democratic hack" produced 76 hits. ...
Gallup 4/2
Obama 49%, Romney
45% Among Registered Voters
If asked to choose between them today, 49% of U.S. registered voters say
they would vote for Barack Obama for president, while 45% would choose
likely Republican opponent Mitt Romney. While Obama's advantage is not
statistically significant, it is the largest he has had over Romney in
Gallup polling to date. ...
Washington Post
4/1
Santorum: PA polls
showing close race work of 'hack'
Former senator Rick Santorum on Sunday dismissed recent polls showing his
support collapsing in his home state of Pennsylvania, taking aim at the
nonpartisan pollster behind the surveys as "a Democratic hack." In an
appearance on "Fox News Sunday," Santorum was asked about a late-March
Franklin & Marshall poll. ...
[From The Polling Report archives: The final Franklin & Marshall 1996
Senate poll, conducted Oct. 25-29, among registered voters, had Bob Casey
Jr. leading Rick Santorum 53% to 38%, with 9% undecided. Casey defeated
Santorum 59% to 41%.]
USA Today
4/1
Swing States poll:
A shift by women puts Obama in lead
President Obama
has opened the first significant lead of the 2012 campaign in the nation's
dozen top battleground states, a USA TODAY/Gallup Poll finds, boosted by a
huge shift of women to his side. ...
Dante Chinni, The Jefferson Institute
3/31
How elections
reduce Americans to stereotypes
... We don't need
to stop studying and debating voter demographics, but we should be smarter
about how we do it. The way we talk about voters matters, not just because
it affects campaigns and candidates, but because it shapes how we see our
country and our fellow citizens -- and the perceptions it fosters are
often wrong. ...
Pew 3/30
Attitudes About
Race
The controversy
over the death of Trayvon Martin has highlighted issues relating to the
treatment of blacks by local police departments, the state of race
relations in the U.S. and press coverage of African Americans. Pew
Research Center surveys in recent years have covered the opinions of
blacks and whites on these and other issues. ...
Gallup 3/30
Global Warming
Views Steady Despite Warm Winter
About half of Americans, 52%, say the effects of global warming have
already begun to happen, consistent with views since 2009. However, this
remains down from prior years, when as many as 61% believed global warming
was already manifesting itself. ...
Gordon Gauchat, UNC Chapel Hill (pdf)
3/29
Politicization of
Science in the Public Sphere
... To summarize
the main empirical findings, this study shows that public trust in science
has not declined since the 1970s except among conservatives and those who
frequently attend church. ...
Pew 3/29
The Gender Gap:
Three Decades Old, as Wide as Ever
The gender gap in
presidential politics is not new. Democratic candidates have gotten more
support from women than men for more than 30 years. Even so, Barack
Obama's advantages among women voters over his GOP rivals are striking.
...
Kaiser Family Foundation (pdf)
3/28
Public Opinion on
the Individual Mandate
... One of the
consistent tenets in public opinion on the ACA is this: while the law as a
whole has never gained majority support, many of its component parts --
from the relatively narrow to the core and comprehensive -- have been
consistently popular over the past two years, with the glaring exception
of the individual mandate. ...
Mark S. Mellman
3/28
Healthcare reform
is no poison pill
... Americans do
not reject healthcare reform en masse. They are cross-pressured -- liking
parts of the plan and disliking others -- leading to uncertainty,
instability and oscillation in public opinion. ...
David Hill 3/28
Polls on ObamaCare
mislead
... ObamaCare-bashing
could supplant immigration as our party's most mishandled issue. ... What
emboldens too many Republicans are the glitzy top-line numbers from polls.
...
ABC News 3/28
Record Number See
Romney Negatively
Mitt Romney trails Barack Obama by 19 points in basic popularity as the
2012 presidential contest inches closer to the main event, with a record
50 percent of Americans in the latest ABC News/Washington Post poll now
rating Romney unfavorably overall. ...
Resurgent Republic
3/27
The Disillusioned
Obama Young Voter
... President
Obama and his team have indicated they are focused on re-energizing the
youth vote in both of these states and others. If these groups are
representative of this demographic at large, it will be a tall task to
counter the disillusionment many feel due to a pattern of over-promising
and under-delivering. ...
National Journal
3/27
Public Still
Opposes Health Care Mandate
Americans remain
overwhelmingly against requiring individuals to purchase health insurance,
but they divide in half about the health care law that President Obama
signed in 2010, according to the latest United Technologies/National
Journal Congressional Connection Poll. ...
Reason-Rupe 3/27
Majority of
Americans Open To Medicare Reform
The recent
national Reason-Rupe poll of 1200 adults finds 65 percent of Americans are
open to changing Medicare for those under 55 years old into a program that
gives individuals a credit to purchase a private insurance plan. ...
New York Times
3/27
Support in U.S.
for Afghan War Drops Sharply
After a series of
violent episodes and setbacks, support for the war in Afghanistan has
dropped sharply among both Republicans and Democrats, according to the
latest New York Times/CBS News poll. ...
Los Angeles Times
3/26
Strong majority
backs Jerry Brown's tax-hike initiative
California voters
strongly support Gov. Jerry Brown's new proposal to increase the sales tax
and raise levies on upper incomes to help raise money for schools and
balance the state's budget, according to a new USC Dornsife/Los Angeles
Times poll. ...
Los Angeles Times
3/24
California
Republicans get behind Mitt Romney
Republican voters in California have swung behind Mitt Romney, with the
national presidential front-runner crushing his rivals by double digits
and substantially expanding his support in the state, a new poll has
found. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
3/24
Conservatives,
Religious Voters Send Santorum Soaring
A strongly conservative, religiously inspired Republican electorate turned
the tables on Mitt Romney in Louisiana, supplying Rick Santorum with both
an easy win and a sharp riposte to Romney's victory in Illinois four days
earlier. ...
NBC News: Michael Isikoff
3/23
Pro-Romney Super
PAC, campaign blur lines on polling
The pro-Mitt
Romney Super PAC has paid $803,000 to a small Alexandria, Va., polling
firm that is owned by the senior partners of a prominent Republican
consulting company that does the polling for the Romney presidential
campaign, according to the campaign finance reports. ...
Pew 3/23
Top One-Word
Reactions to GOP Candidates
When Americans
are asked what one word comes to mind when thinking about Mitt Romney, no
single term stands out. The most frequent responses are "no" or "no way,"
and "rich." ...
Resurgent Republic (pdf)
3/22
Suburban Women
Voters
As part of our Target Voter Series, Resurgent Republic sponsored four
focus groups among Suburban Women who self-identified as Independents,
voted for Obama in 2008 and are undecided today. ...
Third Way and Greenberg Quinlan Rosner (pdf)
3/21
National Security
Focus Group Report
... Swing voters
in a new set of focus groups are generally impressed with the job
President Obama is doing in keeping the country safe. Yet his success has
not erased old doubts or stereotypes about his party on these issues. ...
Pew 3/21
More See 'Too
Much' Religious Talk by Politicians
A new survey
finds signs of public uneasiness with the mixing of religion and politics.
The number of people who say there has been too much religious talk by
political leaders stands at an all-time high since the Pew Research Center
began asking the question more than a decade ago. ...
Ronald Brownstein
3/21
Illinois Verdict:
The Race Goes On With Divided GOP
Mitt Romney's
resounding win in the Illinois primary Tuesday demonstrated his
solidifying hold on the GOP's upscale managerial wing, and deepened the
question of whether rival Rick Santorum can appeal to a broad enough
segment of Republican voters to truly challenge the front-runner's lead
for the nomination. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer, Gregory Holyk, Damla Ergun
3/21
Better-Off, Better
Educated Voters Boost Romney in IL
An improved sense
that he understands voters' problems boosted Mitt Romney to victory in the
Illinois primary, as did a less religiously focused, less strongly
conservative electorate than he's faced in other contests, especially to
the south. But a shortfall among less well-heeled Republicans marks his
continued challenges. ...
Gallup 3/19
Obama's Job
Approval Tied to Economic Confidence in 2012
A new Gallup
analysis of the relationship between Americans' views of the economy and
of recent presidents' job performance finds that the two measures are not
always closely related, but have been thus far in 2012. ...
ABC News: Greg Holyk
3/19
Health Care Law:
Two-Thirds Say Ditch Individual Mandate
Two-thirds of Americans say the U.S. Supreme Court should throw out either
the individual mandate in the federal health care law or the law in its
entirety, signaling the depth of public disagreement with that element of
the Affordable Care Act. ...
Pew 3/19
Support for Oil
and Gas Production Grows
At a time of
rising gas prices, the public's energy priorities have changed. More
Americans continue to view the development of alternative energy sources
as a higher priority than the increased production of oil, coal and
natural gas, but the gap has narrowed considerably over the past year. ...
Thomas Edsall
3/19
The Uses of
Polarization
... The power of
campaigns to create and motivate new swing voters dovetails with the
political strategy of driving polarization. Information science has
geometrically improved the ability of campaigns to accurately identify
specific voters who are angry or threatened and most easily motivated by
hard-edged, divisive messages, on such issues as race, taxes, welfare and
other hot-button subjects. ...
Jonathan Haidt, U. of Virginia 3/17
Forget the Money,
Follow the Sacredness
... Despite what you might have learned in Economics 101, people aren't
always selfish. In politics, they're more often groupish. When people feel
that a group they value -- be it racial, religious, regional or
ideological -- is under attack, they rally to its defense, even at some
cost to themselves. ...
New York Times
3/17
When Businesses
Can't Stop Asking, 'How Am I Doing?'
A commercial
transaction, in its simplest form, involves a customer paying for goods or
services. But these days, that is just the first step. ...
Ronald Brownstein
3/16
Obama's Key Groups
Warming on the Economy
In a trend with
important implications for the presidential election, the latest
Allstate/National Journal Heartland Monitor poll released today shows
President Obama's strongest groups in the electorate expressing the most
optimism about the trajectory of the economy. ...
Gallup 3/16
Romney, Santorum
Tie as Gingrich Voters' Second Choice
Republican voters who prefer Newt Gingrich for the party's 2012
presidential nomination are as likely to name Mitt Romney as their second
choice as they are to name Rick Santorum, suggesting the race would not
tilt in Santorum's favor if Gingrich dropped out. ...
Washington Post
3/16
In GOP race,
voters divided over religion's place in politics
Faith has emerged
as a significant fault line in the Republican race for president,
according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll, which shows that Rick
Santorum's supporters seek a much stronger role for religion in American
politics than do voters who support rival Mitt Romney. ...
Ronald Brownstein
3/16
White Like Me
... This year's tumultuous Republican presidential race has underscored
the dominance of whites, especially older white voters, in the GOP. After
Tuesday's contests in Alabama and Mississippi, exit polls have been
conducted in 16 states that have held Republican primaries or caucuses. In
all but two, whites cast at least 90 percent of the ballots. ...
Religion News Service
3/15
The contraception
mandate and religious freedom
A vocal
contingent of Republican presidential candidates and church leaders are
railing against the Obama administration's "war on religion," but most
Americans can't seem to find the fight. ...
Gallup 3/15
Half Say U.S.
Should Speed Up Afghanistan Withdrawal
Fifty percent of
Americans say the United States should speed up withdrawal of its troops
from Afghanistan, while 24% prefer sticking to the current timetable to
leave by the end of 2014, and 21% say the U.S. should stay as long as it
takes to accomplish its goals. ...
Drew Altman, Kaiser Family Foundation
3/14
The ACA and
Fluoridation: The Power of Political Symbols
... When policy
experts debate the ACA, they debate the substance of the law: what it will
cost and save; how much it will do to reduce the number of the uninsured;
and whether other policies might be more desirable. The public, however,
does not look at the ACA through the lens of a policy decision memo. ...
Pew 3/14
Romney Leads GOP
Contest, Trails in Matchup with Obama
Mitt Romney has
retaken a significant lead nationally in the race for the Republican
presidential nomination, even as he has fallen further behind Barack Obama
in a general election matchup. ...
National Journal
3/13
Public Supports
Obama on Gas Prices
More Americans trust President Obama than congressional Republicans to
make the right decisions to bring down the price of gasoline, according to
a new poll, although neither side commands a majority. ...
Bloomberg 3/13
Public's Economic
Outlook Turning from Fear to Hope
... More than
twice as many Americans view the economy's prospects as brightening as see
them darkening, a reversal from nine months ago, when more people expected
deterioration ahead, according to a Bloomberg National Poll conducted
March 8-11. ...
New York Times
3/13
Obama's Rating
Falls as Poll Reflects Volatility
Despite improving
job growth and an extended Republican primary fight dividing his would-be
opponents, President Obama is heading into the general election season on
treacherous political ground, according to the latest New York Times/CBS
News poll. ...
Larry Bartels, Vanderbilt U.
3/12
The Phantom Tax
Hike
President Obama
is paying a significant political price for having increased the tax
burden on middle-class Americans. Fair enough -- except that he hasn't.
...
CBS News 3/12
Obama's approval
rating sinks to new low
President Obama's approval rating has hit the lowest level ever in CBS
News polling, according to the latest CBS News/New York Times survey. The
drop may be partially attributable to rising gas prices. ...
Ezra Klein 3/12
The Unpersuaded:
Who listens to a President?
... Presidents
win victories because ordinary Americans feel that their lives are going
well, and we call those Presidents great communicators, because their
public persona is the part of them we know. ...
Washington Post
3/12
Gas prices sink
Obama's ratings on economy
Disapproval of
President Obama's handling of the economy is heading higher -- alongside
gasoline prices -- as a record number of Americans now give the president
"strongly" negative reviews on the 2012 presidential campaign's most
important issue, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
3/11
Six in 10
Criticize War in Afghanistan
Sixty percent of
Americans say the war in Afghanistan has not been not worth fighting and
just 30 percent believe the Afghan public supports the U.S. mission there
-- marking the sour state of attitudes on the war even before the shooting
rampage allegedly by a U.S. soldier this weekend. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
3/8
Religion, Race and
Romney's Road Ahead
... Combining
results across all states in which we’ve had exit or entrance polls,
Romney’s done 19 points better among non-evangelical than among
evangelical voters. It’s among the few most consistent gaps in his support
profile across the 2012 contest to date. ...
Bloomberg 3/8
Consumer
Confidence in U.S. Rises
Household
confidence improved last week to a four-year high as more Americans said
the economy was improving and decided it was a good time to shop. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
3/8
Gingrich: The
Santorum Siphon?
... Is Newt
Gingrich tripping up Rick Santorum by siphoning away anti-Romney voters?
It's hard to answer, because it's hypothetical; we haven't had a
second-choice question in any of the exit polls this year. But the data we
do see suggest that this argument, at best, is far from a slam-dunk. ...
PPIC 3/8
California:
Economy, Financial Worries Weigh on Voters
California's
likely voters approach the elections this year with big concerns about the
economy and the state's fiscal future, according to a statewide survey
released today by the Public Policy Institute of California. ...
Gallup 3/7
Obama Approval
Averages 45% in February
President Obama's
average job approval rating for the month of February in Gallup Daily
tracking was 45%, with 47% disapproving, unchanged from January. ...
CBS News: Samuel J. Best
3/7
How Romney won
Ohio
Romney eked out a
narrow victory in the Ohio Republican primary on Tuesday. The CBS News
exit poll of Ohio Republican primary voters showed that Rick Santorum's
coalition of crossover Democrats and socially conservative voters was not
quite large enough to offset Mitt Romney's base of ideologically moderate
voters. ...
ABC News / Langer Research
3/7
Super Tuesday
Theme Song: Can't Buy Me Love?
"Can't Buy Me Love" might be the theme song of the Super Tuesday
primaries: Mitt Romney prevailed on electability, but in terms of a
personal connection with voters' concerns, it was another matter. ...
Mark Mellman 3/7
Romney's negatives
are his fault
Tuesday night
must have been bittersweet for Mitt Romney. Just as he finally feels the
nomination is in hand (as you know, I've been pretty confident of that for
a while), he sees victory in the general election slipping further from
his grasp. ...
Charlie Cook 3/6
Shifting Winds
... The GOP's self-absorption and obsession with pleasing its conservative
base in presidential candidates' rhetoric and in policy initiatives at the
congressional, gubernatorial, and state legislative levels have taken a
toll. ...
Fox News Latino
3/5
GOP Hopefuls
Losing Ground to Obama Among Latinos
Despite growing
disappointment in his handling of immigration issues, Latino voters favor
President Barack Obama by six-to-one over any of the Republican
presidential hopefuls, showed a Fox News Latino poll conducted under the
direction of Latin Insights. ...
Pew 3/5
GOP Race Is
Rallying Democrats
The Republican
nomination battle is rallying Democrats behind Barack Obama. ...
Gallup 3/5
Four in 10
Americans Now Say Economy Is Growing
Forty percent of
Americans believe the U.S. economy is growing, up from 27% last April and
3% in 2008. While this represents a major shift in economic perceptions
over the last four years, nearly half of Americans, 46%, still say the
economy is in either a recession or a depression. ...
NBC News: Mark Murray
3/5
Primary season
takes 'corrosive' toll on the GOP
As another round of voting takes place this week in the Republican
presidential race -- with 11 states holding Super Tuesday contests -- a
new national NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll shows that the combative
and heavily scrutinized primary season so far has damaged the party and
its candidates. ...
New York Times
3/1
Law Has Polling
Firms Leery of Work in New Hampshire
New Hampshire's
attorney general is threatening legal action against some of the nation's
most prominent polling firms, invoking a state law against spreading
negative information through poll questions in a way that could limit
public opinion surveys in one of the nation's most politically contested
states. ...
Jeremy Rosner & Stanley Greenberg
3/1
From Strength to
Strength
... Americans may
be sharply polarized on many issues, but they are relatively aligned on
their confidence in Obama as commander in chief. ...
Kaiser Family Foundation (pdf)
3/1
Health Tracking
Poll
In the midst of a
debate on the future of the Medicare program, most Americans, including
seniors, are currently taking the side of the status quo, though budgetary
arguments about the program's future solvency, as well as arguments about
the effects of any change on seniors, have the potential to sway opinion.
...
ABC News / Langer Research Associates
2/29
Seniors and the
Wealthy Save Michigan for Romney
Michigan's
primary drew the Republican Party's ideological, religious and
socioeconomic divisions in sharp relief, raising questions both for the
primaries ahead and for the party's ability to coalesce behind its
eventual candidate. ...
David Hill 2/29
Wall Street's
predictive power
... Our supposed
understanding of the predictive power of equity markets is a little more
established than fortune-telling predicated on bobble-head sales. Or so I
thought. ...
Mark Mellman 2/29
Words matter in
pollsters' questions
It seems like a simple question: Do Americans now support the Obama
administration's efforts to save our auto industry? ...
Christopher Borick and Barry Rabe (pdf)
2/28
American Public
Opinion on Climate Change
After a period of
declining levels of belief in global warming there appears to be a modest
rebound in the percentage of Americans that believe temperatures on the
planet are increasing. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
2/28
New Lows for
Romney Among Conservatives
Mitt Romney has fallen to a new low in personal favorability among strong
conservatives in the latest ABC News/Washington Post poll, as his
persistent problems in this core GOP group now threaten his fortunes in
today's crucial Michigan primary. ...
National Journal
2/28
Public Divided
Over Birth-Control Coverage
On the docket of
contraception-related issues dividing the parties, more Americans lean
toward the positions held by President Obama and most Democrats, though in
several cases only narrowly, according to the latest United
Technologies/National Journal Congressional Connection Poll. ...
Pew 2/27
Public Views of
the Divide between Religion and Politics
... In both 2010
and 2008, narrow majorities said that churches and other houses of worship
should keep out of political matters rather than express their views on
social and political questions, according to polls by the Pew Research
Center for the People & the Press and the Pew Forum for Religion & Public
Life. ...
Gallup 2/27
Americans Divided
on Repeal of 2010 Health Care Law
Americans divide
evenly when asked if they favor (47%) or oppose (44%) a Republican
president's repealing the 2010 health care law if elected this November.
...
John Aloysius Farrell
2/24
Divided We Stand
... Congressional
leaders now sound, and act, like their parliamentary counterparts in
foreign lands -- voting in rigid blocs and, in times of legislative
gridlock, calling for an election to put the question to the voters. ...
Washington Post
2/24
Santorum winning
more support from Republican women
... A new Washington Post-ABC News poll shows not only that Santorum is
doing better among GOP women than he was a few weeks ago, but also that he
is less unpopular -- and also less well known -- among Democratic and
independent women than his Republican rivals Mitt Romney and Newt
Gingrich. ...
Pew 2/23
Auto Bailout Now
Backed, Stimulus Divisive
Public support
for government loans to major U.S. automakers has increased sharply since
2009. Opinions are far less positive, however, about two other major
initiatives to bolster the economy -- the 2008 bank bailout and the 2009
stimulus plan. ...
Bloomberg 2/23
Consumer Comfort
Highest in Almost Four Years
Consumer
confidence in the U.S. increased last week to the highest level since
April 2008 as more Americans had a favorable view of their finances. ...
Sacramento Bee
2/23
Obama resurgent in
California
President Barack
Obama is enjoying a mini-renaissance in California. Golden State voters
are giving him a higher job approval rating and larger margins of victory
over potential GOP challengers than they did three months ago. ...
ABC News 2/22
Santorum, Romney
Even in Popularity, Gingrich Fades
Rick Santorum and Mitt Romney have battled essentially to parity in basic
popularity, far outpacing Newt Gingrich, who's faded to a new low in the
2012 election cycle. ...
Sacramento Bee
2/22
California: Romney
holds lead, but Santorum gains
While challengers
rise and recede in the Republican presidential primaries, Mitt Romney's
sail remains full in California. ...
David Hill 2/22
Santorum's '06
loss not just bad luck
... The last time
Santorum faced his home state's electorate, in 2006, he fell by double
digits. He did so poorly, in fact, that there's little doubt he'd fail
again in Pennsylvania, even if he were placed at the top of our Republican
ticket. ...
Gallup 2/21
Santorum Expands
Lead, Romney Gets Electability Vote
Rick Santorum now
holds a 10-percentage-point lead in Gallup's Daily tracking of national
Republicans registered voters' preferences for the 2012 GOP nomination.
...
Gallup 2/20
Americans Still
Rate Iran Top U.S. Enemy
Americans most
frequently mention Iran when asked to name the country they consider to be
the United States' greatest enemy, and the 32% who do so is up from 25% in
2011. ...
Guardian 2/18
Obama, Facebook
and the power of friendship
Barack Obama's
re-election team are building a vast digital data operation that for the
first time combines a unified database on millions of Americans with the
power of Facebook to target individual voters to a degree never achieved
before. ...
John Sides, George Washington U.
2/17
Obama, Birth
Control, and Catholic Voters
Did the the
contraception contretemps hurt Obama's standing among Catholic voters?
Despite endless speculation about this, evidence has been in short supply.
...
William Galston
2/17
The Obama Campaign
Has Momentum, But Can It Keep It?
It's all but
official: Survey after survey indicates that President Obama’s reelection
prospects have brightened considerably in the past three months. ...
Gallup 2/17
Reagan, Clinton
Judged Best of Recent Presidents
Americans believe
history will judge Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton as the best among recent
U.S. presidents, with at least 6 in 10 saying each will go down in history
as an above-average or outstanding president. ...
Democracy Corps / WVWV Action Fund
2/16
New Phase and
Shifting Balance
... This survey
sees a collapse of the Republican brand at almost all levels. Negatives
associated with the Republican Party have not been this high since right
after they lost the country in 2008. ...
Fox News: Dana Blanton
2/15
Swing-state
landscape shifting?
President Obama
leads each Republican contender in swing states. That's according to a Fox
News Swing State Poll that also suggests a significant shift in the
battleground landscape. ...
CBS News 2/14
Obama's ratings
rise as economic outlook improves
Most Americans
still say the economy is in a rut, according to a new CBS News/New York
Times poll, but more and more say the economy is improving. And as the
public grows more optimistic about the economy, the poll shows, President
Obama is getting some credit for it. ...
Pew 2/14
Public Divided
Over Birth Control Insurance Mandate
About six-in-ten
Americans (62%) have heard about the proposed federal rule that would
require employers, including most religiously affiliated institutions, to
cover birth control as part of their health care benefits. Among those
aware of the issue, opinion is closely divided over whether these
institutions should be given an exemption to the rule if they object to
the use of contraceptives. ...
Gallup 2/14
Catholics'
Approval of Obama Little Changed
Catholics' views
of President Obama were little changed during a week in which the
administration battled publicly with Catholic leaders over whether
church-affiliated employers should have to pay for contraception as part
of their employees' health plans. ...
National Journal
2/14
Americans Split on
Concern For Very Poor
As the debate
over the federal budget resumes, a new United Technologies/National
Journal Congressional Connection Poll shows that most Americans are
concerned about growing dependency on federal entitlements, but still
resist major spending cuts in programs benefiting the poor and the
elderly. ...
Pew 2/13
Santorum Catches
Romney in GOP Race
Rick Santorum’s
support among Tea Party Republicans and white evangelicals is surging, and
he now has pulled into a virtual tie with Mitt Romney in the race for the
Republican presidential nomination. ...
New York Times
2/12
Most Expect to
Give More Than They Receive
A majority of
Americans say they expect to pay more in federal taxes over their lifetime
than they will ever receive in benefits from the government, according to
a recent New York Times poll. ...
ABC News 2/9
Split Opinion on
Tax Proposals
Americans broadly support increasing taxes on businesses that move jobs
overseas and on the very wealthy. But two other tax proposals -- cutting
taxes for companies that bring overseas jobs here, and boosting the
capital gains tax -- are much less popular. ...
Alan I. Abramowitz
2/9
The Third Party
Illusion
... The vast
majority of American voters today, in fact well over 90%, identify with or
lean toward one of the two major parties. And the vast majority of those
identifiers and leaners strongly prefer their own party’s candidates and
policies to those of the opposing party. ...
Gallup 2/9
Obama's Economic
Approval Rating Improves
By 59% to 38%, more Americans continue to disapprove than approve of
President Barack Obama's handling of the economy. However, his approval
rating on the economy is up from 30% in November after descending to a
term-low 26% in August. ...
Pew 2/9
Young,
Underemployed and Optimistic
... A plurality
of the public (41%) believes young adults, rather than middle-aged or
older adults, are having the toughest time in today's economy. An analysis
of government economic data suggests that this perception is correct. ...
Gallup 2/7
Congress' Job
Approval at New Low of 10%
A record-low 10% of Americans approve of the job Congress is doing, down
from 13% in January and the previous low of 11%, recorded in December
2011. ...
Public Religion Research Institute
2/7
Employer Health
Care Plans and Contraception Coverage
A majority (55%)
of Americans agree that "employers should be required to provide their
employees with health care plans that cover contraception and birth
control at no cost." ... Roughly 6-in-10 Catholics (58%) believe that
employers should be required to provide their employees with health care
plans that cover contraception. ...
Charlie Cook 2/7
Up in the Air
Last Friday's drop in the unemployment rate from 8.5 to 8.3 percent marked
the fifth consecutive month of declines in the jobless rate. This decline
adds to a growing body of evidence that there are some subtle but
important shifting sands in the 2012 election. ...
Third Way (pdf)
2/7
2012 Showdown:
Battle for the Obama Independents
Many analysts
lump all Independents together, when in fact there are currently two very
distinct groups of Independent voters: those who voted for Barack Obama in
2008 ("Obama Independents") and those who voted for John McCain ("McCain
Independents"). The Obama Independents are the real heart of the contest
for 2012. ...
Gallup: Frank Newport
2/6
Where the U.S.
Election Stands Now
U.S. President
Barack Obama beats several of his possible Republican opponents in recent
Gallup general election trial heats, but he is tied with GOP front-runner
Mitt Romney, suggesting he could be facing a competitive race this fall.
...
ABC News: Gary Langer
2/6
Today's Poll: A
Word on the Buzz
Our latest ABC
News/Washington Post poll is getting some buzz today, including some
criticisms of the questionnaire design. On one hand it’s hardly the newest
game in town for aggrieved parties to try to dismiss survey results they
don’t like. On the other, fair-minded discussion always is welcome. ...
Ronald Brownstein
2/6
Is Obama's
Coalition Re-Emerging?
One striking
aspect of the new ABC News/Washington Post poll released Monday is how
closely the internal results of its head-to-head match-up between
President Obama and Mitt Romney track Obama's performance against John
McCain in 2008. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
2/6
Economic Gains,
Questions on Romney Boost Obama
Mitt Romney has solidified his position for the Republican nomination but
lost ground in the main event, with improved economic indicators and
questions about Romney's wealth and taxes lifting Barack Obama to a
head-to-head advantage for the first time this cycle. ...
Washington Post
2/6
Obama holds edge
over Romney
Boosted by
improved public confidence in his economic stewardship, President Obama
for the first time holds a clear edge over Republican presidential
candidate Mitt Romney in a hypothetical general-election matchup,
according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
2/5
Nevada's a Romney
Romp
Mitt Romney
romped in the Nevada caucuses with a leg up from his Mormon
co-religionists, but also with winning margins across other faith groups
-- evangelicals included -- and a knockout even among the very
conservative voters with whom he's struggled elsewhere. ...
CBS News: Sarah Dutton
2/5
How Mitt Romney
won the Nevada caucuses
... CBS News
entrance polls show Romney won among most demographic groups. He received
strong support from Mormon voters in Nevada - a group he also won
overwhelmingly in the 2008 Nevada caucuses. ...
Tim Hibbitts
2/3
Vengeful
Billionaire Sinks President's Re-election Bid!
... "When the
facts collide with the legend, print the legend." So it is with the 1992
presidential election, as even today many reporters state as fact that
independent Ross Perot cost George H. W. Bush the presidency. ...
Samuel J. Best, U. of Conn.
2/3
8 lessons from the
Republican presidential race so far
The first month
of the Republican nomination process is complete and it has produced one
of the most exciting races in a generation. Three different candidates
have won the first four contests. ... Examining the CBS News entrance/exit
polls of voters in these states offers a number of insights into the GOP
nomination battle as well as the upcoming presidential race. ...
Gallup: Jeffrey M. Jones
2/3
More States Move
to GOP in 2011
Democrats have
lost their solid political party affiliation advantage in 18 states since
2008, while Republicans have gained a solid advantage in 6 states. ...
Charlie Cook 2/2
Improving Fortunes
... Pollsters and
strategists in both parties are closely watching some very preliminary and
uncertain signs that suggest the dynamics today will be somewhat different
than those that drove the 2010 midterm elections and the political debate
during much of 2011. ...
Las Vegas Review-Journal
2/2
Nevada: Romney
poised to roll, poll shows
A new poll shows
Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney headed for a blowout victory
Saturday in Nevada's GOP caucuses. ...
New York Times David Leonhardt
2/1
Obama's Approval
Ratings Suggest a Nail-Biter
... Mr. Obama now
hovers in the gray area between likely victory and likely defeat, with the
country divided nearly 50-50 on his performance. ...
Mark Mellman 2/1
The 50 percent
problem
What do job
approval ratings portend about a president’s reelection prospects? Quite a
lot, according to most analysts, whose mantra is that an incumbent
president needs 50 percent approval to be reelected. ...
ABC News 2/1
Romney Basks in
Florida, Strong Conservatives Aside
Mitt Romney
snapped back from South Carolina with a Florida primary victory that took
advantage of a more diverse electorate, re-established his image of
electability and economic leadership, and demonstrated his organizational
firepower in attracting -- and retaining -- early-deciding voters. ...
Ronald Brownstein
2/1
How Romney Came
Back in Florida
Mitt Romney's
blowout win in Florida Tuesday provided almost a mirror image of the
results just 10 days ago in South Carolina, a head-spinning reversal that
underscored the continuing turbulence of the most volatile Republican
presidential race since 1940. ...
National Journal
1/31
Voters Favor Obama
Ideas But Keystone, Too
According to a
new poll, Americans overwhelmingly support the key ideas President Obama
laid out in his State of the Union address last week but also favor the
GOP approach to taxes and regulation and a controversial oil pipeline from
Canada to the U.S. -- all while doubting the ability of the president and
Congress to come to agreement. ...
Gallup: Jeffrey M. Jones
1/31
Obama Approval
Above 50% in 10 States and DC in 2011
In 10 states plus
the District of Columbia, a majority of residents approved of the job
Barack Obama was doing as president last year, according to aggregated
data from 2011. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
1/31
Gingrich and
Romney In the Private Sector
Neither Mitt Romney's nor Newt Gingrich's private sector experience is
playing particularly well with the American public, although Gingrich's
consulting work draws far more criticism than Romney's background buying
and restructuring companies. ...
Columbia Journalism Review: Brian E. Crowley
1/31
Romney's Hispanic
Support: About That Florida Poll
... In Caputo's
and Smith's stories, there is a clear example of what is wrong with
newspaper polls and the coverage thereof. Both reporters wrote that their
poll showed that Romney has a 24-point lead over Gingrich among Hispanic
voters -- 52 to 28 percent. But readers were not told important details
about these numbers. ...
Gallup 1/30
Romney Seen as
More Presidential, Sincere Than Gingrich
Mitt Romney leads
Newt Gingrich, 59% to 39%, in U.S. registered voters' perceptions that
each "has the personality and leadership qualities a president should
have." ...
William Galston
1/30
Romney a Stronger
Candidate Than Democrats Think
... The conventional wisdom is that the Republican nominating contest has
already damaged Romney severely. ... But it's hard to find much evidence
of that trend in Florida, a state whose voters have much more information
about Romney, negative as well as positive, than they did two weeks ago,
and far more than do voters nationally. ...
USA Today 1/29
Swing States poll:
Romney and Obama tied; Gingrich trails
Republican
presidential hopeful Mitt Romney essentially ties Barack Obama in the
nation's key battlegrounds, a USA TODAY/Gallup Swing States survey finds,
while rival Newt Gingrich now trails the president by a decisive 14
percentage points. ...
Gallup 1/27
Obama Ratings
Historically Polarized
The historically
high gap between partisans' job approval ratings of Barack Obama continued
during Obama's third year in office, with an average of 80% of Democrats
and 12% of Republicans approving of the job he was doing. ...
Andrew Kohut
1/27
Don't Mind the Gap
... What's
different these days is that a despondent public, struggling with
difficult times and an uncertain future, is upset over a perceived lack of
fairness in public policy. ...
NBC News
1/26
Gingrich leads
Romney, but badly trails Obama
Newt Gingrich
leads Mitt Romney among Republicans, but he is the weakest of the
Republican candidates tested against President Obama, according to an NBC
News-Wall Street Journal poll released Thursday evening. ...
Kaiser Family Foundation (pdf)
1/26
Kaiser Health
Tracking Poll
Earlier this
month, parties challenging certain aspects of the 2010 health reform law
... filed their opening briefs with the Supreme Court. As the Court
prepares to hear arguments in the case in March, most of the public
believes the Justices' own ideological views will play at least some role
in their decision. ...
Resurgent Republic
1/26
Obama
Underperforms Among Hispanic Voters In Florida
... President Obama continues to underperform among Florida Hispanic
voters and has done little to bolster his standing among this critical
swing state demographic since our September survey last year. ...
Gallup 1/26
Post-State of the
Union Analysis
Gallup data reveal how Americans' views line up with 16 specific issues
President Obama raised in his 2012 State of the Union address. ...
New York Times: Marjorie Connelly
1/26
Consumer Confusion
on Where Apple Devices Are Made
The outsourcing
of manufacturing jobs remains a major sore point for most Americans. But
owners of some of the nation's most popular electronics -- including
iPhones and iPads -- are less concerned than other Americans about where
their purchases are made, according to a nationwide survey conducted by
The New York Times. ...
Hollywood Reporter
1/25
Time Warner Opens
Medialab at New York Headquarters
Time Warner will
on Wednesday formally unveil a newly established Medialab at its midtown
Manhattan headquarters designed to provide cutting-edge research for its
media and entertainment operations in the digital age. ...
Democracy Corps
1/25
President Obama
Scores With Middle Class Message
Dial testing and
follow-up focus groups with 50 swing voters in Denver, Colorado, show that
President Obama's populist defense of the middle class and their
priorities in his State of the Union scored with voters. The President
generated strong responses on energy, education and foreign policy, but
most important, he made impressive gains on a range of economic measures.
...
ABC News 1/25
Obama Leads by
Wide Margins Among Latinos
Only nine months
from Election Day, Latino voters -- the nation's fastest-growing voting
bloc -- favor President Obama over all the Republican candidates by a wide
margin, according to a new poll conducted by Latino Decisions for
Univision News and ABC News, a welcome boost for a White House facing a
difficult reelection fight. ...
National Journal
1/25
Americans Hold
Nuanced Views on Romney, Payroll Cut
A plurality of
Americans surveyed favor paying for an extension of the payroll-tax cut
with a combination of spending cuts and higher taxes on the wealthy, the
plan favored by Democrats, according to the latest United
Technologies/National Journal Congressional Connection Poll. ...
Gallup 1/25
Financial Worries
Rival Those of 1992
Americans' worries about maintaining their standard of living (51%), or
being able to pay medical bills (43%) or losing their job (34%) in the
next 12 months are among the highest Gallup has measured in the past 20
years, on par with the levels seen in 1991 and 1992. ...
Mark Mellman 1/25
Mean and extreme
... The
"we-hate-moderates" positioning sells well in Republican primaries, but in
2010, moderates, together with liberals, made up 58 percent of the
November electorate, and in the last presidential year, that segment
comprised 66 percent of the voters. ...
CBS News 1/24
Most Americans
agree with 'Buffett rule' concept
The government
taxes income earned through investments at a lower tax rate income earned
from working, but half of Americans think that should change, according to
a new CBS News/New York Times poll. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
1/24
Sharp Swings in
Political Popularity as Wild Ride Continues
Unfavorable views
of Mitt Romney have soared, doubts about Newt Gingrich remain widespread
and Barack Obama has advanced to his highest personal popularity in more
than a year -- all in advance of the State of the Union address in which
Obama makes his case for a second term. ...
Gallup 1/24
U.S. Economic
Confidence Best Since May
U.S. economic
confidence is at -25 in the week ending Jan. 22, improved from -29 the
prior week and the best since the week ending May 22, 2011. ...
Michael Tesler, Brown University
1/23
Racial Attitudes a
Predictor of Obama Vote Preference
Several recent
studies by political scientists show racial and ethnocentric attitudes
were not only strongly related to 2008 voting behavior, but that these
attitudes had a much larger influence on that year's presidential race
than they had on the all-white presidential contests of the past. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
1/23
The State of the
Union -- In the Public's Eyes
Where does public
opinion stand on the eve of President Obama's third State of the Union
address? Here's the tale of the tape. ...
Pew 1/23
Public Priorities:
Deficit Rising, Terrorism Slipping
As the 2012 State of the Union approaches, the public continues to give
the highest priority to economic issues. Fully 86% say that strengthening
the economy should be a top priority for the president and Congress this
year, and 82% rate improving the job situation as a top priority. ...
Gallup: Lydia Saad
1/23
U.S. Economy Most
Toxic of 24 Issues
As President
Barack Obama prepares his annual address to Congress, Americans are
broadly dissatisfied with the state of the nation in several specific
issue areas, with satisfaction down sharply in some cases since January
2008. ...
Washington Post
1/23
Survey paints
portrait of black women in America
In a new nationwide survey conducted by The Washington Post and the Kaiser
Family Foundation, a complex portrait emerges of black women who feel
confident but vulnerable, who have high self-esteem and see physical
beauty as important, who find career success more vital to them than
marriage. ...
Ronald Brownstein
1/22
Primary Contest
Could Divide GOP Along Clear, Sharp Lines
In South Carolina it
appears the two tribes of the Republican Party have settled on their
champions for a contest that could divide the party along clear, sharp
lines of class, ideology and religious devotion. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
1/21
Newt Gingrich's
Turn to Shine
A smashing result
among voters who focused on the pre-primary debates lifted Newt Gingrich
to victory in South Carolina, breathing new life into his candidacy -- and
dealing a stern blow to Mitt Romney, who struggled especially with the
state's evangelical and strongly conservative voters. ...
Samuel J. Best, U. of Connecticut
1/21
How Newt Gingrich
won the South Carolina primary
... More than a
third of voters - 34 percent - in the South Carolina Republican primary
strongly support the Tea Party movement. They overwhelmingly gravitated
toward Newt Gingrich, backing him by more than a two-to-one margin over
Mitt Romney, 47 percent to 21 percent. ...
John Perry, University of California, Riverside
1/21
Needed: More
Political Dimensions
One dimension --
left to right -- doesn't suffice to deal with today's political reality.
... We seem to need at least three dimensions. ...
Gallup: Jeffrey M. Jones
1/20
Obama Averages 44%
Approval in 3rd Year
President Barack
Obama averaged 44% job approval for his third full year in office, which
ended Jan. 19. His third-year average is down slightly from his
second-year average of 47% and much lower than his first-year average of
57%. ...
Charlie Cook 1/20
Congress's
approval ratings can't get much worse
... With the
exception of the immediate aftermath of extraordinary events like 9/11,
the public routinely holds Congress in, as they say, "minimum high
regard." But now, the new norm is record lows. ...
Pew 1/19
Obama: Weak Job
Ratings, But Positive Personal Image
Barack Obama
begins his fourth year in office facing a struggling economy, an unhappy
public, and a lower job approval rating than most of his recent
predecessors at a comparable point in their presidencies. ...
Andrew Gelman, Columbia University
1/19
Governor Romney,
Meet Governor Dukakis
... I wouldn't be
surprised if, once he has locked up the Republican nomination, Romney
takes a big lead in a head-to-head matchup with Obama. ...
New York Times
1/19
Poll Sees Shift in
Independent Vote, a Hurdle for Obama
President Obama
opens his re-election bid facing significant obstacles among independent
voters, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News poll, with the
critical piece of the electorate that cemented his victory four years ago
open to denying him a second term. ...
Washington Post
1/18
Electorate is
sharply split over Obama
As President
Obama prepares to give his third State of the Union address next week, he
faces a dispirited and polarized electorate that is sharply divided over
his record, worried about the pace of the economic recovery and deeply
pessimistic about the country's trajectory. ...
Gallup: Jeffrey M. Jones
1/18
Romney, Santorum
Tie for Lead in GOP Positive Intensity
Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum currently generate the strongest positive
reactions among Republicans and Republican-leaning independents
nationwide, with Positive Intensity Scores of +12, and lead the other
contenders by a significant margin. ...
Larry J. Sabato
1/17
What the Polls
Can't Tell Us: Anything Can Change
At the start of
each presidential election, we think we have a good sense of what will
happen. We know the incumbent, the candidates, the conditions and the
polls. But then, in most years, the roller-coaster reality of politics
makes a jumble of many of our assumptions. ...
Pew 1/17
Impact of Super
PACs
... Fully 65% of
those who are aware of the new rules on independent expenditures say they
are having a negative effect on the 2012 presidential campaign. ...
Washington Post: Dan Balz and Jon Cohen
1/17
Most in poll think
Romney will clinch GOP nomination
Mitt Romney holds
a strong lead nationally in the race for the Republican presidential
nomination, with a 2 to 1 advantage over his closest competitors,
according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
1/16
Congress Hits a
New Low in Approval
Hammered by
bipartisan discontent with its partisan rancor, the U.S. Congress
reconvenes Tuesday with its lowest approval rating on record in polls
dating back nearly 40 years -- ideal fodder not just for late-night
comedians, but also for President Obama in the election year ahead. ...
Gallup: Frank Newport
1/16
Romney Has
23-Point GOP Lead Nationally
Mitt Romney has
climbed to a commanding 23-point lead over his nearest competitor among
Republican registered voters nationally, based on interviewing conducted
Jan. 11-15. ...
Gallup: Lydia Saad
1/16
Obama Faces
Challenging Re-Election Climate
The U.S.
political and economic environment at the start of 2012 is a challenging
one for President Barack Obama as he seeks re-election. However, Gallup
trends suggest that it is too soon to make any firm predictions about the
outcome. ...
Dan Hopkins, Georgetown University
1/13
A magical ride for
polls
... [T]here is
something about contemporary polls that is impressive and unexpected, if
not a touch magical: the fact that overall, they remain accurate in
forecasting general election outcomes. ...
Democracy Corps
1/13
Primary contest,
pre-Christmas showdown put GOP at risk
This first Democracy Corps national survey of the New Year shows
Republicans at risk at every level. ...
Gallup 1/13
Slightly More Want
Obama to Set Course Than GOP
Americans say
they want Barack Obama (46%) rather than the Republicans in Congress (42%)
to have more influence over the direction the nation takes in the next
year. ...
Pew 1/12
Many Voters
Unaware of Basic Facts about GOP Candidates
Many voters do
not know basic facts about the Republican candidates running for president
or the early primary calendar. While a sizable majority (69%) knows that
Newt Gingrich served as speaker of the House, only about half (53%)
identify Massachusetts as the state where Mitt Romney served as governor.
...
Gallup 1/12
Conservatives
Remain the Largest Ideological Group
Political
ideology in the U.S. held steady in 2011, with 40% of Americans continuing
to describe their views as conservative, 35% as moderate, and 21% as
liberal. ...
Pew 1/12
Certain in Their
Beliefs, Uncertain of Their Place in Society
... Many Mormons feel they are misunderstood, discriminated against and
not accepted by other Americans as part of mainstream society. Yet, at the
same time, a majority of Mormons think that acceptance of Mormonism is
rising. ...
Matthew Dickinson, Middlebury College
1/12
Why Mitt Romney Is
A Weak Candidate
... Romney is
ahead not because he is a strong candidate. It is because his opponents
and their supporters face a classic collective action problem: each would
prefer any of the other non-Mitts as the nominee, but none are willing to
sacrifice their own candidacy to make it happen. ...
Pew 1/11
Rising Share of
Americans See Conflict Between Rich, Poor
... Virtually all
major demographic groups now perceive significantly more class conflict
than two years ago. ...
Gallup
1/11
National
Satisfaction Up Slightly at Start of 2012, to 18%
Eighteen percent of Americans are satisfied with the way things are going
in the United States today, a slight improvement from the latter half of
2011, when satisfaction levels ranged from 11% to 16%. ...
David R. Jones, Baruch College
1/11
What the N.H. Exit
Polls Say about South Carolina
With the primary
season moving south in the coming weeks, what do the New Hampshire exit
polls suggest about each candidate’s potential strengths and weaknesses in
South Carolina? ...
CNN 1/11
Romney dominates
more moderate New Hampshire
... Mitt Romney cruised to victory in New Hampshire on Tuesday night,
riding a wave of support from mainstream Yankee Republicans -- fiscally
conservative, socially moderate and politically pragmatic. The former
Massachusetts governor swept nearly every group of voters, whether
categorized by income, ideology or religion. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
1/11
New Hampshire Is
Romney's; What Says S.C.?
Perceptions of electability, a fractured opposition and a strong showing
in his weaker groups lifted Mitt Romney to victory in the New Hampshire
Republican primary -- but without settling how he may play in some of the
more conservative climes ahead. ...
Washington Post
1/11
How Romney won the
New Hampshire primary
Romney swept to a big win in New Hampshire, with significant strength
among the Republican and conservative base, and a big advantage as the
most electable GOP candidate. ...
Reuters 1/10
Romney leads
Republicans, narrows gap with Obama
U.S. presidential hopeful Mitt Romney has sailed farther ahead of rival
Republican candidates nationally and narrowed President Barack Obama's
lead in the White House race, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll. ...Gallup 1/10
Majority of
Conservatives See Romney as 'Acceptable'
Mitt Romney is
the now the only candidate that a majority of conservative and
moderate/liberal Republicans nationwide see as an "acceptable" GOP nominee
for president. ...
CBS News 1/9
58% of Republicans
want more presidential choices
The nominating process may officially be underway, but Republicans have
yet to enthusiastically embrace a potential nominee for president - and
despite the late date, most would like to see other candidates enter the
race, according to a new CBS News poll. ...
Pew 1/9
GOP Voters Still
Unenthused About Presidential Field
On the eve of the
New Hampshire primary, Republican voters continue to express mixed views
of the party's presidential field. ...
Gallup 1/9
Record-High 40% of
Americans Identify as Independents
The percentage of Americans identifying as political independents
increased in 2011, as is common in a non-election year, although the 40%
who did so is the highest Gallup has measured, by one percentage point.
...
National Journal
1/7
What We've Learned
More than three years into the deepest economic downturn since the
Depression, Americans are resilient, wary, and divided. That's a central
message from the 11 Allstate/National Journal Heartland Monitor polls
conducted each quarter since April 2009. ...
John Avlon 1/7
New Hampshire --
all about the independents
New Hampshire is
all about the independents. And that's why it's the best test of general
election electability. While Iowa's caucuses are disproportionately
dominated by social conservatives, in New Hampshire's open primary,
independents can vote -- and they make up more than 40% of the local
electorate. ...
Ronald Brownstein
1/6
S.C. Poll Shows
Narrowing Window for Romney Foes
Mitt Romney's strong showing in Friday's CNN/Time/ORC South Carolina poll
shows how narrow a window his opponents may have to derail him. The poll
offers a powerful reminder of how much each caucus and primary resets the
dynamic in the states that follow-the same way each shot in billiards
reshapes the table. ...
Ronald Brownstein
1/4
Why Romney and
Santorum Fought to a Draw in Iowa
Ron Paul expanded
the electorate. Mitt Romney slightly advanced from his key beachheads in
2008. Evangelical Christians splintered but gave Rick Santorum the largest
slice of their votes. Those dynamics, captured in the Edison Research
National Election Pool entrance poll at the Iowa caucuses, explained the
tight three-way race among the top contenders in Iowa. ...
CBS News: Samuel J. Best
1/4
Iowa caucus
results: Why the race was so close
In the past six
months, Iowa Republicans wavered repeatedly in their presidential
preferences, sending six different candidates to the top of the
pre-election polls in the Hawkeye state. Tuesday night seemingly failed to
bring any greater clarity to their preferences. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
1/4
Iowa Mash-up
Settles Nothing
... Rick Santorum
took advantage of Romney’s weak spots, winning evangelical and very
conservative voters, and those focused on moral character, as well as
late-deciders. One question is how well Santorum plays in states with
fewer evangelicals participating; they accounted for a broad 58 percent in
Iowa. Another is how well he withstands the new found scrutiny his showing
is sure to bring. ...
CNN
1/4
Iowa didn't change
many N.H. minds
The Iowa caucus
results appear to have changed few minds in New Hampshire, at least among
likely GOP primary voters who watched the caucus results tonight,
according to a new survey. But a CNN/ORC International Poll also indicates
that former Sen. Rick Santorum gained a small amount of support among Iowa
caucus-watchers, moving from 5% to 10% among that group. ...
New York Times
1/4
Electability and
Principles Split Iowa Votes
Republicans
appeared sharply divided between those whose top priority is defeating
President Obama and those seeking someone representing traditional
conservative principles and religious values, according to a poll of
voters entering the Iowa Republican caucuses on Tuesday. ...
Washington Post: Jon Cohen
1/3
Ahead of the
Numbers: The Iowa 'Entrance Poll'
The Tuesday
evening kick-off for the Republican nomination contest brings not only the
first real votes of 2012, but also the first analyses (and bogus analyses)
of exit polls. ...
Gallup 1/2
GOP 2012 Battle to
Date Most Akin to Dems in 2003
The lead in the
Republican nomination race has thus far changed seven times since May in
Gallup polling. Mitt Romney, Rick Perry, Herman Cain, and Newt Gingrich
each held the top spot at various points in 2011, with Romney's standing
rising and falling as other candidates surged and faded. ...
Washington Post: Peyton M. Craighill
1/1
Rating 2012:
Personally, for the country and for the world
A New Year's note
from the public: 2012 looks bright for me, not so hot for the rest of the
country and worse still for the world in general. ...
Matthew Dickinson, Middlebury College
1/1
Iowa Poll: The Two
Most Important Things to Know
Here are two most important aspects of the Des Moines Register's poll to
ponder with your morning coffee and aspirin: the composition of the
respondent pool and when Santorum's surge began. ...
J. Ann Selzer
1/1
Varying scenarios,
varying results
At some point, we
have to stop interviewing for our Iowa Poll and publish our findings. That
is just a fact of life. But what if there is a late-breaking surge of
evangelicals who decide to caucus at the last moment? ...
Des Moines Register
1/1/12
Romney leads Paul
in new Iowa Poll; Santorum surges
The Des Moines
Register's latest Iowa Poll shows a surprise three-way match-up in
contention to win the Iowa Republican caucuses: Mitt Romney, Ron Paul and
Rick Santorum. ...
Tad Devine 12/31/11
Three ads that can
seal the deal for Romney
... If Romney
runs the right ads -- which he has the resources to do -- he can seal the
nomination, even if a surge by Ron Paul or Rick Santorum spoils his day in
Iowa. ...
Yahoo! News: David Chalian
12/31
Ann Selzer, queen
of the Iowa caucuses
... Polling the
likely Iowa caucusgoing electorate is like finding the proverbial needle
in the haystack, but Selzer clearly welcomes the challenge. ...
J. Ann Selzer
Polling the Iowa
Caucuses
... The
long-standing axiom of caucus politics in Iowa is to organize, organize,
organize and then get hot at the end. Of the two elements, getting hot is
far more important. ... [From The Polling Report archives.]
NBC News 12/30
Three storylines
from our Iowa poll
... With just
four days left until the Jan. 3 caucuses, Mitt Romney and Ron Paul are
running neck and neck, with Romney at 23% among likely caucus-goers and
Paul at 21%. ... But the poll contains three big storylines beyond the
horserace numbers. ...
Gallup 12/29
Americans See
Views of GOP Candidates Closer to Own
Americans perceive Jon Huntsman, Mitt Romney, and Ron Paul as closest to
themselves ideologically, and Michele Bachmann and Barack Obama as
furthest away. ...
Ronald Brownstein
12/28
Divide and Conquer
The latest CNN/Time/ORC surveys released this afternoon for New Hampshire,
and especially Iowa, show that on the eve of the first actual voting, the
GOP race is reverting to the pattern that has defined it for most of this
year: the party's more pragmatic and secular circles are consolidating
around Mitt Romney more than the GOP's more ideological and evangelical
wings are consolidating around any single alternative to him. ...
Pew 12/28
Most Latinos
Oppose Obama's Deportation Policy
By a ratio of
more than two-to-one (59% versus 27%), Latinos disapprove of the way the
Obama administration is handling deportations of unauthorized immigrants,
according to a new national survey of Latino adults by the Pew Hispanic
Center. ...
David P. Redlawsk & Caroline J. Tolbert
12/27
What Do Iowans
Want in a Candidate?
Let's start here:
the premise that the economy is less important in Iowa because things
aren't as bad is simply wrong. ...
Theda Skocpol & Vanessa Williamson
12/26
Whose Tea Party Is
It?
Newt Gingrich's
brief turn as presidential front-runner was only the latest paroxysm of a
tumultuous Republican primary season. What's going on? Tensions within the
Tea Party help explain the volatility of the Republican primary campaign,
as candidates seek to appeal to competing elements of the Tea Party with
varying success. ...
Lawrence Jacobs
12/23
What Do Political
Polls Really Accomplish?
... Although polls are (mistakenly) equated with tailoring policy to
majority opinion, private surveys are primarily geared today to
manipulating public opinion – not responding to it. ...
Andrew Gelman
12/22
Do We Hate the
Rich or Don't We?
... A vast majority of Americans -- including half of all self-identified
Republicans -- think there is "too much power in the hands of a few rich
people and large corporations." ... On the other hand, close to 60 percent
of Americans do not see the country as "divided into haves and have-nots."
... What gives? ...
Alan I. Abramowitz
12/22
The Anti-Incumbent
Election Myth
... When they
vote in a House or Senate election, Americans cast their ballots based on
their evaluation of their own representative or senator. As a result, the
reelection rates for House and Senate incumbents are generally quite high,
averaging over 95% for House incumbents and over 80% for Senate incumbents
in recent years. ...
Gallup 12/22
Satisfaction in
2011 Ranks as Second Lowest Since 1979
Throughout 2011, an average of 17% of Americans said they were satisfied
with the way things are going in the United States. That is the
second-lowest annual average in the more than 30-year history of the
question, after the 15% from 2008. ...
Kaiser (pdf) 12/21
Kaiser Health
Tracking Poll
After a bumpy fall, American opinion toward the 2010 health reform law
returned to the nearly even divide now familiar to opinion watchers, a
divide that masks the lasting partisan gap in favorability that has
existed since passage. ...
CBS News 12/20
Most back raising
taxes on millionaires
Six in ten Americans believe Congress should raise taxes on Americans
earning more than $1 million per year, according to a new CBS News poll,
while only 35 percent oppose such an increase. ...
Ronald Brownstein
12/20
The Optimism Gap
... For Obama, the most plausible road to reelection continues to look
like one that accelerates the Democrats' generation-long transformation
from a coalition centered on whites who work with their hands to an
upstairs-downstairs alliance revolving primarily around minorities, young
people, and well-educated whites, especially women.
Pew 12/20
Tax System Seen as
Unfair, in Need of Overhaul
Public dissatisfaction with the tax system has grown over the past decade,
and the focus of the public's frustration is not how much they themselves
pay, but rather the impression that wealthy people are not paying their
fair share. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
12/20
Gingrich, Romney
Go to a Tie
Newt Gingrich has relinquished sole front-runner status almost as quickly
as he gained it, landing at a dead heat with Mitt Romney in the latest ABC
News/Washington Post poll. And as the GOP hopefuls battle it out, ratings
of Barack Obama's prospects have warmed. ...
Washington Post
12/19
Obama's
job-approval rating is highest since March
After a difficult summer and a contentious fall, President Obama's
job-approval ratings are showing signs of improvement -- a crucial
indicator of his reelection chances as he positions himself to seek a
second term. ...
Gallup 12/19
Congress Ends 2011
With Record-Low 11% Approval
A new record-low 11% of Americans approve of the job Congress is doing,
the lowest single rating in Gallup's history of asking this question since
1974. This earns Congress a 17% yearly average for 2011, the lowest annual
congressional approval rating in Gallup history. ...
MSNBC.com 12/18
Gov. Haley
questions poll numbers
Appearing on
"Meet the Press" Sunday, South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley seemed to
question the validity of a South Carolina poll that showed her approval
rating at 35 percent because, she claimed, the poll also showed that
President Obama would win South Carolina, a reliably Republican state over
the past three decades. ...
Ronald Brownstein
12/18
Still Frozen:
Obama's Ratings Are Consistently Low
Attitudes toward
President Obama remain chilly in the latest Allstate/National Journal
Heartland Monitor poll. But the first hint of a spring breeze might be
blowing toward the White House in the form of warming expectations about
the economy's trajectory. ...
William Galston
12/17
Why Obama's New
Populism May Sink His Campaign
President Obama's much-heralded speech in Osawatomie, Kansas, focused on
inequality, which, he argued, is undermining our prosperity, weakening our
democracy, and shrinking our middle class. While there's a serious
data-based argument to be made in favor of that view, recent surveys
suggest that most Americans don't share it. ...
Christian Science Monitor
12/16
A third-party
candidate in 2012?
A third-party
presidential candidate is likely in 2012, introducing considerable
uncertainty into the battle to win control of Congress, Democratic
pollster Stanley Greenberg says. ...
NYT Magazine: The Ethicist
12/16
The Polls Don't
Lie
Having
participated in political polls in the past, I am wondering how I should
respond if asked whether I approve of President Obama's job performance.
...
Pew 12/15
Frustration with
Congress Could Hurt GOP Incumbents
Public discontent with Congress has reached record levels, and the
implications for incumbents in next year's elections could be stark. ...
Kennedy School
12/15
Millennials
predict Obama will lose
A new national
poll of America's 18- to 29- year olds by Harvard's Institute of Politics,
located at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, finds more
Millennials predict President Barack Obama will lose his bid for
re-election (36%) than win (30%). ...
Sasha Issenberg
12/15
'Likely Voters'
Lie
... Campaigns
are, in essence, relying less on voters' honesty and self-awareness to
determine who is a likely voter. ...
Ronald Brownstein
12/15
Where Obama Has
Slipped
There's an ominous trend for President Obama in the latest
Allstate/National Journal Heartland Monitor poll: not only is his overall
approval rating lagging, but he's lost as much (or even more) ground among
groups that favored him in 2008 as among those who resisted him last time.
...
Gallup 12/13
Romney, Gingrich
Have Edge Over Obama in Swing States
Registered voters
in 12 key swing states give a slight edge to the two leading Republican
presidential candidates, Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich, over Barack Obama
as their preference for president in the 2012 election. ...
Ronald Brownstein
12/13
Anger With
Congress At '06, '10 Levels
Across a wide array of measures, Americans are now as dissatisfied with
Congress as they were immediately before the 2006 and 2010 electoral
landslides that ousted the majority party in one or both chambers,
according to a year-end United Technologies/National Journal Congressional
Connection Poll. ...
Pew 12/13
Gingrich Leads,
But GOP Voters Haven't Ruled Out Romney
Newt Gingrich holds a substantial 35% to 21% lead over Mitt Romney among
Republican and Republican-leaning independent voters who say they are very
likely to vote in the GOP primaries or caucuses. But clear majorities say
there is at least a chance they would vote for either Gingrich or Romney
in Republican primaries in their state. ...
Public Policy Institute of California
12/13
California: Most
Favor Governor's Tax Proposal
Most Californians
favor Governor Jerry Brown's proposal to temporarily increase the state
sales tax and the income taxes of high earners, according to a statewide
survey released today by the Public Policy Institute of California. ...
USA Today 12/12
Swing States Poll:
Downbeat Dems, resurgent Republicans
President Obama is moving to energize the Democratic base for his
re-election campaign, but in the case of a dozen battleground states,
he'll have to work harder than four years ago to find it. ...
Bloomberg 12/12
Iowa Focus Group:
Evangelical Voters and Newt Gingrich
... The
discussion offered insight into potential vulnerabilities for Gingrich
among a critical group of voters. In the 2008 Republican caucuses, exit
polls showed 60 percent who attended described themselves as born-again or
evangelicals. ...
Kaiser Family Foundation/NPR (pdf)
12/12
Long-Term
Unemployed Survey
... When it comes to who or what they hold responsible for the country's
economic situation, the long-term un- and underemployed dish out blame to
Wall Street financial institutions, Congress, changes in the global
economy, and (to a somewhat lesser extent) President Obama. ...
Gallup 12/12
64% Rate Honesty,
Ethics of Members of Congress Low
Sixty-four percent of Americans rate the honesty and ethical standards of
members of Congress as "low" or "very low," tying the record "low"/"very
low" rating Gallup has measured for any profession historically. ...
Democracy Corps
12/9
GOP Incumbents Out
of Touch, Increasingly Vulnerable
The latest Democracy Corps survey of the Republican House battleground
shows the incumbents out of touch with their districts, a climate less
favorable to Republicans, weakening support and vulnerability to attack.
...
Gallup 12/9
Record High
Anti-Incumbent Sentiment Toward Congress
About three-quarters of registered voters (76%) say most members of
Congress do not deserve re-election, the highest such percentage Gallup
has measured in its 19-year history of asking this question. ...
Gallup 12/8
Republicans Less
Enthusiastic About Voting in 2012
Republicans' enthusiasm about voting in the election for president next
year has decreased, with 49% of Republicans and independents who lean
Republican now saying they are more enthusiastic than usual about voting,
down from 58% in September. This narrows the gap between them and
Democrats. ...
Barry Sussman
12/7
Why not make a Fox
question standard in all news polls?
... I often feel
Obama is being cheated on his approval ratings, compared to past
presidents. I think his ratings are dragged down by Fox News. ...
CBS News 12/6
Newt Gingrich
strong with Iowa evangelicals, Tea Partiers
Newt
Gingrich's14-point lead over Mitt Romney among likely Iowa Republican
caucus-goers is grounded in large part in support from Tea Party and
evangelical voters, who have a far more positive view of Gingrich than
they do Romney, according to a new CBS News/New York Times poll. ...
Ronald Brownstein
12/6
Newt's Reach
What's the
scariest news for Mitt Romney in the nearly mirror-image polls out today
showing Newt Gingrich rocketing into the lead in Iowa, South Carolina and
nationally? The short answer: the breadth of Gingrich's support. ...
Pew 12/6
Illegal
Immigration: Gaps Between and Within Parties
The public
continues to support tough measures to crack down on illegal immigration,
but also a path to citizenship for those in the country illegally. ...
Northwestern University
12/6
A Rare Survey of
the One Percent
Though little
reliable survey research exists about the nation's wealthiest one percent,
public discourse is rife with claims about their opinions and attitudes.
Now a Northwestern University pilot study sheds light on philanthropic and
other behaviors of the so-called one percent. ...
Washington Post
12/6
Gingrich emerges
as clear front-runner in Iowa
Propelled by his
debate performances and the demise of Herman Cain's candidacy, former
House speaker Newt Gingrich sits atop the Republican presidential field in
Iowa with a clear lead over his closest competitors, according to a new
Washington Post-ABC News poll. ...
Gallup 12/5
Republicans See
Gingrich, Romney as 'Acceptable'
Newt Gingrich (62%) and Mitt Romney (54%) are the only two candidates
Republicans say would be acceptable presidential nominees from their
party, emphasizing the degree to which the GOP race has narrowed down to
these two men at this juncture. ...
Gallup 12/5
'1%' Is More
Republican, but Not More Conservative
Politically, the wealthiest 1% of Americans -- those in households earning
$500,000 or more annually -- are somewhat to the right of the remaining
99%, but more in terms of party identification than self-professed
ideology. ...
Des Moines Register
12/3
Iowa Poll: Newt
Gingrich leads three-candidate race
Former U.S. House
Speaker Newt Gingrich has carved out a clear lead in what's become a
three-candidate race in Iowa, according to The Des Moines Register's new
Iowa Poll. ...
Carl Bialik
12/3
Pollsters Go
Mobile
... Not only have young adults continued to refrain from getting a wired
phone as they aged, but older adults who have had landlines for decades
are joining the bandwagon. This has major implications for pollsters, who
have enough problems getting Americans to talk to them even when they can
reach them by phone. ...
Danny Hayes 12/2
What influences
public views on Iran action?
... Public
opinion in foreign affairs is driven not only by Americans' own general
preferences for force or diplomacy, but also by the arguments made by
political leaders. ...
Gallup 12/2
Obama's Nov.
Approval Weak From Historical Perspective
President Obama's 43% average job approval rating last month ranks as one
of the lowest for an elected president in November of his third year in
office. Only Jimmy Carter had a lower rating, at 40%. ...
Hofstra University (pdf)
12/1
Dark mood in the
suburbs
... A year before the 2012 elections, President Obama is in trouble in the
suburbs, with residents looking for someone else for the White House, even
if they have not settled on just who that might be. ...
Brad Plumer 12/1
Can a hot day
persuade people that global warming is real?
Weather isn't the same thing as climate. Just because it's sunny or chilly
on a given day doesn't tell us all that much about long-term temperature
trends. Even so, plenty of research suggests that local weather does
heavily influence how people think about climate change. ...
Chris Moody 12/1
Advice for GOP
Governors: Always Blame Washington
... How can Republicans do a better job of talking about Occupy Wall
Street? ... [Frank] Luntz offered tips on how Republicans could discuss
the grievances of the Occupiers, and help the governors better handle all
these new questions from constituents about "income inequality" and
"paying your fair share." ...
Pew 12/1
Evidence of Global
Warming
The percentage of Americans who say there is solid evidence of global
warming has increased modestly over the past two years. ...
Kaiser Family Foundation 11/30
The Most Popular
Provision in the ACA?
In our most recent monthly tracking poll, we asked the American people
what elements of the health reform law they like and dislike.
Surprisingly, the runaway favorite was a relatively obscure requirement
that health plans provide consumers with a short, easy to understand
description of their benefits and coverage. ...
Washington Post
11/30
Gingrich, Romney
equally well liked among conservatives
On the basic
question of personal popularity, former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney
and former House speaker Newt Gingrich get roughly equally positive
ratings from conservatives, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News
poll. ...
William Galston
11/30
Any Way You Slice
It, Obama Is In Trouble
... The bottom line is that unless things turn around considerably in the
next eleven months, key parts of Obama's winning 2008 coalition are poised
to deliver both lower margins and smaller shares of the electorate than
they did in 2008. ...
Mark Mellman 11/30
Is Obama toast in
2012?
If Barack Obama is "toast," as one now-infamous headline conjectured, why
is the broadest-based forecast (Pollyvote) projecting the president will
be reelected with 51.1 percent of the vote? ...
Kaiser Family Foundation (pdf)
11/30
Public Opinion on
Health Care Issues
The share of the public with an unfavorable view of the health reform law
declined between October and November, returning more to the split in
opinion running along partisan lines we have seen in the past, but
Americans overall remain somewhat more likely to have an unfavorable than
a favorable view of the law. ...
Pew
11/29
More Now Disagree
with Tea Party
Since the 2010 midterm elections, the Tea Party has not only lost support
nationwide, but also in the congressional districts represented by members
of the House Tea Party Caucus. ...
Andrew Gelman
11/28
Why Are Primaries
Hard To Predict?
... And while presidential elections are predictable, the nominating
contests that choose the candidates are not. ...
The Atlantic 11/25
The Polling Guru
of the Iowa Caucuses
On Jan. 3, the Iowa caucuses will kick off the presidential primaries.
Though plenty of pollsters will be publishing surveys aiming to predict
the outcome, there's just one that most political insiders will trust: the
Iowa Poll, conducted for the Des Moines Register for more than two decades
by J. Ann Selzer. ...
Jonathan Bernstein
11/24
Fifteen Things
Political Junkies Should Be Thankful For
... We're
politics fans, the way some people are sports fans or movie buffs or
weather fans. . . . We all know, too, that this has been a great year for
our chosen sport. So, with one last caveat that, of course, there are
terribly important things at stake and we shouldn't really just sit back
as passive spectators, here's the list of what political junkies should be
thankful for. ...
John Halpin and Ruy Teixeira
11/23
Demographics vs.
Economics in the Presidential Election
... Heading into 2012, the primary strategic questions will be: Will
President Obama withstand continued doubts about the economy and his
approach to recovery? Will the president hold sufficient support among
communities of color, educated whites, Millennials, single women, and
seculars and avoid a catastrophic meltdown among white working-class
voters? ...
National Journal
11/23
Unlike Super
Committee, Public United on Taxing Wealthy
The deficit-reduction super committee collapsed on Monday after its
members failed to negotiate a proposal to reduce the nation's debt, and
this week's United Technologies/National Journal Congressional Connection
Poll showed voters likewise struggling to find common, bipartisan ground
on specific ways to trim the federal deficit. ...
Pew Forum 11/23
Romney's Mormon
Faith Likely a Factor in Primaries
... White evangelical Protestants -- a key element of the GOP electoral
base -- are more inclined than the public as a whole to view Mormonism as
a non-Christian faith. And this view is linked to opinions about Romney.
...
New York Times
11/23
George Gallup Jr.,
of Polling Family, Dies at 81
George Gallup Jr., who led the firm that his father made all but
synonymous with polling and expanded it to become a barometer of
Americans' views on religion as well as their political attitudes, died on
Monday in Princeton, N.J. ...
Ronald Brownstein
11/22
Public Opposes
Sequestration
With the
congressional deficit-reduction super committee collapsing into stalemate,
a solid majority of Americans say that Congress should block the automatic
spending cuts established as a fallback if the panel deadlocked....
Thomas B. Edsall
11/22
The White Party
... With less
than a year to go until the election, poll data suggest that the
Republican "white" strategy has a chance of working. Since 2008, the
Republican Party's biggest gains, and Obama's sharpest declines, have been
among white voters. ...
Gallup 11/21
Support for
'Occupy' Unchanged, More Criticize Approach
Americans have
grown a bit more critical over the past month of the methods used by
Occupy Wall Street protesters; however, their overall view of the movement
and position on its goals have not changed. ...
Chris Cillizza
11/20
Obama's base of
support remains solid heading into 2012
Everyone knows
that President Obama has a problem with his political base heading into
2012. Except that he doesn't. ...
Religion News Service
11/17
Tea Party, Occupy
movements fail to capture hearts
In a war between
the Tea Party and the Occupy Wall Street movement to capture the hearts of
Americans, who wins? According to a new poll, it's a draw. ...
Pew 11/17
Obama Job Approval
Edges Up
With much of the
recent political focus on the ever-changing Republican presidential
nomination race, Barack Obama's job rating has improved modestly over the
past month, although few Americans (35%) approve of the way he is handling
the economy. ...
Robert Blendon, Minah Kang Kim, John Benson
11/17
The Public,
Political Parties, and Stem-Cell Research
... A majority of
Americans express pro–stem-cell-research views in response to all four of
the questions we considered. ... However, on every poll measure for which
data are available, Republicans are less supportive than Democrats. ...
Bloomberg 11/17
Republicans on
Romney
Republican primary voters are torn between their confidence in Mitt
Romney's professional competence and doubts about his political character.
...
Los Angeles Times
11/17
California
Republicans favor Romney
A collapse in support for Texas Gov. Rick Perry has left Mitt Romney as
the clear front-runner in California's Republican presidential primary,
but the former Massachusetts governor is still struggling to rally the
party's most conservative voters. ...
PPIC 11/17
CA: Most Say
Higher Ed System Heading in Wrong Direction
Most Californians say the state's public higher education system is headed
in the wrong direction, according to a statewide survey released today by
the Public Policy Institute of California. ...
Gallup 11/16
Americans Tilt
Toward Favoring Repeal of Healthcare Law
Given a choice,
47% of Americans favor repealing the 2010 Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act, while 42% want it kept in place. Views on this issue
are highly partisan, with Republicans strongly in favor of repeal and the
large majority of Democrats wanting the law kept in place. ...
Bloomberg 11/16
Romney Holds
Commanding Lead in N.H.
Mitt Romney holds
a commanding lead in the New Hampshire Republican presidential primary,
more than double the support for his nearest rival, Texas congressman Ron
Paul. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
11/16
One in Four Women
Reports Workplace Harassment
More than a
political issue, sexual harassment in the workplace is a common experience
among women — and source of worry among men -- in American society. ...
Bloomberg 11/15
Iowa: GOP
Candidates in Four-Way Dead Heat
Herman Cain, Ron Paul, Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich are in a dead heat as
the top choices for Iowans likely to attend the Jan. 3 Republican
presidential caucuses. ...
Asia Foundation
11/15
Survey of the
Afghan People
While nearly half (46%) of Afghans say their country is moving in the
right direction, more respondents than at any time since The Asia
Foundation began polling there in 2004 say Afghanistan is headed in the
wrong direction. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
11/14
Views on Herman
Cain Increasingly Negative
Unfavorable views
of Herman Cain have soared by 17 points in the face of allegations of past
sexual harassment, including a sharp increase in negative views of Cain
within his own party. ...
Ronald Brownstein
11/14
Why Newt is Next
in Line
The latest CNN/ORC national survey showing Newt Gingrich surging to a
statistical tie with Mitt Romney captures not only the continuing
volatility of the GOP's most conservative wing, but cracks in Romney's
standing among the party's more managerial and moderate voters. ...
NBC News 11/13
GOP support for
Perry plummets after debate flub
After his flub at
a Republican debate on Wednesday, Texas Gov. Rick Perry has seen his
support plummet among GOP primary voters, according to a re-contact of
Republicans surveyed in this month’s NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll.
...
CBS News 11/12
Three in four back
Iraq troop pullout
Three in four
Americans support President Obama's decisions to withdraw U.S. troops from
Iraq by the end of the year, a new CBS News survey finds. ...
William Galston (pdf)
11/10
One Year to Go:
Obama's Uphill Battle for Reelection
... If the
election pitting Obama against the strongest potential Republican nominee,
former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, were held tomorrow, the
president would probably lose. But a year is a very long time in American
politics, and three factors could change the odds in Obama's favor. ...
Pew 11/10
Partisan Divide
Over Alternative Energy Widens
Public support
for increased federal funding on research into alternative energy
technology, including solar technology, has decreased substantially since
the early months of the Obama administration, with nearly all the decline
coming from Republicans and Republican-leaning independents. ...
Glen Bolger 11/10
Obama's Destiny:
Demographics vs. Political Environment
Call it the clash of irresistible force of demography/geography versus the
immovable object of the political environment. This is the conundrum
facing political analysts in looking at President Obama's chances in the
presidential election next year. ...
GQRR / Voter Participation Center (pdf)
11/10
Re-Energizing
Unmarried Women
Unmarried women
-- who make up more than a quarter of America's voting-eligible population
-- today feel disengaged and alienated from politics and that threatens
their participation in the next election, according to new focus group
research. ...
Alan Abramowitz
11/10
Why Obama Has a
Good Chance of Winning a Second Term
According to the
Time-for-Change forecasting model, which has correctly predicted the
winner of the popular vote in every presidential election since 1988,
Barack Obama has a good chance of winning a second term in the White House
next November. ...
Brendan Nyhan & Jacob Montgomery
11/10
Forecasting 2012:
How much does ideology matter?
... As you might
expect, scholars have spilled a lot of ink debating the best forecasting
indicators for outcomes ranging from the paths of hurricanes to stock
prices. But rather than have a philosophical debate, we can evaluate this
concern empirically to determine the extent to which specific forecasting
models can successfully predict election outcomes beyond the range of the
data used to estimate them. ...
New York Times
11/10
Hal Bruno,
Director of Election Coverage at ABC, Dies at 83
Hal Bruno, who
helped shape political coverage at ABC News for nearly two decades and was
a frequent analyst on its radio and television broadcasts, died on
Tuesday, Election Day, in Bethesda, Md. ...
Columbia Journalism Review archives
1962
Elmo Roper: A Plea
for the Polls
It may be human
to err, but to err time and time again, in precisely the same way, is
folly of divine dimensions. I am talking about journalists -- when they
tackle the job of predicting elections. ...
Univision 11/9
Obama holds
advantage with Latino voters
Despite loud complaints from Latinos about high unemployment and
unfulfilled campaign promises on immigration, President Obama is well
situated to repeat his strong performance with Latino voters in 2012. ...
Mark Mellman
11/9
Myth of the
Independent Voter
... Despite their initial attempt to adopt the independent label, leaners
vote very much like partisans, giving the vast majority of their support
to the party to which they feel closer. ...
David Hill
11/9
Obama's odds worse
than bad
Democrats
complaining about my judgment that President Obama cannot win reelection
insist there's still a chance. ... As I get it, the Dumbercrat dreamers
hang their hopes on the possibility that Republicans will nominate someone
equally unelectable. ...
Gallup 11/9
Obama Improves on
Foreign Affairs, Not on Fiscal Matters
There is a clear division in the way Americans today perceive the job
President Barack Obama is doing on issues. He gets largely positive
reviews for matters related to foreign affairs, particularly terrorism and
the situation in Iraq. At the same time, majorities disapprove of his
handling of several fiscal-related matters, including the federal budget
deficit, the economy, creating jobs, and healthcare. ...
Washington Post
11/9
Most see deepening
wealth gap
More than six in
10 Americans see a widening gap between the wealthy and the less well-off
in this country, and about as many want the federal government to try to
shrink the divide, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll. ...
Resurgent Republic
11/8
Poll: America
Worse Off Than When Obama Took Office
If President Obama's reelection campaign is a referendum on the incumbent,
as are almost all reelection campaigns, then he remains in deep trouble a
year out from the election, because Americans believe the country is worse
off than when he was inaugurated. ...
Public Religion Research Institute
11/8
2011 American
Values Survey
A strong majority
(60 percent) of Americans say that society would be better off if the
distribution of wealth were more equal. A new major national survey finds
that majorities of every religious group and religiously unaffiliated
Americans agree on this point. ...
ABC News 11/8
Hot and Bothered,
Frustration Remains High
Americans are
steamed, and the economy's providing the heat: The ABC News Frustration
Index stands at 72 on its scale of 0 to 100, one of its highest readings
on record. ...
National Journal
11/8
Public Doubts
Congress Will Aid Economy
With time ticking
down on the first session of the 112th Congress, Americans generally
prefer that Congress act on priorities supported by Democratic members and
the White House, but they are very pessimistic about any of these
initiatives actually being realized before the end of the year, according
to the latest United Technologies/National Journal Congressional
Connection Poll. ...
Gallup 11/8
Cain's Image
Showing Signs of Decline Amid Allegations
Herman Cain's image among Republicans is starting to get worse amid claims
that he sexually harassed several women in the 1990s. ...
theGrio.com 11/8
Black Americans
more optimistic, enthused about 2012
Nearly half of African-Americans remain optimistic, despite a stubbornly
high black unemployment rate. And African-Americans are more enthusiastic
about voting in 2012 than in previous elections. ...
NBC News 11/7
Despite national
pessimism, Obama tops GOP foes
One year out
before President Barack Obama faces voters in his bid for re-election, he
encounters an American public that remains deeply pessimistic about the
state of the country and its economy, according to a new NBC News/Wall
Street Journal poll. ...
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (pdf)
11/7
Americans' Health
Agenda
In a period of
national debate over government spending priorities, a new poll by the
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Harvard School of Public Health
finds that a majority (52%) of Americans prefer a bigger government
providing more services in health, rather than a smaller government
providing fewer services in health (37%). ...
Gallup 11/7
Democrats More
Liberal, Less White Than in 2008
In many respects,
the demographic profile of Democrats nationwide is similar to what it was
in 2008, although Democrats have become somewhat less white and more
liberal than the party that nominated Barack Obama as its presidential
candidate that year. ...
Pew 11/7
The Rising Age Gap
in Economic Well-Being
Households headed
by older adults have made dramatic gains relative to those headed by
younger adults in their economic well-being over the past quarter of a
century, according to a new Pew Research Center analysis of a wide array
of government data. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
11/7
The Question for
Romney: Is Electability Enough?
What's with Mitt
Romney? He's been the constant in an otherwise shifting Republican
landscape, the steady leader or co-leader of the field, the standout
choice in ratings of electability -- yet with weaknesses in core GOP
groups, shortfalls in views of his personal attributes and no apparent
momentum. ...
Washington Post
11/6
A dark mood awaits
Obama and GOP rival
One year out from the 2012 election, President Obama faces the most
difficult reelection environment of any White House incumbent in two
decades, with economic woes at the center of the public's concerns, an
electorate that is deeply pessimistic and sharply polarized, and growing
questions about the president's capacity to lead. ...
Thomas B. Edsall
11/5
The Politics of
Austerity
The economic
collapse of 2008 transformed American politics. In place of shared
abundance, battles at every level of government now focus on picking the
losers who will bear the costs of deficit reduction and austerity. ...
Ronald Brownstein
11/4
Back to Basics
... Most
political strategists agree that given today's cynicism about politicians,
incumbents can now win reelection with an approval rating of less than 50
percent, the historic danger line. The question is how much less. ...
ABC News 11/4
Cain Shows Initial
Resilience in the Face of Controversy
Herman Cain is
showing initial resilience in the face of allegations of sexual
impropriety: More than half of potential Republican voters say the
controversy is not serious, fewer than a quarter say it makes them less
likely to support Cain, and he's running essentially evenly with Mitt
Romney for the Republican presidential nomination. ...
Gallup 11/4
Obama, Romney Tied
Nationally and in Swing States
Registered voters nationally and in 12 key swing states are evenly divided
in their preferences for president in the 2012 election between President
Barack Obama and Republican Mitt Romney. ...
Des Moines Register
11/4
Iowa Poll: Many
think Cain's 9-9-9 plan would help them
Two-thirds of likely Iowa Republican caucusgoers earning less than $50,000
a year believe they personally would be better off or in the same
situation under Herman Cain's 9-9-9 tax plan, The Des Moines Register's
new Iowa Poll shows. ...
USA Today 11/3
Swing States poll:
Obama's path to 2nd term an uphill climb
... While Americans across the nation are downbeat about the economy and
the future, a special USA TODAY/Gallup Poll finds that voters in a dozen
key battleground states for the 2012 election are in an even deeper funk
about their lives, Obama's tenure and the nation's politics. ...
Anti-Defamation League
11/3
Anti-Semitic
Attitudes on Rise in America
A nationwide
survey of the American people released today by the Anti-Defamation League
(ADL) found that anti-Semitic attitudes have risen slightly in America,
demonstrating once again that "anti-Semitic beliefs continue to hold a
vicegrip" on a small but not insubstantial segment of America. ...
Public Religion Research Institute
11/3
Rights and Legal
Protections for Transgender People
Overwhelming majorities of Americans, across the political and religious
spectrum, believe that transgender people should have the same general
rights and legal protections as other people, a new survey finds. ...
Pew 11/3
The Generation Gap
and the 2012 Election
... According to
the exit polls, younger people have voted substantially more Democratic
than other age groups in each election since 2004, while older voters have
cast more ballots for Republican candidates in each election since 2006.
The latest national polls suggest this pattern may well continue in 2012.
...
Democracy Corps (pdf)
11/3
Winning the
Economic Argument
... Democrats are
losing the economic argument because right now voters do not see how
increased spending helps the economy and they fear increased debt will
prevent the economy from growing. ...
Nate Silver 11/3
Is Obama Toast?
Handicapping the 2012 Election
... The
fundamental flaw with much of what passes for political analysis is the
tendency to think small. I blame soccer moms for this. ...
Matthew D. Lassiter
11/3
Who Speaks for the
Silent Majority?
American politics
might appear polarized along a red-blue divide, but the Tea Party and
Occupy Wall Street movements are claiming to do the same thing: defend the
real majority against the powerful elites and vocal interest groups that
control the political system. ...
New York Times
11/2
Pollster Tells of
Suggestive Behavior by Cain
A Republican pollster who is supporting Rick Perry‘s presidential campaign
said this morning he had witnessed sexually suggestive behavior by Herman
Cain toward a woman in the 1990s, but he denied being the source of the
controversy now swirling around the presidential hopeful. ...
National Journal
11/2
On Economy,
Neither Party Has Voter Edge
Americans trust Democrats, by a narrow plurality, to do a better job
coping with the nation’s major problems over the next few years, but
neither party can claim an edge on the economic or fiscal issues likely to
dominate the 2012 debate, the latest United Technologies/National Journal
Congressional Connection Poll shows. ...
Andrew Rosenthal
11/2
Fantasy Politics
Americans must be
the most polled people in the world. Every morning's news brings at least
half a dozen headlines purporting to tell me how the public feels about
their government, or other people's governments, or maybe other people's
pets. ...
ABC News 11/2
Parties Struggle
for Popularity; Interest in an Alternative
Favorable views of the Democratic Party have fallen to their lowest since
the Reagan landslide of 1984. Even fewer Americans see the Republican
Party positively, and Americans by 2-1 say they’d welcome an independent
alternative for president. ...
David Hill 11/2
Obama fails all
viability tests
Last week's column asserting that the president is unelectable has
triggered strong responses. ... But I must stress that I am not so much
making a personal prediction as drawing an informed conclusion based on
all the numbers available. ...
Mark Mellman 11/2
Moderate myths and
facts
... There is little doubt that Dick Morris, channeling Richard Nixon's
well-worn strategy, urged Clinton to move right and that the president
used both pronouncements and policy to tack toward the center as the 1996
campaign unfolded. But did it make a difference? ...
NY1 11/1
New York State
Voters Support Occupy Wall Street
More New York State voters may support Occupy Wall Street than its
grassroots competitor, but they say the Tea Party may have more political
clout. ...
New York Times
11/1
Members of
Congress Worried About Jobs: Their Own
One of the immutable laws of American politics has been that while voters
typically loathe Congress, they tend to tolerate their own lawmaker. Now,
with ratings for the institution in the root cellar and approval of
individual lawmakers heading there, members of Congress and analysts are
beginning to wonder if that law could be repealed next year. ...
National Journal
11/1
Voters Evenly
Split On GOP House, Obama
American voters may be in a firing mood. Underscoring widespread
discontent with all political leaders, registered voters now divide almost
exactly in half on whether President Obama and the Republican majority in
the House of Representatives each deserve another term in power, according
to the latest United Technologies/National Journal Congressional
Connection poll. ...
Andrew Kohut 10/31
Religion at the
Ballot Box: Correlation, but Not Causation
Religion is a
significant factor in the way Americans think about politics. It has a
bearing on political affiliation, political values, policy attitudes and
candidate choice. No fewer than 70 percent of Americans say it is
important to them that a president have strong religious beliefs. ...
Des Moines Register
10/30
Older Iowans less
enthusiastic this time
Older voters say
they're less likely to attend this year's Iowa GOP caucuses, a phenomenon
that, if it holds, could sway turnout, the results of The Des Moines
Register's Iowa Poll show. ...
J. Ann Selzer
10/30
The Register's
pollster asks: What’s up with older Iowans?
Pollsters have a
love/hate relationship with unexpected findings. It causes a flurry of
scenario-testing, historical comparisons, a multiplicity of special
crosstabulations and analyses, and discussions with wiser brains. ...
Los Angeles Times
10/30
Obama's
demographic support may not weather economy
Barack Obama won
the presidency in 2008 by riding two of America's biggest waves of
population change -- greater racial diversity and a rise in college
graduates. With the 2012 election a year away, his reelection chances
depend on those trends overpowering the sour impact of a bad economy. ...
Public Religion Research Institute
10/27
4-in-10 Correctly
Identify Romney's Religion as Mormon
Despite continued media attention to presidential candidate Mitt Romney's
Mormon religion, only about four-in-ten Americans (42 percent) correctly
identify Romney as Mormon, a new survey finds. ...
Charlie Cook 10/27
Underwater
With the 2012
presidential general election just a year away, it's a good time to look
at the national polling and talk about the state of play. ...
Gallup 10/27
Obama Job Approval
Showing Modest Improvement
President Barack Obama's job approval rating has shown modest improvement
in the past week. His latest rating, based on Oct. 24-26 Gallup Daily
tracking, is 43%, and his approval has been at or above 42% in each of the
last seven days. ...
New York Times
10/27
Facing Hardship,
Jobless Still Say They Have Hope
The nation's
lingering unemployment crisis has forced many people without work to dip
into their savings, borrow from relatives and do without necessities
including health insurance, and most people who receive unemployment
benefits said that the money was not enough to meet their basic needs,
according to a New York Times/CBS News poll of jobless Americans. ...
Ronald Brownstein
10/26
Eight Takeaways
From Early-State Primary Polls
The TIME/CNN/ORC
polls released Wednesday afternoon from the first four states on the 2012
Republican calendar paint a consistent picture of the Republican race.
These polls show that the GOP race is being shaped by parallel but
disparate movements. ...
Gallup 10/26
Record-Low 26% in
U.S. Favor Handgun Ban
A record-low 26%
of Americans favor a legal ban on the possession of handguns in the United
States other than by police and other authorized people. ...
New York Times
10/26
New Poll Finds a
Deep Distrust of Government
With Election Day
just over a year away, a deep sense of economic anxiety and doubt about
the future hangs over the nation, according to the latest New York
Times/CBS News poll, with Americans' distrust of government at its highest
level ever. ...
Mark Mellman 10/26
Ignore the Iowa
caucus polls
With the Iowa caucuses a little more than 10 weeks away, polls will
proliferate, so I am officially sounding my quadrennial warning -- beware
of caucus polling. ...
David Hill 10/26
Stick a fork in
Obama -- he's done
On life support. Dead man walking. Down for the count. He's toast. Stick a
fork in him; he's done. Pick your own metaphorical cliché as long as it
acknowledges that this president is a goner. ...
The Colbert Report
10/25
'Corporations Are
People' -- Frank Luntz's Focus Group
Frank Luntz talks
about focus groups on
The Colbert Report. [See also: Frank
Luntz writes about focus groups in
The
Polling Report.]
ABC News 10/25
Flat Tax Outpaces
9-9-9, Notably Among Conservatives
A flat tax like the one proposed today by Republican presidential
candidate Gov. Rick Perry engenders a split decision in public opinion --
if not the warmest reception, a better one than the public's broader
disapproval of his rival Herman Cain's 9-9-9 plan. ...
Charlie Cook 10/25
2012 Narrative
Still Being Written
... During the 2006, 2008, and 2010 cycles, the question was how many
seats would the victorious party pick up, not which one the political
tides would benefit most. But so far for 2012, the weather vanes are just
spinning. ...
Pew 10/24
Public Divided
Over Occupy Wall Street Movement
About four-in-ten
Americans say they support the Occupy Wall Street movement (39%), while
nearly as many (35%) say they oppose the movement launched last month in
New York's financial district. ...
Gallup 10/24
Americans Would
Swap Electoral College for Popular Vote
Nearly 11 years
after the 2000 presidential election brought the idiosyncrasies of the
United States' Electoral College into full view, 62% of Americans say they
would amend the U.S. Constitution to replace that system for electing
presidents with a popular vote system. ...
Gallup 10/21
Obama Job Approval
Avg. Slides to New Low in 11th Qtr.
President Barack Obama's 11th quarter in office was the worst of his
administration, based on his quarterly average job approval ratings. His
41% approval average is down six percentage points from his 10th quarter
in office, and is nearly four points below his previous low of 45% during
his seventh quarter. ...
National Journal
10/19
Occupy D.C.? Most
Back Protests, Surtax
At a time when protests have erupted across the country over a growing
inequality of wealth and Congress is considering measures to impose a
surtax on those earning more than $1 million annually, the public seems to
be in a populist mood -- one that's tempered by skepticism about
Washington's ability to do anything about the grim economy. ...
Gallup 10/19
Americans Blame
Gov't More Than Wall Street for Economy
Americans are more than twice as likely to blame the federal government in
Washington (64%) for the economic problems facing the United States as
they are the financial institutions on Wall Street (30%). ...
David Hill 10/19
The whys and
wherefores of Cain
Herman Cain's improbable run-up to co-front-runner status in the
presidential race might not last, but it's worth pondering its origins and
meaning. ...
Mark S. Mellman
10/19
Romney still
likely to win GOP nod
... As others rise and fall, Romney's numbers just don't budge.
Commentators helpfully remind us that "slow and steady wins the race." But
this isn't a track meet. ...
ABC News 10/18
Cain Matches
Romney in Favorability
With the stage
set for their latest debate, Herman Cain is challenging former
Massachusetts' Gov. Mitt Romney and Texas Gov. Rick Perry in overall
popularity and leading both in strong sentiment among very conservative
Americans -- a key Republican constituency that's backed away from Perry
in the past month. ...
Pew 10/18
Top One-Word
Reaction to Cain Is a Number: 9-9-9
When Americans are asked to describe Republican presidential candidate
Herman Cain in a single word, they most frequently offer a series of
numbers: "9-9-9." ...
Gallup 10/18
Most Uncertain
About 'Occupy Wall Street' Goals
Less than half of Americans express an opinion about either the Occupy
Wall Street movement's goals or the way it has conducted its protests.
Those with an opinion are more likely to approve than disapprove. ...
The Onion 10/18
Man In Coma Enters
GOP Race, Polling Ahead Of Romney
In a dramatic turn for the 2012 presidential race, comatose former
congressman John Clarkson ... threw his hat into the ring for the
Republican nomination today, and early polls show the immobile, bedridden
candidate already ahead of his competition. ...
CNN 10/17
Two-thirds of
Republicans say minds are not made up
One day before a CNN Western Republican presidential debate, a new
national survey indicates that Mitt Romney and Herman Cain are essentially
tied for the lead in the race for the GOP nomination, with Rick Perry
dropping to a distant third. ...
Gallup 10/17
Record-High 50%
Favor Legalizing Marijuana Use
A record-high 50% of Americans now say the use of marijuana should be made
legal, up from 46% last year. ...
Gallup: Frank Newport
10/14
Occupy Wall Street
and the Tea Party
Could the Occupy
Wall Street movement signify a return to enthusiasm on the other side of
the spectrum from what we saw last year? ... Since being anti-business
generally translates into being Democratic in terms of political
orientation, it's possible we could see a return to more proportionate
enthusiasm on the two ends of the political spectrum. ...
FTI Strategic Communications (pdf)
10/14
Allstate/National
Journal Heartland Monitor
... The lesson Americans have taken from the economic downturn of the past
several years and the recent budget battles in Washington is that debt is
undesirable at all levels -- from their personal household budget to the
federal government. ... And, the survey also shows an increase from our
previous surveys in the belief that "government is not the solution to our
economic problems; government is the problem." ...
Time 10/13
Obama Leads
Head-to-Head Match-Ups with Rivals
Despite sweeping pessimism about the nation's fortunes and his own sliding
approval ratings, President Obama leads potential Republican rivals Mitt
Romney and Rick Perry in hypothetical general-election match-ups,
according to a new TIME poll. ...
Washington Post: Scott Clement
10/13
Cain ahead in GOP
race?
A new poll shows
Cain outpacing Romney, but is his lead real? ...
Gallup 10/13
Support for Death
Penalty Falls to 39-Year Low
Sixty-one percent of Americans approve of using the death penalty for
persons convicted of murder, down from 64% last year. This is the lowest
level of support since 1972, the year the Supreme Court voided all
existing state death penalty laws in Furman v. Georgia. ...
NBC News 10/12
Cain now leads GOP
pack
Fueled by Tea Party supporters, conservatives and high-interest GOP
primary voters, former Godfather's Pizza CEO Herman Cain now leads the
race for the Republican presidential nomination, according to the latest
NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll. ...
CBS News: Sarah Dutton
10/12
Polls show
longtime support for tax hikes on rich
... Whether the
goal is to reduce the federal budget deficit, provide health insurance for
those without, or even for no specific reason, there is a history of
support in public opinion polls for higher taxes for the most affluent
Americans. ...
Gallup 10/12
At 13%, Congress'
Approval Ties All-Time Low
The percentage of Americans who approve of the job Congress is doing
returned to 13% in October, matching the all-time Gallup low on this
measure, first recorded in December 2010 and repeated in August. ...
Reuters 10/12
Romney leads
Republicans, Cain second
Mitt Romney leads the field vying for the Republican presidential
nomination, but fewer than one in four of the party's voters back him as a
surging Herman Cain gains ground, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll. ...
NBC News 10/12
Despite defeat,
Obama's jobs bill is popular
Even though the United States Senate on Tuesday blocked President Obama's
jobs bill, the legislation's specifics -- as well as the idea of taxing
the wealthy to pay for it -- are popular with the American public,
according to a new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll. ...
ABC News 10/12
Seven in 10 See
Wall Street Negatively
Seven in 10 Americans have an unfavorable impression of the financial
institutions on Wall Street, a point of resonance with the protesters
camped out in Lower Manhattan and elsewhere. ...
Mark Mellman 10/12
Republicans should
stick to traditions
... Since the rise of the modern nominating system, every successful
presidential aspirant in both parties, save one (Bill Clinton), has won
either Iowa or New Hampshire. ... If you don't win one of these two early
contests, your chances of becoming your party's standard-bearer sink to
near zero. ...
David Hill 10/12
Primary polls
point to Romney
... My reading is that the early strong polling for Perry simply reflected
a vote of confidence in his being the governor of one of the reddest red
states, Texas. ... Then the debates allowed Republicans to "sample" the
product, to use a marketing term, and many voters were profoundly
disappointed. ...
Gallup 10/11
Cain's Rise,
Perry's Decline in Positive Intensity Continue
The upward trend continues in Republicans' ratings of presidential
candidate Herman Cain, as does the downward trend in their ratings of Rick
Perry. ...
Washington Post
10/11
Middle-class pain
necessary, but widely unpopular
More than eight in 10 Americans say the middle class will have to make
financial sacrifices to reduce the nation’s budget deficit, but about as
many oppose tax increases on middle-income families and broad-based
entitlement cuts, according to a new Washington Post-Bloomberg News poll.
...
Gallup 10/10
Cain Surges,
Nearly Ties Romney for Lead
Republicans' support for Herman Cain has surged to 18%, their support for
Rick Perry has sagged to 15%, and their support for Mitt Romney remains
relatively stable at 20%. ...
Bloomberg 10/10
Cain Even With
Romney on Economy for GOP Supporters
Businessman Herman Cain is almost even with Mitt Romney in his appeal as
an economic leader to Republicans and Republican-leaning independents. ...
Lindsay A. Owens, Stanford U.
10/7
40-year low in
America's view of Wall Street
... Animosity
toward Wall Street is at its highest level in at least 40 years. Americans
have never exactly loved Wall Street stockbrokers or bankers -- but we
certainly didn't always hate them. Why this increasing hostility? ...
WMUR 10/7
NH: Primary Poll
Shows Romney With Strong Lead
A new poll shows that Mitt Romney continues to lead the race for the
Republican presidential nomination in New Hampshire, and there is a new
candidate in second place. ...
Gallup 10/7
Obama's Sept.
Approval Rating Remains at Term-Low 41%
President Barack Obama's job approval rating averaged 41% in September,
tied with August for the lowest monthly approval average of his
administration. ...
Brendan Nyhan
10/6
Obama 2012: Not
Exactly the Truman Show
Can President Obama overcome a weak economy and win in 2012 by campaigning
against the Republican Congress? The historical evidence for this claim is
weaker than his allies would like to admit. ...
Pew 10/6
Obama Motivates
Supporters, Opponents in 2012 Matchups
Barack Obama is a leading driver of voter preferences in possible 2012
matchups, among both his supporters and opponents. ...
Pew 10/5
War and Sacrifice
in the Post-9/11 Era
... Only about one half of one percent of the U.S. population has been on
active military duty at any given time during the past decade of sustained
warfare. Some 84% of post-9/11 veterans say the public does not understand
the problems faced by those in the military or their families. ...
ABC News 10/5
Obama Gains vs.
GOP on Jobs as Congress Hits a New Low
Barack Obama has jumped to a 15-point lead over the Republicans in
Congress in trust to handle job creation, a sign the beleaguered
president’s $450 billion jobs package has hit its mark in public opinion.
...New York Times
10/5
A.C. Nielsen Jr.,
Who Built Ratings Firm, Dies at 92
Arthur C. Nielsen
Jr., who transformed the company his father founded in 1923 into an
international leader in market research, helping to make its name
synonymous with television ratings, died on Monday in Winnetka, Ill. ...
National Journal: Ronald Brownstein
10/4
Voters of Two
Minds on Federal Regulation
A majority of voters worry that government regulation of business has gone
too far and is hurting the economy, but most also remain reluctant to
block several of the key rules that congressional Republicans want to
reverse, according to the latest United Technologies/National Journal
Congressional Connection Poll. ...
Gallup 10/4
Perry Plummets,
Cain Surges in Positive Intensity
Rick Perry's
image is suffering, with his Positive Intensity Score among Republicans
familiar with him down to 15, and below 20 for the first time. Meanwhile,
Herman Cain's score is now 30, the highest for any candidate this year.
...
Washington Post
10/4
Perry slips, Cain
rises in bid for GOP nomination
After a quick rise in the race for the Republican presidential nomination,
Texas Gov. Rick Perry has experienced an almost equally dramatic decline,
losing about half of his support over the past month, according to a new
Washington Post-ABC News poll. ...
CBS News 10/4
7 in 10 say Obama
has not helped economy
A new CBS News poll finds that nearly seven in 10 Americans believe
President Obama has not made real progress in fixing the economy. ...
CBS News 10/4
Most want taxes on
millionaires increased
Most Americans
believe that taxes on millionaires should be increased in order to reduce
the deficit, according to a new CBS News poll. ...
National Journal
10/3
Goeas Quits
Bachmann campaign
In yet another sign of the Michele Bachmann meltdown, pollster Ed Goeas is
leaving her presidential campaign after the October 18th GOP debate in Las
Vegas. ...
The Daily Caller: Ginni Thomas
10/3
John McLaughlin,
political savant
... The September
13 congressional special elections in New York and Nevada were a political
earthquake striking the White House and the Democratic Party. ... Last
week The Daily Caller's Ginni Thomas sat down with John McLaughlin, a
respected political consultant who assisted both of these winning campaign
teams. ...
Gallup 10/3
Supreme Court
Approval Rating Dips to 46%
As the U.S. Supreme Court begins its 2011-2012 term, Americans' approval
of the institution is now 46%, a drop of 5 percentage points in the last
year and 15 points in the last two years. ...
ABC News 10/3
Majority Expects
Obama to Lose Re-election
A majority of
Americans expect Barack Obama to be a one-term president, an assessment on
which, in past elections, the public more often has been right than wrong.
...
The New Yorker: Jane Mayer
10/3
North Carolina:
State for Sale
... Civitas underwrites polls on issues of the day. ... "Civitas was
clever," Bob Hall, the executive director of Democracy NC, the progressive
watchdog group, says. "It takes campaign expenses -- like polling, message
development, and voter-turnout analysis -- and makes them tax-deductible."
(Pope, in response, said that the poll results are equally available to
everyone.) ...
Boston Herald
10/3
Warren, Brown in
dead heat
Democrat Elizabeth Warren's meteoric ascent in Massachusetts politics has
landed her in a virtual dead heat with Republican U.S. Sen. Scott Brown.
...
Wall Street Journal: Jonah Lehrer
10/2
Attention,
Shoppers: Go With Your Gut
... In recent years, many scientists have argued that our "emotional
brain," that welter of gut instincts and feelings generated by the
unconscious, might be better suited for the complexity of 21st-century
shopping. ...
CBS News
10/2
60 Minutes/Vanity
Fair Poll: October Edition
A great brand often starts with a name and 27 percent of Americans say the
American brand name that makes them most proud belongs to automaker Henry
Ford. ...
New York Times
9/30
Obama Charts a New
Route to Re-election
With his support among blue-collar white voters far weaker than among
white-collar independents, President Obama is charting an alternative
course to re-election should he be unable to win Ohio and other industrial
states traditionally essential to Democratic presidential victories. ...
Pew 9/29
Is the
Nation Divided Into 'Haves' and 'Have-Nots'?
Despite an
extended economic downturn, the public's impression of whether the nation
is economically divided remains relatively stable. ...
Gallup 9/28
Satisfaction With
U.S. Remains Near 32-Year Low
Americans' satisfaction with the way things are going in the United States
remains at 11% in September as it was in August, the lowest readings on
this measure since December 2008 -- and among the worst on record in a
trend that dates to 1979. ...
David Hill 9/27
What Putin could
teach Republicans
... America needs
a strong new leader to remove a weak one. Will we give primacy to
strength, or will we lapse into soft-headed longing for someone who makes
us feel good about something that doesn't really matter? ...
Mark S. Mellman
9/27
Crisis of
confidence is widespread
It's no secret that America is suffering a crisis of confidence. The
breadth and depth of that crisis, however, is overwhelming. ...
NPR 9/27
Retirement:
Reality Not As Rosy As Expectations
Americans pride themselves on being optimistic. But Robert Blendon, of the
Harvard School of Public Health, says that may not be such a good thing
when it comes to planning for retirement. For many Americans, it is
proving harder than they imagined, according to a a new poll by NPR, the
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Harvard School of Public Health.
...
William A. Galston
9/27
Left Behind: How
Democrats Are Losing the Political Center
... Even as the terms of the political debate in Washington, in the eyes
of many Democrats, have moved steadily to the right, the electorate is
increasingly likely to see itself as ideologically closer to the
Republican Party than to Democrats. ...
AJC 9/26
Survey Reveals
Declining Jewish Support for Obama
Disappointment with President Obama's handling of the economy and
U.S.-Israel relations has caused a falloff in Jewish support for the
administration, a just-completed national survey by AJC, a non-partisan
advocacy organization, shows. ...
Stan Greenberg
9/26
The Illusive Indie
Who are
independent voters anyway? ...
Pew 9/26
Obama Draws More
Confidence than GOP on Deficit
As the nation prepares for another round of deficit reduction debates, the
public's confidence in congressional leaders, particularly Republican
leaders in Congress, has plummeted. ...
Kaiser (pdf) 9/23
Kaiser Health
Tracking Poll
This month, the bipartisan Congressional "super committee" began
negotiations on a deficit reduction package that is likely to include at
least some proposed changes to the nation's major health programs,
Medicare and Medicaid. Probably reflecting current levels of distrust in
Congress documented in many polls, a majority of the public expresses
little to no trust in the super committee to make the right
recommendations. ...
Pew 9/22
Press Criticized,
But Trusted More than Other Info Sources
Negative opinions about the performance of news organizations now equal or
surpass all-time highs on nine of 12 core measures the Pew Research Center
has been tracking since 1985. ...
Alan I. Abramowitz
9/22
NY's 9th District
and Obama's Orthodox Jewish Problem
... But while
President Obama may not have big problems with Jewish voters in general,
he may very well have big problems with one group of Jewish voters -- the
Orthodox -- and that may help to explain the results of last week’s
special election in New York. ... Orthodox Jews were unhappy with the
Democratic Party and its policies long before Barack Obama appeared on the
political scene. ...
Democracy Corps
9/22
The Explosive
Republican-Obama Battleground
... The mood of the country is deeply pessimistic and voter anger
encompasses the Republicans as well, particularly the new House members.
...
Gallup 9/22
More Voters
Considering Romney Than Obama, Perry
More registered voters say they would definitely vote for Mitt Romney or
might consider doing so (62%) than say the same about his two main rivals
in the 2012 presidential election, Democrat Barack Obama (54%) and
Republican Rick Perry (53%). ...
Gallup: Frank Newport
9/21
Public Opinion
Polls and Public Policy
... At a time when the public's confidence in the elected representatives
themselves is at an all-time low, it seems that paying more attention to
the distilled wisdom of the average people whom these representatives are
elected to represent makes sense. ...
Washington Post
9/21
Obama's
favorability drops among African Americans
New cracks have begun to show in President Obama's support amongst African
Americans, who have been his strongest supporters. ...
ABC News 9/21
Obama's
Favorability Slips, But Perry, Romney No Better
Barack Obama's basic popularity has slipped to its lowest of his
presidency, but his top two Republican challengers are no better off: Rick
Perry and Mitt Romney are far less known than Obama – and at least as
divisive as he is among those who do have an opinion of them. ...
McClatchy 9/21
Obama expected to
lose, still tops any Republican 1-on-1
... A new McClatchy-Marist poll finds that Obama looks increasingly
vulnerable in next year's election, with a majority of voters believing
he'll lose to any Republican, a solid plurality saying they'll definitely
vote against him and most potential Republican challengers gaining on him.
...
Pew 9/20
Palestinian
Statehood: Mixed Views, Low Visibility
Americans express mixed opinions about a possible independent Palestinian
state, an issue that has so far drawn little attention from the press or
the public. ...
McClatchy 9/20
As economy
sputters, Obama's ratings continues to sink
President Barack Obama's job approval rating has plunged to a dismal 39%,
the lowest of his presidency, as increasing numbers disapprove of his
handling of the nation's ailing economy, according to a new
McClatchy-Marist poll. ...
National Journal
9/20
Voters Favor
Balance in Cutting Deficit
As President Obama challenged congressional Republicans with his new
deficit plan on Monday, voters are rejecting the idea of reducing the
nation's debt through spending cuts alone -- but there is no clear-cut
enthusiasm for any specific proposal offered by either political party and
even less confidence in their ability to get things done. ...
Gallup 9/20
Americans Favor
Jobs Proposals, Including Taxing Rich
Americans generally favor raising taxes on higher-income Americans and
eliminating tax deductions for some corporations as ways of paying for
President Obama's proposed jobs plan. ...
Suzanne Mettler
9/19
Our Hidden
Government Benefits
... Americans often fail to recognize government's role in society, even
if they have experienced it in their own lives. That is because so much of
what government does today is largely invisible. ...
Gallup 9/19
Americans Say Fed
Gov't Wastes Over Half of Every Dollar
Americans
estimate that the federal government wastes 51 cents of every dollar it
spends, a new high in a Gallup trend question first asked in 1979. ...
Resurgent Republic
9/18
Opportunities,
Challenges For GOP Among Hispanic Voters
... Compared to 2008 President Obama is underperforming among Hispanic
voters, particularly in Florida and New Mexico. ...
New York Times
9/18
Support for Obama
Slips; Unease on 2012 Candidates
President Obama's support is eroding among elements of his base, and a
yearlong effort to recapture the political center has failed to attract
independent voters, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News poll,
leaving him vulnerable at a moment when pessimism over the country's
direction is greater than at any other time since he took office. ...
Stanford University
9/18
'Green' views may
help win major elections
A political candidate's electoral victory or defeat is influenced by his
or her stance on climate change policy, according to new Stanford
University studies of the most recent presidential and congressional
elections. ...
Bloomberg 9/18
Hillary Clinton
Popularity Prompts Some Buyer's Remorse
The most popular national political figure in America today is one who was
rejected by her own party three years ago: Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton. ...
Gallup 9/18
Jewish Support for
Obama Down, Not Disproportionately
There is little
sign that President Obama is suffering disproportionately in support among
Jews; 54% approved of his job performance from Aug. 1-Sept. 15, 13
percentage points higher than his overall 41% approval rating during that
time, and similar to the average 14-point gap seen throughout Obama's
term. ...
National Journal
9/13
With Doubts,
Voters Prefer Obama Jobs Plan
Despite deepening doubts about President Obama's economic agenda,
Americans generally prefer the proposals he offered last week for reviving
the economy to the competing ideas advanced by congressional Republicans
and the GOP's 2012 presidential field, a United Technologies/National
Journal Congressional Connection Poll has found. ...
Nicole McCleskey 9/12
Hispanic Voters:
Opportunity for GOP as Obama Falters?
With much speculation about Hispanics and the 2012 election, we thought it
worth taking a look. Anecdotally you hear whispers (some louder than
others) about President Obama's erosion in the Hispanic community, that
Hispanics are turning against him headed into 2012. But is it true? ...
Gallup 9/12
Congressional Job
Approval at 15%
Congressional job approval is now 15%, up slightly from the record-tying
low of 13% recorded in August, while disapproval is 82%, compared with 84%
last month. ...
Dan Balz 9/10
What the tea party
is -- and isn't
.. According to Alan Abramowitz of Emory University, "The tea party
movement can best be understood in the context of the long-term growth of
partisan-ideological polarization within the American electorate and
especially the growing conservatism of the activist base in the Republican
Party." ...
John Sides 9/9
What Can
Presidential Speeches Do? A Dialogue
Q: So, Obama's
jobs speech was a barnburner. Surely this will pull Obama's approval
ratings out of the doldrums, no? A: Presidential speeches don't really
move the president's job approval ratings. ...
GOOD 9/9
The Information
Arms Race
... Gage has found that "anger points," issues that provoke the most ire,
are the most effective way to boost turnout. So his surveys are designed
to find which issues -- taxes, abortion, guns -- fit each profile in order
to get the most persuasive message to the right voter. ...
ABC News 9/9
A Sense of
Security Rebounds
Confidence in the country's safety from terrorism has rebounded sharply in
the past year to near its highs, with most Americans expressing
satisfaction with the steps the country's taken in response to 9/11. But
there are two major exceptions: The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. ...
New York Times
9/9
Feeling Safer, but
Still Wary
Ten years after
Sept. 11, Americans are still walking an emotional tightrope, with
increased comfort in the government's antiterrorism efforts but a
significant number wary that such a catastrophe could happen again. ...
World Public Opinion
9/8
U.S. Response to
9/11 Weakened Its Economy
Six in ten Americans believe that that the U.S. weakened its economy by
overspending in its responses to the 9/11 attacks. In particular,
respondents felt this was especially true of the U.S. mission in Iraq. ...
Larry J. Sabato
9/8
It's Already About
Electoral College Math
Straw polls, real polls, debates, caucuses and primaries -- these comprise
the public side of presidential campaigns 14 months before Election Day.
But behind the scenes, strategists for President Obama and his major
Republican opponents are already focused like a laser on the Electoral
College. ...
Yale U. / George Mason U. (pdf)
9/7
Politics & Global
Warming
... Majorities of Democrats (78%), Independents (71%) and Republicans
(53%) believe that global warming is happening. By contrast, only 34% of
Tea Party members believe global warming is happening, while 53% say it is
not happening. ...
Glen Bolger 9/7
White Voters Can
Jump
... The President's problems with white voters will impact other
Democrats. In campaigns where the percentage of white votes hits 75% or
more, do not be surprised if Democratic candidates are more reluctant to
strongly campaign with Obama. And that's going to be a lot of key places.
...
Resurgent Republic
9/7
President In Deep
Trouble As He Delivers Jobs Speech
By almost every measure, President Obama's prospects for reelection are
bad. Most Americans: Think the country is on the wrong track (67 percent);
Believe Obama has turned out to be a weaker leader than they expected (60
percent); Think his policies have made things worse for most Americans (50
percent) ...
Pew 9/7
From Hyperpower to Declining Power
In the decade since the Sept. 11 attacks, America's global image has
followed a remarkable, if now familiar, trajectory. Initially, there was a
global outpouring of sympathy for the United States, but it was
short-lived. ...
Gallup 9/7
Obama Approval At
New Lows Among Whites, Hispanics
President Barack Obama earned the lowest monthly job approval rating of
his presidency to date in August. ... He also received term-low monthly
job approval ratings from both Hispanics (48%) and whites (33%) and tied
his lowest rating from blacks (84%). ...
Public Religion Research Institute
9/6
Attitudes in an
Increasingly Diverse America
Ten years after the September 11th terrorist attacks, Americans believe
they are more safe but have less personal freedom and that the country is
less respected in the world than it was prior to September 11, 2001. ...
Andrew Gelman (pdf)
9/6
Economic Divisions
and Political Polarization
Americans are
worried about polarization, but we can't always agree on what exactly
we're polarized about. You might say that we're polarized about
polarization. ...
AP 9/6
OK to trade some
freedoms to fight terrorism
... The same Americans who are increasingly splashing their personal
lives across Facebook and Twitter trace a meandering path when asked where
the government should draw the line between protecting civil liberties and
pursuing terrorism. ...
Washington Post
9/6
Obama ratings sink
to new lows as hope fades
Public pessimism about the direction of the country has jumped to its
highest level in nearly three years, erasing the sense of hope that
followed President Obama's inauguration and pushing his approval ratings
to a record low, according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll. ...
Gallup 9/5
More U.S. Workers
Unhappy With Benefits, Promotions
U.S. workers are more dissatisfied today with their health insurance
benefits and their chances for promotion than they were before the global
economic collapse. These are the biggest movers since August 2008 on a
list of 13 specific job aspects Gallup tracks. ...
Gallup 9/2
Americans' Fear of
Terrorism in U.S. Is Near Low Point
Americans' fear that a terrorist attack in the U.S. could be imminent has
retreated from the high level Gallup recorded shortly after al Qaeda
leader Osama bin Laden was killed at his hiding place in Pakistan on May
1. It is now on the low end of the range seen over the past decade. ...
Cliff Young and Chris Jackson
9/1
Obama at the
electoral tipping point
... Taken as a whole, Obama is still a favorite. That being said, he is
dangerously close to the tipping point between a clear favorite and a
struggling contender. ...
Pew 9/1
United in
Remembrance, Divided over Policies
... the public continues to be divided over many of the anti-terrorism
policies that arose in the wake of Sept. 11, and these differences extend
to opinions about whether U.S. wrongdoing prior to 9/11 may have motivated
the attacks: 43% say yes, while 45% disagree. ...
Thomas F. Schaller
9/1
One Year From
Convention, What Does Obama Say?
... the calm, cerebral President Obama may need to give way to a more
combative, visceral Candidate Obama next year. Indeed, the 2012
presidential race is setting up to be a classic test case of the
endangered incumbent. ...
AP 9/1
Japanese distrust
leaders after disasters
Five months after the tsunami and nuclear accident, the Japanese people
lack confidence in the government's ability to handle another major
disaster and generally distrust elected leaders, an Associated Press-GfK
poll has found. ...
Bill McInturff (pdf)
8/31
The Debt Ceiling
Negotiation and its Consequences
... The debt ceiling negotiation is an extremely significant event that is
profoundly and sharply reshaping views of the economy and the federal
government. It has led to a scary erosion in confidence in both. ...
Nate Silver 8/31
Despite Keys,
Obama is No Lock
The American University political scientist Allan J. Lichtman has issued a
prediction that, in the context of an economy that is still teetering on
the brink of recession and Barack Obama's 40 percent approval ratings,
looks awfully bold. ...
Chris Wilson 8/31
Is Obama more like
Harry Truman or Gerald Ford?
Gallup's latest data paints a potentially dire picture for Barak [sic]
Obama, but not one so dire that it prevents Democrats from whistling past
the graveyard. ...
AP 8/31
AP, NORC partner
for in-depth research, journalism
The Associated Press and NORC at the University of Chicago announced a new
research partnership Wednesday, joining to create the Associated Press-NORC
Center for Public Affairs Research. ...
Gallup 8/31
Approval of Labor
Unions Holds Near Its Low, at 52%
In a year marked
by contentious negotiations between state governments and public employee
unions, a slim majority of Americans, 52%, approve of labor unions. ...
usnews.com 8/30
Never-Wrong Pundit
Picks Obama to Win in 2012
Allan Lichtman, the American University professor whose election formula
has correctly called every president since Ronald Reagan's 1984
re-election, has a belated birthday present for Barack Obama: Rest easy,
your re-election is in the bag. ...
Pew 8/30
Muslim Americans:
No Signs of Growth in Alienation
As the 1oth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks approaches, a comprehensive
public opinion survey finds no indication of increased alienation or anger
among Muslim Americans in response to concerns about home-grown Islamic
terrorists, controversies about the building of mosques and other
pressures that have been brought to bear on this high-profile minority
group in recent years. ...
Gallup 8/30
Obama Weekly
Average Approval Holds at Term-Low 40%
President Barack Obama's job approval rating averaged 40% last week, tying
his record-low 40% ratings for the two prior weeks that started on Aug. 8.
...
Kaiser Family Foundation
8/29
Uninsured But Not
Yet Informed
If there is one thing there is general agreement on when it comes to the
Affordable Care Act it's that it will help the uninsured. ... Therefore,
it was a real surprise in our latest tracking poll to learn that most of
the uninsured don't know how much the law will benefit them. ...
Gallup 8/29
Computer Industry
Rated Best, Federal Gov't Worst
Americans view the computer industry the most positively and the federal
government the least positively when asked to rate 25 business and
industry sectors. ...
Gallup 8/26
Tea Party
Supporters Backing Perry for GOP Nomination
Rick Perry's candidacy has attracted strong initial support from
Republicans who identify themselves as supporters of the Tea Party
movement. ...
Alan I. Abramowitz
8/25
The Electoral
College: Democrats' Friend?
... But while it's too soon to predict the outcome of next year's
election, there are some things that we can predict about that election
with a fairly high degree of confidence based on the results of recent
presidential elections and long-term trends in American politics. ...
Pew 8/25
Obama Image Takes
a Hit, GOP Ratings Decline
The public is profoundly discontented with conditions in the country, its
government, political leadership and several of its major institutions.
...
Women's Voices, Women Vote/Democracy Corps (pdf)
8/24
Creating a New
Economic Narrative
... Those in Congress who are concerned about the middle class and those
most damaged by the current economic crisis have yet to make the case
strongly enough that they can solve the economic problems facing
Americans, particularly to unmarried and young voters. ...
Gallup 8/24
One-Third See
Improved Race Relations Under Obama
By 35% to 23%, more Americans believe U.S. race relations have gotten
better rather than worse with Barack Obama's election as president. ...
Gallup 8/23
Perry Rises in
Recognition and Maintains Positive Image
Texas Gov. Rick Perry is now recognized by 67% of Republicans and
Republican leaners nationwide, an increase of 13 percentage points from
two weeks ago. Still, six of the other nine candidates or potential
candidates are better known than Perry, led by Sarah Palin (97%) and Rudy
Giuliani (91%). ...
Washington Post
8/22
Legacy of MLK's 'I
Have a Dream' speech unfulfilled
Barely more than a third of African Americans see the United States as
having realized the vision outlined in Martin Luther King Jr.'s famous "I
Have a Dream" speech -- down from nearly two-thirds just before President
Obama's inauguration in 2009. ...
Gallup 8/19
Americans Much
More Positive About Local Schools
Americans, and parents in particular, evaluate their community schools
more positively than in any year since Phi Delta Kappa International and
Gallup started asking Americans to grade local schools in 1984. ...
Ronald Brownstein
8/19
Will Perry,
Bachmann Divide Voters Resistant to Romney?
... The Republican coalition now divides virtually evenly between the
economically-focused managers and the culturally-conservative, viscerally
anti-Washington populists. ...
Larry J. Sabato
8/18
The Dirty Thirties
President Obama has found himself in the cellar for the first time since
taking office: He fell to 39% in Gallup Poll tracking over the past
weekend. ... But if there's any comfort for Obama, it is that every
president since Lyndon Johnson has become familiar with the "dirty
thirties" at some point in his tenure. ...
Pew 8/18
Women See Value
and Benefits of College; Men Lag
At a time when women surpass men by record numbers in college enrollment
and completion, they also have a more positive view than men about the
value higher education provides, according to a nationwide Pew Research
Center survey. ...
Education Week
8/17
Americans Trust
Teachers, Split on Teachers' Unions
Governors and teachers' unions are going head-to-head in several states
across the country, and the public feels caught in the middle, a new
survey on the public's perception of U.S. schools finds. ...
David E. Campbell and Robert D. Putnam
8/17
Crashing the Tea
Party
Given how much sway the Tea Party has among Republicans in Congress and
those seeking the Republican presidential nomination, one might think the
Tea Party is redefining mainstream American politics. But in fact the Tea
Party is increasingly swimming against the tide of public opinion: among
most Americans, even before the furor over the debt limit, its brand was
becoming toxic. ...
New York Times
8/16
NYC: Bloomberg's
Approval Rating the Lowest in 6 Years
Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg's job approval rating among New Yorkers has hit
its lowest point in six years, with residents conveying widespread
anxieties about the city's economic prospects, according to the latest New
York Times/CBS News poll. ...
Gallup 8/16
Perry, Bachmann:
More Positive Intensity Than Romney
Newly announced presidential candidate Rick Perry and Iowa Straw Poll
winner Michele Bachmann generate more intensely positive reactions from
Republicans who know them than does front-runner Mitt Romney. ...
Gallup 8/16
Congressional Job
Approval Ties Historic Low of 13%
Americans' evaluation of the job Congress is doing is the worst Gallup has
ever measured, with 13% approving, tying the all-time low measured in
December 2010. ...
Latino Decisions
8/15
Latino voters
support tax increases alongside cuts
... When asked which approach they prefer to reduce the deficit, 46% of
Latino registered voters stated raising taxes on the wealthy, compared to
only 7% who said cutting existing programs, and 37% who said a combination
of both tax increases and cuts. ...
Gallup 8/15
Obama's Weekly Job
Approval at Lowest of Administration
President Obama's job approval rating dropped to 40% during the week
spanning Aug. 8-14, the lowest weekly average of his administration. ...
Democracy Corps (pdf)
8/15
Voters downgrade
Washington
A new survey by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research for Democracy Corps
reveals voters' growing anger with Washington. ...
Alan Reifman 8/19
Health Care Polls
... Now, I'm not saying the health care reform policy (either when it was
working its way through the Congress or as an actually enacted law) has
ever been wildly popular. However, "very unpopular" doesn't strike me as
an accurate characterization, either. ...
Gallup 8/12
Economic
Confidence Drops, Obama Approval Fairly Stable
President Obama's job approval rating for the first 10 days of August is 4
percentage points lower than it was in the first week of July,
significantly less of a drop than the 19-point decline in Gallup's
Economic Confidence Index over the same period. ...
National Journal
8/11
Obama's Path to
Reelection Narrows
Newly released state-by-state approval numbers for President Obama suggest
that in 2012 he could face fewer options for assembling an Electoral
College majority and increased pressure to capture racially diverse
states. ...
Washington Post
8/11
Spreading gloom
about government
In the aftermath of the tumultuous debate over raising the debt ceiling,
Americans give Washington a strong vote of no confidence, with barely a
quarter of those surveyed recently saying the federal government can fix
the nation's economic problems and a large majority agreeing that the
policymaking process is unstable and ineffective. ...
Gallup 8/10
Tea Party Sparks
More Antipathy Than Passion
More Americans consider themselves strong opponents of the Tea Party
movement than strong supporters, by 20% to 14%, and the ratio is a similar
22% to 15% among registered voters. ...
Reuters 8/10
Most Americans say
U.S. on wrong track
Economic fears are weighing heavily on Americans, with a large majority
saying the United States is on the wrong track and nearly half believing
the worst is yet to come, a Reuters/Ipsos poll said on Wednesday. ...
Mark Mellman 8/10
Burned on a teacup
... "Tea Party" is becoming a dirty word. ... Republicans running for
every office from president to dog catcher are forced to pledge fealty to
a group that is increasingly scorned by the American people. ...
Gallup 8/10
Americans Want
Debt Supercommittee to Compromise
Six in 10 Americans say members of the new bipartisan "supercommittee"
mandated to find new ways of reducing the federal budget deficit should
compromise, even if the agreement reached is one they personally disagree
with. ...
Gallup 8/9
Record-Low 21% Say
Most in Congress Deserve Reelection
About one in five U.S. registered voters (21%) say most members of
Congress deserve reelection, the lowest percentage Gallup has found in the
20-year history of asking this question. ...
Pew 8/9
Views of Tea Party
Supporters in Congress More Negative
More Americans now think that members of Congress who support the Tea
Party are having a negative effect than said that in January, at the start
of the new Congress. ...
USA Today 8/8
Will anti-Congress
mood cause another 'wave' election?
A USA TODAY/Gallup Poll finds signs that another "wave" election with the
potential to dramatically change the capital's political makeup may be
building. ...
Gallup 8/8
Plenty of Common
Ground Found in Abortion Debate
Self-described "pro-choice" and "pro-life" Americans agree about nine
major areas of abortion policy, while disagreeing on eight others. ...
New York Times
8/6
Obama Team Turns
Its Focus to Tough Re-election Fight
... Despite an intensive effort by the White House since last November to
recapture the political center, Mr. Obama continues to struggle to win
back the support of moderate and independent voters, polls show. ...
Washington Post
8/6
Will Obama be
reelected? Economy could hold the answer
... Campaigning in last year's midterm elections, Obama argued over and
over again that Republicans had driven the economy into a ditch; from now
going forward, the question will be why he hasn't towed it out. ...
Ron Brownstein
8/4
Towering Wave of
Alienation Threatens Both GOP, Dems
In the shadow of the bitterly fought agreement to raise the federal debt
ceiling, the independent voters who usually hold the balance of power in
American politics are expressing astronomical levels of discontent with
President Obama, Congress, and the Washington system itself. ...
CBS News 8/4
Americans divided
on debt limit deal
Americans are divided on Congress' last-minute deal to raise the debt
ceiling, a new CBS News/New York Times poll shows. ...
New York Times
8/4
Disapproval of
Congress at Historic Level
The debate over raising the debt ceiling, which brought the nation to the
brink of default, has sent disapproval of Congress to its highest level on
record and left most Americans saying that creating jobs should now take
priority over cutting spending, according to the latest New York Times/CBS
News poll. ...
Gallup 8/4
Tea Party
Supporters Oppose Debt Agreement
Tea Party supporters overwhelmingly disapprove of the agreement reached by
President Obama and Congress to raise the federal debt ceiling, by a 68%
to 22% margin. ...
CNN 8/4
Huntsman chief
outlines strategy in memo to donors
In a confidential pair of memos circulated to donors this week, Jon
Huntsman's campaign manager and pollster mapped out a nomination strategy
that relies heavily on raising the former Utah governor's profile among
primary voters and drawing contrasts with his "very weak" field of
Republican opponents. ...
National Journal
8/3
Public Doubts
Washington Can Get Things Done
Now that the debt crisis has been resolved -- at least for a while -- how
is Congress doing in the eyes of the American people? What does survey
research suggest about the public's mood heading into the fall when
lawmakers will once again have to vote on massive spending cuts? ...
Los Angeles Times
8/3
Nine missing
pollsters freed in western Mexico
All nine polling workers who had vanished while taking surveys in a
violent slice of western Mexico have been freed, their employers and
Mexican authorities said Wednesday morning. ...
Gallup 8/3
More Oppose Than
Favor Debt Ceiling Agreement
Americans are more likely to oppose (46%) than favor (39%) the agreement
President Obama and Congress reached to raise the federal debt ceiling.
Majorities of Democrats and liberals favor the agreement, while
conservatives and Republicans largely oppose it. ...
National Journal
8/2
Amidst Debt Fight,
Discontent With Congress
Amidst a tumultuous fight over raising the debt ceiling, Americans are
deeply dissatisfied with Washington and eager to elect fresh faces to
Congress, raising warning flags for Democrats and Republicans alike. ...
Pew
8/1
Public Sees Budget
Negotiations as 'Ridiculous,' 'Stupid'
From liberal
Democrats to Tea Party Republicans, there is broad public consensus that
the budget negotiations of recent weeks can be summed up in words such as
ridiculous, disgusting, stupid, and frustrating. ...
Gallup 8/1
U.S. Political
Ideology Stable With Conservatives Leading
Americans' political ideology at the midyear point of 2011 looks similar
to 2009 and 2010, with 41% self-identifying as conservative, 36% as
moderate, and 21% as liberal. ...
Stanley Greenberg
7/30
Why Voters Tune
Out Democrats
... In analyzing these polls in the United States, I see clearly that
voters feel ever more estranged from government -- and that they associate
Democrats with government. If Democrats are going to be encumbered by that
link, they need to change voters' feelings about government. ...
Gallup 7/29
Obama Approval
Drops to New Low of 40%
President Obama's job approval rating is at a new low, averaging 40% in
July 26-28 Gallup Daily tracking. His prior low rating of 41% occurred
several times, the last of which was in April. As recently as June 7,
Obama had 50% job approval. ...
Gallup 7/28
Obama Rates Higher
Than Boehner, Reid on Debt Situation
Americans are more likely to approve of the way President Obama is
handling the negotiations to raise the federal debt ceiling than they are
to approve of the handling of the situation by Speaker of the House John
Boehner or Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, although opinions about all
three are more negative than positive. ...
Pew 7/28
Obama Loses Ground
in 2012 Reelection Bid
The sizeable lead Barack Obama held over a generic Republican opponent in
polls conducted earlier this year has vanished as his support among
independent voters has fallen off. ...
Kaiser Family Foundation
7/28
Americans Gloomy
On Some Promises In Health Law
Americans are pessimistic that the new health care law will improve the
quality of medicine, do a better job protecting consumers or lower costs,
a new poll shows. ...
PPIC 7/28
CA: Support Drops
for Nuclear Plants, Rises for Drilling
In the wake of the Japanese nuclear crisis, support for building more
nuclear power plants in California has dropped sharply in a statewide
survey released today by the Public Policy Institute of California. ...
Lawrence R. Jacobs
7/27
Who's winning the
debt debate?
News reporting is
fixated on the D.C. beltway scheming, beaming pictures of government
officials zipping in and out of meetings with occasional public comment.
Meanwhile, the public is already reaching a verdict, and it is a harsh one
-- the Republican Party is out of step with the country's fiscal
priorities. ...
Freedom to Marry
7/27
Momentum for the
Freedom to Marry
Today at the
National Press Club, two leading pollsters, one Republican and one
Democratic, released a new analysis of polling data spanning more than a
decade regarding the dramatic shift in public attitudes on the freedom to
marry for same-sex couples. ...
See also: Marriage polls
Gallup 7/27
Romney Leads Field
of Announced GOP Candidates
Mitt Romney is the leader for the GOP nomination among the current field
of official candidates, supported by 27% of Republicans, compared with 18%
for Michele Bachmann. However, Rick Perry would essentially tie Romney,
with Sarah Palin and Rudy Giuliani close behind, in a scenario in which
all three of these undecided candidates entered the race. ...
National Journal
7/26
Voters Fear Debt
Deal Will Hurt Medicare
Americans
expressed more trust in President Obama than in congressional Republicans
to make decisions about both the federal deficit and debt ceiling, but
continued to display little urgency about the risk of default if the two
sides remain stalemated, a new United Technologies/National Journal
Congressional Connection Poll found. ...
Check here for future Congressional Connection Poll releases:
Congressional Connection Poll
Reuters 7/26
Americans back
mixed solution for debt crisis
Americans overwhelmingly are concerned about the U.S. debt crisis and a
majority backs the type of compromise pushed by President Barack Obama, a
Reuters/Ipsos poll found on Tuesday. ...
Human Rights Campaign / GQRR (pdf)
7/26
A Giant Step
Forward on the Road to Equality
A recent national survey of 900 adults shows a nation moving inexorably
toward equality for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people. ...
Pew 7/26
Public Wants Debt
Ceiling Compromise
The public overwhelmingly favors a compromise in the debt ceiling
standoff. And even as negotiations aimed at resolving the issue show
little progress, a majority thinks that Barack Obama and congressional
Republicans will reach a deal before the Aug. 2 deadline on a possible
government default. ...
Washington Post
7/26
More Americans
unhappy with Obama on economy, jobs
More than a third of Americans now believe that President Obama's policies
are hurting the economy, and confidence in his ability to create jobs is
sharply eroding among his base, according to a new Washington Post-ABC
News poll. ...
Religion News Service
7/25
Americans want
religious presidents, vague on details
Americans want their presidents to be religious, but many have trouble
identifying the faiths of President Obama and leading GOP contenders Mitt
Romney and Rep. Michele Bachmann, according to a new poll released Monday.
...
Gallup 7/25
Common State
Abortion Restrictions Spark Mixed Reviews
Large majorities of Americans favor the broad intent of several types of
abortion restriction laws that are now common in many states, but have
mixed or negative reactions to others. ...
Pew 7/22
GOP Makes Big
Gains among White Voters
As the country enters into the 2012 presidential election cycle, the
electorate's partisan affiliations have shifted significantly since Barack
Obama won office nearly three years ago. ...
Los Angeles Times
7/22
California voters
see some bright spots in grim budget
The budget approved by Gov. Jerry Brown and lawmakers last month was
largely distasteful to voters, a new poll shows, but many felt the process
went more smoothly than in past years, when political paralysis gripped
the Capitol and left the state starved for cash. ...
Charlie Cook 7/21
Too Close to Call
It's interesting
that the race for the Republican presidential nomination is as fluid as it
is, given that no primaries or caucuses have been held and that the first
important straw poll, in Ames, Iowa, is still three weeks away. ...
Pew 7/21
Muslim-Western
Tensions Persist
Muslim and Western publics continue to see relations between them as
generally bad, with both sides holding negative stereotypes of the other.
...
Washington Post
7/21
Romney still
ahead, but with big vulnerabilities
Mitt Romney leads the wide-open contest for the 2012 Republican
presidential nomination. But a new Washington Post-ABC News poll
underscores his vulnerabilities as a front-runner, as well as Sarah
Palin's lingering power to shake up the race if she decides to run. ...
Gallup 7/21
Obama Maintains
Sub-50% Job Approval in 10th Quarter
... Obama is in the company of several former elected presidents who
averaged sub-50% approval during their 10th quarters in office. This
includes three former presidents who won re-election -- Bill Clinton,
Richard Nixon, and Ronald Reagan -- and one, Jimmy Carter, who lost. ...
Remapping Debate
7/20
Financial Times,
Lazard resist disclosure on poll facts
According to a recent Financial Times report on the extent of public
support for green energy development based on a poll sponsored by Lazard,
a major international financial advisory and asset management firm, U.S.
voters cap their willingness to pay for renewable energy sources, such as
wind and solar, at $10 per month. ... But can the poll results be trusted?
...
Mark Mellman 7/20
Debt-limit debate
views
Don't let anyone
tell you a big, widely covered public debate on a topic of vital
importance can't shift public opinion. Though a relatively paltry 29
percent are following the discussion closely, attitudes on the debt
ceiling are shifting. Dramatically. ...
David Hill 7/20
Time to go for
broke on debt
... I'm making a political judgment and believe there might be, in fact,
good reasons to risk the alleged political chaos that some say will ensue
from a failure to raise the ceiling. ...
NBC News 7/19
Americans want
compromise on debt
As Democrats and Republicans wrestle over spending and deficits in advance
of an Aug. 2 deadline to raise the debt ceiling, most Americans want their
political leaders to compromise rather stand their ground, according to a
new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll. ...
Washington Post
7/19
Public sees dire
consequences if no budget deal
With President Obama and congressional Republicans at an impasse in budget
negotiations, majorities of Americans see both sides as not being willing
enough to compromise to get a deal done, according to a new Washington
Post-ABC News Poll. ...
ABC News 7/19
Obama's Advantage
on Aiding the Middle Class
Most Americans think the Republicans in Congress have got Wall Street and
large corporations' backs, while President Obama prevails on protecting
the middle class and small businesses: an edge that helps explain his
better-than-dismal job approval in the teeth of a terrible economy. ...
Gallup 7/18
Americans,
Including Republicans, Want Debt Compromise
Two-thirds of Americans would like government officials to agree to a
compromise plan on the debt and budget deficit negotiations now underway.
Fewer than 3 in 10 want lawmakers who share their views on the debt and
budget deficit to hold out for their desired plan. ...
CBS News 7/18
Support for debt
ceiling increase doubles
Americans are now roughly split on raising the debt ceiling, a new CBS
News poll shows, with support for an increase nearly doubling since last
month. ...
USA Today 7/18
Low ratings for
Obama, Congress on debt talks
... Half of those surveyed in a USA TODAY/Gallup Poll say President Obama
and the current Congress are doing a worse job than their predecessors in
dealing with the nation's problems, and four in 10 call the situation the
worst they've seen in their lifetimes. ...
Pew 7/18
Obama Draws More
Confidence on Debt Ceiling
The public expresses far more confidence in President Obama than it does
in congressional leaders of both parties when it comes to the debate over
the debt ceiling. ...
CBS News
7/18
71% shun GOP
handling of debt crisis
Americans are unimpressed with their political leaders' handling of the
debt ceiling crisis, with a new CBS News poll showing a majority
disapprove of all the involved parties' conduct, but Republicans in
Congress fare the worst, with just 21 percent backing their resistance to
raising taxes. ...
PolitiFact 7/15
Truth-O-Meter (1)
Barack Obama said 80 percent of Americans favor both spending cuts and tax
increases to address budget problems. ...
PolitiFact 7/15
Truth-O-Meter (2)
Barack Obama said a "clear majority" of Republican voters think tax
revenues should be included as part of a budget deal. ...
Gallup 7/15
Majority of
Republicans Can't Name a 2012 Favorite
More than half of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents, 58%, do
not express a preference when asked in an open-ended format -- with no
candidates' names read -- whom they are most likely to support for the
party's 2012 presidential nomination. ...
Pew 7/14
China Seen
Overtaking U.S. as Global Superpower
In most regions of the world, opinion of the United States continues to be
more favorable than it was in the Bush years, but U.S. image now faces a
new challenge: doubts about America's superpower status. ...
Gallup 7/13
Americans Prefer
Spending Cuts; Open to Tax Hikes
Americans' preferences for deficit reduction clearly favor spending cuts
to tax increases, but most Americans favor a mix of the two approaches.
Twenty percent favor an approach that relies only on spending cuts and 4%
favor an approach that uses tax increases alone. ...
TheIowaRepublican.com
7/12
Iowa: Look Out for
Chris Christie
... TheIowaRepublican.com poll shows that Bachmann is head and shoulders
above the current crop of candidates campaigning in Iowa, but that could
change if a high-profile candidate enters the race and competes in Iowa.
...
Pew 7/11
Public Now Divided
on Debt Limit Debate
As the debate over the nation's debt and deficit continues, the public has
grown more concerned that failing to raise the debt limit would force the
government into default and hurt the economy. Despite this change,
however, about as many Americans are concerned by the consequences of
raising the nation's debt limit as by the fallout from not doing so. ...
TheIowaRepublican.com
7/11
Iowa: Bachmann
Overtakes Romney
Minnesota Congresswoman Michele Bachmann has surpassed former
Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney in a recent Iowa poll that was
conducted by TheIowaRepublican.com. ...
Gallup 7/8
Cain, Huntsman,
Bachmann, Pawlenty Gain in Recognition
Herman Cain, Jon Huntsman, Michele Bachmann, and Tim Pawlenty have gained
the most in name recognition so far this year of any of the Republican
presidential candidates Gallup tracks. ...
Alan I. Abramowitz
7/7
Correcting Myths
About Independent Voters
There they go again. The presidential campaign season is barely under way
but already pundits and pollsters are making misleading claims about
independent voters and the role they play in presidential elections. ...
Pew 7/7
Public Wants
Changes in Entitlements, Not Benefits
As policymakers at the state and national level struggle with rising
entitlement costs, overwhelming numbers of Americans agree that, over the
years, Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid have been good for the
country. ...
Gallup 7/6
Obama Averages 46%
Approval in June
President Barack Obama's job approval rating averaged 46% in June, down
from 50% in May but similar to his ratings from February through April.
...
Washington Post
7/5
Tea party
Democrats do exist
Is there such a thing as a tea party Democrat? The answer, it seems, is
yes. Polls show the group exists, but determining its actual impact is
difficult. ...
Gallup 7/5
Solid Majority of
Jewish Americans Still Approve of Obama
Jewish Americans gave President Barack Obama a 60% job approval rating in
June, down from 68% in May, but statistically unchanged from 64% in April.
...
Des Moines Register
7/3
Iowa Poll: Likely
GOP caucusgoers are educated, religious
Likely Iowa Republican caucusgoers are a highly educated bunch who are not
wildly out of step with the rest of America in their religious profile.
That's the stereotype-bucking picture that emerges of those who will get
the nation’s first crack at narrowing the Republican presidential field
early next year, based on demographic statistics gleaned from a Des Moines
Register Iowa Poll taken June 19 to 22 and four Iowa Polls from the 2008
caucus cycle. ...
Ron Brownstein
7/1
The Racial Fault
Line
... Huge gaps still routinely separate the preferences of whites and
minorities, not only in voting behavior but also in basic attitudes about
the role of government. The most recent Allstate/National Journal
Heartland Monitor survey shows, moreover, that the two demographic groups
diverge in their perspectives on an equally fundamental issue: whether the
nation’s rapidly growing minority population has too much, too little, or
the right amount of influence in the political system. ...
Kaiser Family Foundation (pdf)
6/30
Kaiser Health
Tracking Poll
The debate over how best to deal with the federal budget deficit continues
in Washington, and discussions of Medicare's financial future have been
closely tied to this debate. This month's Kaiser Health Tracking Poll
takes a look at the views of seniors and the public as they relate to
these discussions. ...
CBS News
6/30
Many say economy
is in permanent decline
In a sign of increasing pessimism about the direction of the U.S. economy,
roughly four in ten Americans now believes it is in permanent decline,
according to a new CBS News/New York Times poll. ...
CBS News
6/30
Most think
government should help homeowners in trouble
Most Americans think home ownership is an important part of the American
dream, a new CBS News/ New York Times poll shows - so much so, that most
also say the government should help homeowners in trouble with mortgage
payments as a means of improving the market. ...
Pew 6/29
Government Still
Faulted for Troop Support
As President Obama begins to draw down U.S. forces in Afghanistan, most
Americans continue to say that government support for troops returning
from war is falling short. ...
Gallup 6/29
Obama's
Afghanistan Pullout Plan Broadly Favored
Americans broadly support President Barack Obama's plan to begin
withdrawing U.S. forces in Afghanistan this year, with additional troops
scheduled to leave by the end of next summer and the remainder by 2014.
Nearly three-quarters, 72%, are in favor, while 23% are opposed. ...
Gallup 6/28
Bachmann in Strong
Position as She Enters 2012 Race
Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann, who formally announced her presidential
candidacy Monday in her hometown of Waterloo, Iowa, enters the race with
69% name recognition among Republicans and ties for the highest Positive
Intensity Score of any GOP candidate Gallup tracks. ...
McClatchy 6/28
Voters give Obama
lowest rating yet on economy
President Barack Obama is in a fragile position as the 2012 campaign
begins: Only 37 percent of registered voters approve of his handling of
the economy, his lowest rating ever, according to a new McClatchy-Marist
poll. ...
CBS News: Brian Montopoli
6/28
Alienated nation:
Americans complain of gov't disconnect
Americans see their leaders in Washington as overpaid agents of wealthy
individuals and corporations who are largely disconnected from the
concerns of average Americans. ...
Des Moines Register
6/27
Iowa Poll: Civil
unions are minefield for GOP candidates
Iowa Republicans' long reputation for being hostile to political
candidates who oppose ethanol subsidies isn't true today, if it ever was.
But the shoe fits when it comes to the conventional wisdom that candidates
in the nation's leadoff caucuses could have trouble if they support civil
unions for gay and lesbian couples, a new Des Moines Register Iowa Poll
shows. ...
Sun-Times
6/26
Cell phones throw
off poll takers
How do you accurately poll voters in an age when increasing numbers of
them own only a cell phone? "I worry about this more than anything else --
you can have a California number and still be living in Iowa," said Ann
Selzer, the only pollster to predict Barack Obama would win the Iowa
Caucuses by 7 percentage points. ...
Des Moines Register
6/25
Iowa Poll: Romney,
Bachmann in lead; Cain third
Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and Minnesota congresswoman Michele
Bachmann sit atop the standings in the year's first Des Moines Register
Iowa Poll on the Republican presidential field. ...
Gallup 6/24
Shift to More
Negative View of Libya Military Action
Americans are more likely to say they disapprove than approve of the U.S.
military action in Libya. That represents a shift from three months ago,
just after the mission began, when approval exceeded disapproval. ...
CBS News: Sarah Dutton
6/23
GOP 2012: It's
still too early for most voters
It's still early days for the 2012 presidential election, and while the
news media are avidly following the travel schedules, debate performances
and general comings and goings of various candidates and potential
candidates alike, most voters themselves have yet to focus on the election
or the potential field. What's more, that's typical for this point in time
in a presidential election cycle. ...
Pew 6/23
Pessimism About
National Economy Rises
With a growing number of Americans saying they have been hearing "mostly
bad" economic news, opinions about the current state of the national
economy remain grim. ...
AP 6/23
Economic Worries
Pose New Snags For Obama
Increasingly troubled by the economy, more Americans are convinced the
country is headed in the wrong direction and fewer approve of President
Barack Obama's economic stewardship. ...
Bloomberg 6/23
Romney Gets 59%
Favorable Rating From Republicans
Mitt Romney, the frontrunner in the Republican presidential race, is in
strong shape with his party's rank and file as the 2012 nomination race
enters a more heated phase. ...
Gallup 6/23
Americans Most
Confident in Military, Least in Congress
Americans continue to express greater confidence in the military than in
15 other national institutions, with 78% saying they have a "great deal"
or "quite a lot" of confidence in it. ...
Bloomberg 6/22
Americans Worse
Since Obama Elected
Two years after the official start of the recovery, the American people
remain pessimistic about their current economic circumstances and
longer-term prospects. ...
Gallup 6/22
Americans' Views
on Immigration Holding Steady
Americans in 2011 continue to show a slight preference for lower
immigration levels over keeping the levels the same, while a much smaller
percentage favors increased immigration. ...
Pew 6/21
U.S. Image in
Pakistan Following bin Laden Killing
Most Pakistanis disapprove of the U.S. military operation that killed
Osama bin Laden, and although the al Qaeda leader has not been well-liked
in recent years, a majority of Pakistanis describe his death as a bad
thing. Only 14% say it is a good thing. ...
Kaiser (pdf) 6/21
HIV/AIDS At 30: A
Public Opinion Perspective
... In 1987, two-thirds of Americans named HIV/AIDS as the most urgent
health problem facing the country, a share that has declined steadily over
the years, and sits at just 7 percent today. ...
Gallup 6/21
N.H. Debate Fails
to Shake Up GOP Presidential Race
Gallup Daily tracking finds no major shake-up in the GOP presidential
candidates' ratings among Republicans nationwide in the two weeks
surrounding a New Hampshire debate that featured seven of the candidates.
...
Pew 6/21
Record Number
Favors Removing Troops from Afghanistan
As President Obama prepares to announce his policy for drawing down U.S.
forces in Afghanistan, the percentage of Americans who favor removing the
troops as soon as possible has reached an all-time high in Pew Research
Center surveys. ...
Gallup 6/20
22% Are Hesitant
to Support a Mormon in 2012
Though the vast majority of Americans say they would vote for their
party's nominee for president in 2012 if that person happens to be a
Mormon, 22% say they would not, a figure largely unchanged since 1967. ...
Gallup 6/17
Congress' Job
Approval Retreats to 17%
Seventeen percent of Americans approve of the job Congress is doing, down
seven percentage points from May's 24% approval rating, but similar to
where it was in March and April. ...
Gallup
6/16
Voter Preferences
for Obama, 'Republican' Remain Close
Forty-four percent of
registered voters say they are more likely to vote for "the Republican
Party's candidate" and 39% for Barack Obama in the 2012 presidential
election, according to Gallup's June update. ...
Pew 6/16
Social networking
sites and our lives
Questions have been raised about the social impact of widespread use of
social networking sites like Facebook, LinkedIn, MySpace, and Twitter. Do
these technologies isolate people and truncate their relationships? Or are
there benefits associated with being connected to others in this way? ...
NBC News 6/16
Less than half of
GOP primary voters satisfied with field
... [W]ith about eight months until the first GOP nominating contests,
less than half of Republican primary voters -- 45% -- say they are
satisfied with their current crop of presidential candidates. ...
Gallup 6/15
Obama Approval
Rally Largely Over
President Obama's job approval rating averaged 46% for the week ending
June 12, a significant decline from his weekly averages for most of May
and nearly back to the level before Osama bin Laden's death on May 1. ...
Sacramento Bee
6/15
CA: Support
slipping for Jerry Brown, tax extensions
Gov. Jerry Brown still has public support for his tax plan, but the margin
has slipped, and so has his public approval rating, according to a Field
Poll released today. ...
Pew 6/14
Political Sex
Scandals
Most Americans attribute the series of public sex scandals in recent years
involving politicians more to the heightened scrutiny they face than to
lower moral standards among elected officials. ...
Gallup 6/14
Bachmann:
Above-Average Recognition, Intensity
Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann, who formally announced her presidential
candidacy at Monday night's Republican debate in New Hampshire, is
currently recognized by 62% of Republicans nationwide. Her Positive
Intensity Score of 18 essentially ties the better-known Mitt Romney's 19.
...
Adweek 6/14
Social Media, The
New Exit Poll?
... Polling has always been an important element to any electoral bid, but
now a new type of impromptu assessment is coming to the fore. Third
parties, such as analytics startup Likester, are carving out a space for
themselves by processing data that is instantaneously available. ...
Latino Decisions
6/14
Latinos divided on
Obama and immigration
The number of Latino voters who intend to support President Barack Obama
increased by 9% compared with those supporting the president in the
previous impreMedia/Latino Decisions poll, conducted two months ago.
However, the same group is profoundly divided in their opinions about the
Obama administration's actions on immigration policy. ...
CBS News 6/13
Most want Medicare
changes, but wary of GOP plan
A new CBS News poll shows that Americans have mixed feelings about what
should happen to Medicare: While 53 percent say the program needs
fundamental changes, 58 percent say it should continue the way it is set
up now. ...
Gallup 6/13
Romney Support Up
Republicans' support for Mitt Romney as their party's 2012 presidential
nominee has increased significantly to 24%, compared with 17% in late May.
...
Washington Post: Peyton M. Craighill
6/12
What matters to
GOP voters
... Large majorities of Republicans and GOP-leaning independents say
traits such as gender, race and religion would not matter in their vote
for president across a variety of traits tested in the latest Washington
Post-ABC News poll. ...
Pew 6/10
Views of Middle
East Unchanged by Recent Events
Major events in the Middle East -- including tensions between the U.S. and
Israel, growing political unrest in many Arab countries, and the death of
Osama bin Laden -- have had little effect on public attitudes toward the
region. ...
Marist (pdf) 6/9
Majority in
District Don't Want Cong. Weiner to Resign
As more salacious details about Congressman Anthony Weiner's sex scandal
are revealed, politicians from both parties are calling for his
resignation, but his constituents don't agree. ...
New York Times
6/9
Americans Still
Split on Global Warming
Judging from an annual survey by researchers at Yale and George Mason
universities, the American public is roughly as fractured in its attitudes
toward climate change today as it was last year. ...
Washington Post 6/9
Americans torn
over raising debt limit
A large majority of Americans say the U.S. economy would probably suffer
serious harm if Congress fails to give the federal government more
borrowing authority. But barely half support raising the government’s debt
limit, even if lawmakers also sharply cut spending. ...
CBS News 6/9
Most Republicans
don't want Palin to run for president
Most Republicans do not want to see former Alaska governor Sarah Palin
enter the presidential race, a new CBS News poll finds. ...
Gallup 6/9
Democratic Party
Affiliation Advantage Increases in May
In May, 45% of Americans identified as Democrats or said they were
independent but leaned Democratic, compared with 39% who identified as
Republicans or leaned Republican. ...
Fox News 6/8
Obama Approval
Drops, Romney Tops GOP Preference
The president’s job rating has returned to pre-bin Laden raid levels,
according to a Fox News poll released Wednesday. ...
Reuters 6/8
More oppose than
support Republican Medicare plan
More Americans oppose than support a Republican plan to revamp the
Medicare healthcare program for seniors, presenting a challenge to the
party ahead of next year's presidential and congressional elections. ...
Pew 6/7
More Blame Wars
for Nation's Debt
Far more Americans say that the cost of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
has contributed a great deal to the nation's debt than say that about
increased domestic spending or the tax cuts enacted over the past decade.
...
Gallup 6/7
Romney's Positive
Intensity Up; Santorum's Name ID Low
Newly announced presidential candidate Mitt Romney's Positive Intensity
Score among Republicans who recognize him is up to 17 this week,
essentially tying him with Michele Bachmann. ...
ABC News 6/7
Romney, Palin See
Boost; Obama Vulnerable
An announcement bump for Mitt Romney and a bus-tour boost for Sarah Palin
put the pair atop the field for the Republican presidential nomination.
But while their primary standings are similar, their broader prospects for
election look vastly different. ...
ABC News 6/6
Criticism of War
Eases, but Still a Majority
Public opposition to the war in Afghanistan has eased from its peak,
likely influenced by the killing of Osama bin Laden. But most Americans
continue to say the war has not been worth fighting -- and nearly
three-quarters favor a substantial withdrawal of U.S. combat forces. ...
Ronald Brownstein
6/6
Obama's Ratings
Settle Near 2008 Levels
Among favorable and unfavorable groups alike, President Obama's approval
ratings in the latest Allstate/National Journal Heartland Monitor poll are
returning to the levels of support he attracted in his 2008 election,
though the headwinds of economic slowdown will challenge his ability to
hold those gains. ...
Gallup 6/6
Republicans More
Unified Than Democrats on Abortion
As the 2012 Republican presidential contenders begin to hone their
campaign messages and court social-issues voters, a Gallup analysis
reveals the striking homogeneity of rank-and-file Republicans on abortion.
...
Boston Globe 6/6
MA: Support for
state health law rises
Support for the Massachusetts universal health care law has increased
since 2009, according to a poll of the state's residents -- even as the
law has become the subject of blistering attacks in national and
presidential politics, and health care costs soar. ...
Miller-McCune
6/5
On Immigration
Polls, a Lot of People Lie
UC Berkeley sociologist Alexander Janus says social desirability pressures
cause some liberals to lie about their true feelings on immigration --
even when asked in an anonymous poll. ...
Anchorage Daily News
6/5
Palin flaunts
Alaska; Alaskans unsure about her
Former Gov. Sarah Palin's bus touring around the Lower 48 had a big image
of the state of Alaska, and she's constantly talking up her home state.
But back home, her main initiatives as governor continue to be under
attack from fellow Republicans and her poll numbers aren't looking good.
...
Lake Research Partners (pdf)
6/3
Public Attitudes
on Family Planning
Public opinion
research over the past several years has consistently shown a remarkable
level of support for family planning services and an overwhelming
consensus that it should be widely accessible and free from restrictions.
...
Democracy Corps (pdf)
6/2
A Path to
Democratic Ascendancy on the Economy
... This report shows that Democrats can win in 2012 if they focus on the
new tough economic realities, offer a way to a better future, and show how
different the choices are that progressives and conservatives will make.
...
Alan I. Abramowitz
6/2
Will Jewish Voters
Abandon Obama in 2012?
[H]ow realistic is the belief that a substantial number of Jewish voters
would abandon their traditional loyalty to the Democratic Party out of
concern over Obama's support for the state of Israel? Based on an analysis
of Jewish public opinion and voting behavior over the past two decades,
the answer to this question appears to be that such a scenario is not very
realistic for at least three reasons. ...
Pew 6/2
Republican
Candidates Stir Little Enthusiasm
The emerging Republican presidential field draws tepid ratings. ... Of the
party's best-known possible candidates, only Mitt Romney has broad
potential appeal. ...
PPIC 6/2
Californians Say
Voters Should Have Voice in Budget
The vast majority of Californians think voters should have a say in budget
decisions this year, according to a statewide survey released today by the
Public Policy Institute of California. ...
New York Times: David Leonhardt
6/1
One Person, One
Vote? Not Exactly
Two economists, Brian Knight and Nathan Schiff, set out a few years ago to
determine how much Iowa, New Hampshire and other early-voting states
affected presidential nominations. ... The economists estimated that an
Iowa or New Hampshire voter had the same impact as five Super Tuesday
voters put together. ...
Pew 6/1
Japanese
Resilient, but See Economic Challenges Ahead
... The Japanese public applauds how the country's Self Defense Force has
responded to the March 11 earthquake and tsunami, but is highly critical
of the how the government and the Tokyo Electric Power Company have
handled the multiple disasters. ...
Pew 6/1
Top Reaction to
GOP Field -- 'Unimpressed'
Americans have decidedly negative reactions to the candidates running for
the Republican presidential nomination. Asked for a single word to
describe the GOP field, the top response is a variation on "unimpressed,"
with 42 mentions. ...
Charlie Cook 6/1
All in the Same
Boat
... But you don't have to look far to sense that congressional Republicans
have stepped in a deep pile of manure with their embrace of House Budget
Chairman Paul Ryan's proposal to convert Medicare into a voucher program.
Yet they seem to want to avoid looking at their shoes. ...
Herndon Alliance / Know Your Care (pdf)
6/1
Voters Do Not Want
ACA Repealed, Oppose Ryan Budget
A new national poll conducted by Anzalone Liszt Research on behalf of the
Herndon Alliance and Know Your Care shows that most voters oppose efforts
to repeal the new healthcare law. Even fewer want to prevent the law from
going into effect by defunding it, and there is strong opposition to the
Ryan plan's proposed changes to Medicare. ...
Mark Mellman
6/1
Iowa, New
Hampshire matter
... Since 1976, when proliferating primaries and caucuses became the basis
for selecting convention delegates, every single nominee but one, in both
parties, won either Iowa or New Hampshire. ...
Gallup 5/31
Newt Gingrich's
Image Slides Among Republicans
Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich's Positive Intensity Score
dropped to 6 in the two weeks spanning May 16-29, down from 11 for May
9-22. ...
Democracy Corps
5/27
New York's 26th is
not Alone
Republican leaders and conservative pundits have spun Democrat Kathy
Hochul's upset win in New York's 26th Congressional District as
exceptional . . . . But our national poll completed on Wednesday shows
that New York's 26th is not alone. It is an advance indicator of a sharp
pull back from Republicans, particularly those in the House. ...
Gallup 5/26
Romney's Appeal
Spans Issues, Palin Leads on Values
Mitt Romney, one of the two leaders for the 2012 Republican presidential
nomination, receives generally equal support across Republican political
issue groups. Sarah Palin, the other leader, has a more segmented appeal,
with greater support among Republicans most concerned about social and
moral issues. ...
Brendan Nyhan
5/26
Where Are the
Obama Scandals?
... Since Watergate, presidential and executive branch scandal has been an
inescapable feature of the American presidency, but the current
administration has not yet suffered a major scandal, which I define as a
widespread elite perception of wrongdoing. What happened, and what are the
odds that the administration's streak will continue? ...
Rhodes Cook 5/26
Will Obama Need to
Find His Inner 'Wilson?'
Take a poll of political pundits about next year’s presidential election,
and most at this point would probably predict that President Barack Obama
would win reelection, but with a reduced margin from 2008 in both the
popular and electoral vote. Yet if that actually happens, it would be an
historical rarity of the first order. ...
Gallup 5/26
Romney, Palin Lead
Reduced GOP Field for 2012
Mitt Romney (17%) and Sarah Palin (15%) now lead a smaller field of
potential Republican presidential candidates in rank-and-file Republicans'
preferences for the party's 2012 nominee. ...
Resurgent Republic
5/25
Government
Regulations and Economic Growth
As pessimism over the economy and job creation rises, voters clearly see
too many federal government regulations as more of an economic threat than
too few. ...
Kaiser Health News
5/25
Most Americans
Oppose GOP Plan To Cut Medicaid
Most Americans oppose the House Republicans' plan to overhaul and slash
funding of Medicaid, the state-federal program that covers 56 million
low-income people, according to a poll being released today. ...
Pew 5/24
More Concern about
Raising Debt Limit than Gov't Default
The public is concerned about both of the possible outcomes of the debt
limit debate -- raising the debt limit and failing to do so. But more say
they are very concerned about the possible consequences of raising the
debt limit than of not raising it. ...
Los Angeles Times
5/24
CA: Polls could
influence Prop. 8 legal battle, experts say
A series of recent polls suggesting a majority of Americans support the
right of gays to marry may influence the outcome of the legal dispute over
California's ban on same-sex marriages, some legal experts and gay rights
advocates predict. ....
Alfie Kohn 5/23
What parents
aren't asked in school surveys -- and why
... I find myself thinking about how much more -- and less -- there is to
polling than meets the eye whenever I come across one of those surveys
that school administrators like to distribute to parents. ...
Gallup 5/23
Americans Still
Split Along 'Pro-Choice,' 'Pro-Life' Lines
Americans are closely divided between those calling themselves
"pro-choice" and those who are "pro-life," now 49% and 45%, respectively,
in Gallup's 2011 update on U.S. abortion attitudes. ...
Michael I. Norton & Samuel R. Sommers
5/23
Jockeying for
Stigma
Our recent research reveals that white and black Americans agree that bias
against blacks was prevalent in the 1950's and 1960's. But while blacks
see such racism as continuing, whites tend to see it as a problem that has
been more or less "solved." If anything, many whites now believe that it's
anti-white bias that's on an upswing. ...
Ronald Brownstein
5/21
Romney's
Evangelical Problem
Mike Huckabee, judging by the early opinion polls, would have been among
the most formidable challengers to Mitt Romney, the putative front-runner
for the 2012 GOP presidential nomination. But Huckabee's departure from
the race, paradoxically, could make it more difficult for Romney to
prevail. ...
Whitman Insight Strategies
5/20
Speech Does Little
to Calm Fears over Libya Involvement
According to a poll taken by Whitman Insight Strategies just after
President Obama's major Middle East speech yesterday and ahead of today's
visit by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Americans remain
opposed to US military force involvement in Libya, and want their
Congressional representatives to vote against the Authorization of Use of
Military Force in that country. ...
Columbia Journalism Review
5/20
John Sides: What
we can - and can't - learn from early polls
The 2012 election is almost eighteen months away, but politics junkies are
already being treated to polls asking if people plan to vote for Barack
Obama in his re-election campaign, and testing how he fares against
specific Republican opponents. What can these polls tell us so far ahead
of the election, and what opportunities - or perils - do they create for
reporters? ...
Gallup 5/20
For First Time,
Majority of Favor Legal Gay Marriage
For the first time in Gallup's tracking of the issue, a majority of
Americans (53%) believe same-sex marriage should be recognized by the law
as valid, with the same rights as traditional marriages. ...
Pew Economic Mobility Project (pdf)
5/19
Economic Mobility
and the American Dream
Even as Americans acknowledge that the country is digging itself out of
recession, the economic downturn has had a severe impact on this nation's
psyche -- indeed it would appear that this recession's influence on public
psychology has been greater than that of any economic event since the
Depression. ...
Public Religion Research Institute
5/19
Majority of
Americans support same-sex marriage
A recent Religion and Politics Tracking Survey, conducted by Public
Religion Research Institute, is the third national poll in as many months
to find majority support for same-sex marriage. ...
Thomas F. Schaller
5/19
Obama's
Re-Election and the Democrats' '06 Senate Class
... [H]aving Obama rather than Bush in the White House may be a liability
to Harry Reid's quest to maintain his Senate majority, but having Obama
running for re-election at the top of the ticket could be a compensatory
asset. ...
Fox News 5/18
62% Support U.S.
Action in Afghanistan
While support for the war in Afghanistan remains steady, a majority of
American voters want U.S. troops to come home this summer as planned, if
not sooner, now that Usama bin Laden is dead. ...
Gallup 5/18
High Gas Prices
Cause Lifestyle Changes for Many
The slight majority of Americans, 53%, say they have responded to today's
steep gas prices by making major changes in their personal lives, while
46% say they have not. ...
Mark Mellman 5/18
Winning the
Medicare fight
Republicans, who have been quaking in fear as they contemplate the
political damage wreaked by their nearly unanimous embrace of Paul Ryan's
Medicare-destroying budget, breathed an undeserved sigh of relief after a
Gallup poll found voters evenly split between President Obama's
deficit-reduction plan and that offered by Rep. Ryan (R-Wis.). ...
Gallup 5/17
With Huckabee Out,
No Clear GOP Front-Runner
With Mike Huckabee out of the race for the 2012 GOP presidential
nomination, three well-known politicians, Mitt Romney, Sarah Palin, and
Newt Gingrich, emerge as leaders in Republicans' preferences. ...
Pew 5/17
Arab Spring Fails
to Improve U.S. Image
As President Obama prepares to make a major address on the tumultuous
changes spreading throughout the Middle East, a new survey finds that the
rise of pro-democracy movements has not led to an improvement in America's
image in the region. ...
Roll Call 5/17
Public Opinion
Strategies turns 20
... With 72 House Members and 19 Senators on its current client list, POS
has grown over the past two decades into the largest Republican polling
firm in the country. It has given founding partners Newhouse, Bolger, Bill
McInturff and Gene Ulm a front-seat view of the evolution of campaign
polling in the age of 24/7 news cycles and the need for instant results.
...
Ed Goeas 5/16
Voter concerns
remain strong
The latest edition of the POLITICO-George Washington University
Battleground Poll finds that the political environment should continue to
be a cause for concern for President Obama. ...
Celinda Lake, Daniel Gotoff, Matt Price
5/16
GOP's 2010 win
short-lived
President Obama's successful targeting of Osama bin Laden, nearly a decade
after 9/11, has provided him a much needed boost and set in stark relief
the differences between the two Parties on the central dimensions of
leadership, competence, resolve, and results. ...
Gallup 5/13
Americans Oppose
Raising Debt Ceiling
By a 47% to 19% margin, Americans say they would want their member of
Congress to vote against raising the U.S. debt ceiling, while 34% don't
know enough to say. ...
Alan Abramowitz
5/12
White Racial
Attitudes and Opinions of Obama
... Until now, debates about the influence of racial attitudes on opinions
of Obama have been severely hampered by a lack of survey data including
relevant questions. However, the availability of a new data set now makes
it possible to directly examine the impact of racial attitudes on whites'
evaluations of President Obama. ...
Gallup 5/12
Approval of
Congress, U.S. Satisfaction Rally
Americans' approval of Congress increased to 24% after the death of Osama
bin Laden, up from 17% in April, and by one percentage point the highest
it has been since January 2010. ...
AP 5/11
Obama's approval
rating hits highest point in 2 years
President Barack Obama's approval rating has hit its highest point in two
years -- 60 percent -- and more than half of Americans now say he deserves
to be re-elected, according to an Associated Press-GfK poll taken after
U.S. forces killed al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden. ...
PRRI 5/11
Celebrating Osama
bin Laden's Death
Six-in-ten (62%) Americans agree it is wrong to celebrate the death of
another human being, no matter how bad that person was. There is strong
agreement across party and religious lines. ...
Gallup 5/11
Americans More
Positive on Afghanistan
After the death of Osama bin Laden, a slim majority of Americans now say
things are going well for the United States in Afghanistan, a
four-percentage-point increase from late March. ...
NBC News: Mark Murray
5/9
Economy fears
temper Obama's bin Laden bump
In the days after Barack Obama ordered the successful mission to kill
Osama bin Laden, the president's approval rating on foreign policy issues
reached an all-time high, even as public opinion regarding his handling of
the economy sunk to the lowest point of his administration. ...
Gallup 5/9
Support for Third
U.S. Party Dips, but Is Still Majority View
Fifty-two percent of Americans believe the Republican and Democratic
parties do such a poor job of representing the people that a third party
is needed. ...
NYT: John Harwood
5/9
Obama Can't Depend
On New Poll Numbers
Politically speaking, President Obama walks taller now that American
commandos, on his order, found and killed Osama bin Laden. So what
difference does that make? ...
Gallup 5/9
Romney's GOP
Supporters Tilt Upscale; Palin's, Downscale
Republican college degree holders are more likely than those without a
degree to support Mitt Romney for the Republican presidential nomination
in 2012, 21% vs. 13%. ...
Pew 5/5
Why Are Gas Prices
Rising?
As gas prices soar, many Americans pin the blame on greed or a push for
higher profits among oil companies, speculators and oil-producing nations.
...
Washington Post
5/5
Number of 'birthers'
plummets
The number of Americans saying President Obama was born in another country
has been sliced in half, according to a new Washington Post poll. ...
Pew 5/4
Beyond Red vs.
Blue: The Political Typology
... For political leaders in both parties, the challenge is not only one
of appeasing ideological and moderate "wings" within their coalitions, but
rather holding together remarkably disparate groups, many of whom have
strong disagreements with core principles that have defined each party's
political character in recent years. ...
Reason Foundation
5/4
Cutting the Debt
Is Important to 96% of Americans
As the federal government rapidly approaches the $14.3 trillion debt
ceiling, 96 percent of Americans say it is important to reduce the
national debt, according to a new Reason Foundation-Rupe poll. ...
New York Times
5/4
For Obama, Big
Rise in Poll Numbers After Bin Laden Raid
Support for President Obama has risen sharply following the killing of
Osama bin Laden by American military forces in Pakistan, with a majority
now approving of his overall job performance, as well as his handling of
foreign policy, the war in Afghanistan and the threat of terrorism,
according to the latest New York Times/CBS News poll. ...
Gallup 5/3
Majority Say Bin
Laden's Death Makes America Safer
Americans express mixed views on how Osama bin Laden's demise will affect
U.S. national security, according to a Monday night USA Today/Gallup poll.
...
Pew 5/3
More Optimism
about Afghanistan
The killing of Osama bin Laden has bolstered the public's confidence on
two fronts: that the government can prevent a possible terrorist attack,
and that the U.S. will succeed in achieving its goals in Afghanistan. ...
CNN 5/3
Bin Laden killing
gives Obama boost
President Barack Obama is seeing a boost in his poll numbers on how he's
handling terrorism and the situation in Afghanistan, thanks to his Sunday
announcement that Osama bin Laden has been killed, according to a new
national survey. ...
Washington Post
5/3
Bin Laden killing
gives Obama quick but limited boost
In the immediate aftermath of the targeted killing of Osama bin Laden,
President Obama's approval rating has jumped higher, with big increases in
the number of Americans giving him high marks on dealing with terrorism
and the situation in Afghanistan. ...
Gallup 5/3
Americans Back Bin
Laden Mission
More than 9 in 10 Americans approve of the U.S. military action that
killed Osama bin Laden on Sunday, and 79% say his killing is "extremely"
or "very important" to the U.S. ...
New York Times
5/2
Americans Favor
Budget Cuts Over Raising Corporate Tax
While most Americans say corporations do not pay their fair share in
taxes, they still prefer cuts in government spending to increasing taxes
on corporations as a means of cutting the federal budget deficit,
according to a recent New York Times/CBS News poll. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
5/2
OBL and Public
Opinion
On the public opinion piece of the Osama bin Laden story, a few data
points follow: While some bump for the president is entirely possible, how
big it is and how long it lasts is an open question. ...
Pew 5/2
Bin Laden Largely
Discredited Among Muslim Publics
In the months leading up to Osama bin Laden's death, a survey of Muslim
publics around the world found little support for the al Qaeda leader. ...
Gallup 5/2
Optimism About
Future for Youth Reaches All-Time Low
Forty-four percent of Americans believe it is likely that today's youth
will have a better life than their parents, even fewer than said so amid
the 2008-2009 recession, and the lowest on record for a trend dating to
1983. ...
Isaac Wood, U.Va.
4/28
What Fuels
Presidential Approval?
With gas prices soaring as summer vacations near, many optimistic
Republicans and nervous Democrats are left wondering about what impact
those prices will have on President Obama's reelection chances. ...
PPIC 4/28
Californians Favor
Income Tax Hike -- For the Wealthiest
... To maintain
current funding for K–12 education, a strong majority favor raising income
taxes for the wealthiest Californians, but most oppose raising the state
sales tax or personal income taxes overall. ...
Kaiser (pfd)
4/27
Kaiser Health Tracking
Poll
While Congress and the president debate different approaches to reducing
the deficit, the latest Kaiser Health Tracking Poll indicates that the
public at large, and seniors specifically, are unfamiliar with the terms
Washington is using in talking about potential changes to Medicare to
address the deficit. ...
Gallup 4/27
Americans Divided
Over Ryan vs. Obama Deficit Plans
U.S. adults are evenly split in their reactions to the major
deficit-reduction plans being debated in Washington. Forty-four percent
prefer the Democratic plan proposed by President Barack Obama, while 43%
say Republican Rep. Paul Ryan's plan is better. ...
Pew 4/26
Latino Electorate
in 2010: More Voters, More Non-Voters
More than 6.6 million Latinos voted in last year's election --a record for
a midterm -- according to an analysis of new Census Bureau data by the Pew
Hispanic Center. ...
Gallup 4/26
More Than 6 in 10
Would Not Vote for Trump, Palin
More than 6 in 10 registered voters nationwide say they would definitely
not vote for Donald Trump or Sarah Palin for president in 2012,
significantly more than say the same about possible Republican candidates
Mitt Romney or Mike Huckabee, or about President Barack Obama. ...
Resurgent Republic
4/26
Spending Cuts,
Budget Reforms and the Debt Limit
President Obama's request that Congress pass another increase in the
federal debt limit and his argument that it should be a "clean" debt
ceiling increase without preconditions limiting spending meets with
overwhelming opposition from voters clearly frustrated by mounting federal
debt. ...
Washington Post
4/26
High gas prices
cut into driving habits, Obama's ratings
Soaring gasoline prices are biting into household incomes and nibbling at
Americans' fuel consumption -- and support for President Obama, according
to a Washington Post-ABC News poll. ...
USA Today 4/25
What kind of
president would Donald Trump make?
Republicans may be ready for a fling with Donald Trump, but a USA
TODAY/Gallup Poll shows they have reservations about installing him in the
White House. ...
Pew 4/25
Egyptians
celebrate dramatic political changes
Egyptians of all ages, from all walks of life, and parts of the country
continue to celebrate the dramatic political changes their nation has
undergone. Overwhelmingly, they say it is good that former president Hosni
Mubarak is gone. ...
Gallup 4/25
53% Worry About
Having Enough Money in Retirement
A majority of nonretired Americans do not think they will have enough
money to live comfortably in retirement, up sharply from about a third who
felt this way in 2002. ...
Los Angeles Times
4/24
Californians
support tax hikes to help close budget gap
California voters agree with Gov. Jerry Brown that tax increases should
help close the state budget deficit, and they want to vote on his plan for
raising the revenue, according to a new Times/USC Dornsife poll. ...
New York Times 4/22
Nation's Mood at
Lowest Level in Two Years
Americans are more pessimistic about the nation's economic outlook and
overall direction than they have been at any time since President Obama's
first two months in office, when the country was still officially ensnared
in the Great Recession, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News
poll. ...
New York Times
4/22
Poll Finds Lack of
Passion for Republican Candidates
With less than a year to go before the Iowa caucuses, Republican voters
have yet to form strong opinions about most of their potential candidates
for president in 2012, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News
poll. ...
Gallup 4/22
Worldwide, Blame
for Climate Change Falls on Humans
World residents
are more likely to blame human activities than nature for the rise in
temperatures associated with climate change. ...
Gallup 4/22
Huckabee, Trump,
Romney Pace GOP Field for 2012
Donald Trump debuts in a first-place tie in Gallup's latest update of
Republicans' preferences for the party's 2012 presidential nomination
among potential contenders. ...
Gallup 4/21
Obama Averages
46.7% Job Approval in Ninth Quarter
Barack Obama averaged 46.7% job approval in his ninth quarter in office,
slightly above his seventh- and eighth-quarter averages but still the
third lowest of his presidency. ...
Public Religion Research Institute
4/20
Plurality believe
capitalism at odds with Christian values
Overall more Americans believe that Christian values are at odds with
capitalism and the free market than believe they are compatible. ...
ABC News
4/20
Obama and Libya
War: Criticism Grows in Poll
Disapproval of Barack Obama's handling of the situation in Libya has grown
sharply in the past month, with the president facing criticism from
Americans who oppose U.S. military involvement -- but also from some of
those who say the mission's aim is too limited. ...
Washington Post
4/20
Americans oppose
entitlement cuts to deal with debt
Despite growing concerns about the country's long-term fiscal problems and
an intensifying debate in Washington about how to deal with them,
Americans strongly oppose some of the major remedies under consideration,
according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll. ...
Washington Post
4/19
Economic anxiety
threatens Obama, but he edges rivals
Deepening economic pessimism has pushed down President Obama's approval
rating to a near record low, but he holds an early advantage over
prospective 2012 rivals in part because of widespread dissatisfaction with
Republican candidates. ...
AP 4/18
Students
optimistic despite money doubts
For young people who came of age in the recession, the American dream of
life getting better for each new generation feels like a myth. ...
Gallup 4/18
Americans Split
About Whether Their Taxes Are Too High
Half of Americans believe the amount they pay in federal income taxes is
too high, while 43% consider it about right and 4% too low. ...
Democracy Corps (pdf)
4/15
Paul Ryan to
Seniors: Drop Dead
Congressman Paul Ryan's budget proposal, to be embraced by the House
Republican majority today, faces serious obstacles in winning public
support. ... The Republican deficit reduction plan does not even win
majority support, but when voters learn almost anything about it, they
turn sharply and intensely against it. ...
Gallup 4/14
Americans Trust
Governors, Business Leaders on Economy
Americans have the most confidence in their state governor and in business
leaders to do the right thing for the economy. President Obama comes in
third, followed by Republican and Democratic leaders in Congress. ...
Pew 4/12
The Deficit Debate
– Where the Public Stands
... In a number of surveys over the past several months, the Pew Research
Center has shown where the public stands on the budget deficit -- the
seriousness of the problem, views of competing policy proposals, and its
confidence in the policy-makers. ...
USA Today 4/12
Budget deal wins
support, but Americans wary
Americans overwhelmingly approve of the last-minute budget deal that
averted a partial government shutdown, a USA TODAY/Gallup Poll finds, but
the public is wary and divided about the tough steps that may follow as
officials try to curb spiraling deficits. ...
Gallup 4/12
Romney Not
Generating Strong Positive Intensity
Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who Monday announced the formation
of a presidential exploratory committee, is among the most recognized
Republicans who are thought to be most likely to run for president in
2012. At the same time, his Positive Intensity Score among Republicans
nationwide does not stand out. ...
Pew 4/11
Budget
Negotiations in a Word - 'Ridiculous'
The public has an overwhelmingly negative reaction to the budget
negotiations that narrowly avoided a government shutdown. A weekend survey
by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press and the Washington
Post finds that "ridiculous" is the word used most frequently to describe
the budget negotiations. ...
impreMedia 4/11
Dissatisfied with
political parties
A third of registered Latino voters think neither of the country's two
main political parties is trying to reach out to them. Those voters are
strongly undecided about who they will vote for in the 2012 presidential
election, as shown by the most recent impreMedia/Latino Decisions opinion
poll. ...
World Public Opinion
4/11
Democratization of Middle East Viewed as Positive for US
An overwhelming majority of Americans think that it would be positive for
the United States if the Middle East were to become more democratic and a
solid majority would favor this happening even if this resulted in the
country being more likely to oppose US policies. ...
Gallup 4/11
Americans Decry
Power of Lobbyists, Corporations, Banks
Lobbyists, major corporations, banks, and the federal government all have
too much power, according to Americans. ...
Pew 4/8
Tea Party: Better
Known, Less Popular
As the Tea Party has evolved from a grass-roots movement to become a major
force on Capitol Hill, public views of the Tea Party have grown more
negative. ...
FreedomWorks 4/7
Americans Demand
Bold Action on Budget
American voters want elected officials to take bold steps to decrease the
federal budget deficit and debt, and they won't accept any excuses for
failing to do so, according to a survey released today by FreedomWorks.
... A poll of 1,001 likely voters in 14 battleground swing states,
conducted April 2-4 by Luntz Global, found that 88% support taking action
now to reform Social Security and Medicare. ...
Pew 4/7
Economic Views
Sag, Obama Rating Slips
With the public growing more anxious about the economy and concerned about
overseas commitments, Barack Obama's job rating has edged lower. ...
Alan Abramowitz
4/7
A Declining
Constituency: Union Voters and the Democrats
... Along with the steady decline in the size of the union vote, there has
also been a fairly dramatic decline in the loyalty of union voters to the
Democratic Party since the 1960s. ...
Gallup 4/7
Americans' Views
of Trump
Americans have mixed opinions about businessman, television personality,
and potential presidential candidate Donald Trump, with 43% saying their
opinion is favorable and 47% holding an unfavorable opinion. ...
NBC 4/7
Democrats want
compromise, Republicans prefer resolve
As negotiators in Congress squabble over the size and scope of spending
cuts for the remainder of the fiscal year, Democrats and Republicans
outside the Beltway differ dramatically in how they want their leaders to
handle the budget stalemate, according to the latest NBC News/Wall Street
Journal poll. ...
Gallup 4/6
Americans Favor
Budget Compromise Over Shutdown
With Congress facing a midnight Friday deadline to pass a federal budget
before a partial government shutdown occurs, a new Gallup poll finds
Americans rooting for a deal. ...
Commonwealth Fund (pdf)
4/6
A Call for Change:
Public Views of the U.S. Health System
More than seven of 10 adults believe the U.S. health system needs
fundamental change or complete rebuilding. Most adults surveyed reported
difficulties accessing care, poor care coordination, and struggles with
the costs and administrative hassles of health insurance. ...
Quinnipiac U: Douglas Schwartz
4/5
The Difference a
Word Can Make
When pollsters ask people for their view on whether collective bargaining
should be limited for public employees should pollsters call collective
bargaining a "right"? At the Quinnipiac University Poll, this was the
question we faced when we were going into the field two weeks ago with an
Ohio poll as this issue was the big issue not just in Ohio but nationally
as well. ...
Pew 4/5
Goal of Libyan
Operation Less Clear to Public
Two weeks after U.S. and NATO forces began military operations in Libya,
the public's reaction to the situation remains mixed. Half (50%) say the
United States and its allies made the right decision in conducting
airstrikes in Libya, while 37% say it was the wrong decision -- a balance
of opinion virtually unchanged from a week ago. ...
Kaiser Family Foundation: Drew Altman
4/5
A Public Opinion Surprise
... If you listen to the inside debate you would think Medicaid is
America's most unpopular program. ... It turns out that the insider's view
of Medicaid is not the public's view at all. ...
Gallup 4/5
Huckabee in
Strongest GOP Position as Obama Announces
... Three possible Republican candidates -- Mike Huckabee, Mitt Romney,
and Newt Gingrich -- are currently best situated among Republicans
nationwide in terms of name recognition and Gallup Positive Intensity
Scores. ...
AP 4/5
Baby boomers see
financially shaky retirements
Baby boomers are starting to retire, but many are agonizing about their
finances and believe they'll need to work longer than they had planned, a
new poll finds. ...
Washington Post
4/4
Voters still split
on blame for possible shutdown
With a potential federal government shutdown closing in, the public
remains split down the middle when it comes to which side it would blame
for a work stoppage, according to a new Washington Post poll. ...
Pew 4/4
Public Would Blame
Both Sides if Government Shuts Down
With an April 8 deadline approaching for a possible shutdown of the
federal government, the public remains divided over whether congressional
Republicans or the Obama administration would be more to blame if a
shutdown occurs. ...
Gallup 4/4
Majority Say
Nuclear Power Plants in U.S. Are Safe
Despite concerns about a possible nuclear disaster in the U.S., 58% of
Americans think nuclear power plants in the U.S. are safe, while 36% say
they are not. ...
J. Ann Selzer
4/4
A wobble, not
lurch, to the right
National media
have been calling me recently to talk about Iowa's "lurch to the right"
and what that means for the Republican caucuses next year. The latest Iowa
Poll sheds some light on exactly whether there was, in fact, such a lurch.
...
Gallup 4/1
Obama Still Fares
Better on Foreign Than Domestic Issues
Americans continue to generally rate President Barack Obama's handling of
international issues better than his handling of domestic issues.
Forty-six percent approve of the president's handling of foreign affairs
and 44% his handling of Libya, while his highest rating on three domestic
issues is 40% for healthcare policy. ...
CNN 4/1
Americans flunk
budget IQ test
If you think cutting the government's budget is as easy as taking the ax
to some unpopular federal programs, a new national poll suggests that you
should think again. According to a CNN/Opinion Research Corporation survey
released Friday, most Americans think that the government spends a lot
more money than it actually does on such unpopular programs as foreign aid
and public broadcasting. ...
Gallup 4/1
More Back Unions
Than Governors in State Disputes
With political battles over state budgets and collective bargaining still
playing out to varying degrees in Wisconsin, Ohio, Indiana, Maine, and
several other states, 48% of Americans say they agree more with the unions
in these disputes, while 39% agree more with the governors. ...
Ron Brownstein
4/1
The Next America
... [I]n many states the key question for 2012 may be whether Republicans
can increase their advantage among whites enough to overcome what's likely
to be a growing share of the overall vote cast by minorities, who still
break preponderantly for Democrats. ...
Harvard (pdf)
3/31
Obama approval
ratings on the rise among Millenials
A new national poll of America's 18 to 29 year olds by Harvard's Institute
of Politics, located at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, now
finds a majority of Millennials (55%) approve of the job performance of
President Barack Obama, a rise of six percentage points from IOP polling
conducted last October. ...
Pew 3/31
Political
Knowledge Update
The public is generally aware of basic facts about several recent national
and international news stories, but is much less knowledgeable about
current politics in Washington, according to the Pew Research Center's
latest News IQ survey. ...
Gallup 3/29
Huckabee Continues
to Lead in Positive Intensity Tracking
Mike Huckabee continues to generate the strongest favorable reactions from
Republicans who recognize him, with a Positive Intensity Score of 26. Mitt
Romney and Michele Bachmann follow, with scores of 20. ...
Gallup 3/29
Americans Resist a
Major U.S. Role in Libya
Prior to President Barack Obama's speech to the U.S. on Libya Monday
night, 10% of Americans said the U.S. should take the lead role in the
multi-national military campaign in Libya and 29% said it should have a
major role. The plurality, 36%, favors a minor role for the U.S., while
22% think the country should withdraw entirely. ...
World Public Opinion
3/28
Rising Concern
about China's Increasing Power
Public concern is growing about China's increasing economic power,
according to a new global poll conducted for BBC World Service. ...
Pew
3/28
Modest Support for
Libya Airstrikes, No Clear Goal Seen
After several days of airstrikes on Libya by the United States and its
allies, the public has mixed reactions to the military operation. ...
Democracy Corps (pdf)
3/28
The Budget Battle
in the Republican-Obama Battleground
The Republicans' proposed budget cuts are in trouble in the 50 most
competitive Republican-held Congressional districts -- nearly all of which
gave a majority to Obama in the last presidential election. ...
Gallup 3/28
Water Issues Worry
Americans Most
With Earth Day about a month away, Americans tell Gallup they worry the
most about several water-related risks and issues among nine major
environmental issues. They worry least about global warming and loss of
open spaces. ...
Jonathan Bernstein
3/26
Wag What Dog?
A week into American and allied action in Libya, one political result is
already clear: Barack Obama has not benefited in the polls. If anything,
Obama's Gallup approval numbers are actually down a few points since
American involvement in Libya began. ...
Democracy Corps
3/25
Republican-Obama
Battleground Contested
... While Democrats still have work to do with independents and swing
voters, they have consolidated their base groups and are winning back
Obama voters who defected in 2010. Most importantly, Democratic and
Republican voters are equally enthusiastic about their preferences, a very
big change from earlier trends. ...
CNN 3/25
Most near nuclear
plants not ready for emergency
Most Americans who live within 50 miles of a nuclear power plant aren't
prepared for a nuclear emergency and don't think the police, hospitals and
other emergency services in their community are prepared either, according
to a new national poll. ...
Gallup 3/25
Huckabee Has
Slight Edge, Palin Down, in GOP Preferences
Mike Huckabee tops a large list of potential GOP presidential candidates
in current support for the party's 2012 nomination, with 19% of
Republicans saying they are most likely to back him. ...
Religion News Service
3/24
Most Americans
don't blame God for natural disasters
We may never know why bad things happen to good people, but most Americans
- except evangelicals - reject the idea that natural disasters are divine
punishment, a test of faith or some other sign from God, according to a
new poll. ...
Gallup 3/24
Worldwide Approval
of U.S. Leadership Tops Major Powers
The United States continues to achieve higher global approval ratings than
China, Russia, Japan, France, the United Kingdom, and Germany. Gallup's
worldwide surveys document a noticeable change in the U.S. global
leadership position from 2007 and 2008, when the U.S. trailed other major
powers. ...
Public Policy Institute of California
3/24
Support Slips for
California Special Election
Public support for a June special election on Governor Jerry Brown's plan
to extend temporary tax and fee increases has declined since he proposed
it in January, according to a statewide survey released today by the
Public Policy Institute of California. ...
Peter Ubel, Aaron Kay and Gavan Fitzsimons
3/23
Health law's
uncertainty problem
... Obama's health-care reform is unpopular not simply because it's
complicated, or because it increases government spending at a time when
people are in a budget-cutting mood. Rather, it's unpopular largely
because it doesn't seem inevitable. ...
Gallup 3/23
Pawlenty Begins
Race With 41% GOP Name Recognition
Former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, who this week became the first major
Republican to announce the formation of a presidential exploratory
committee, has 41% name recognition among Republicans nationwide. He
trails a number of other potential GOP presidential candidates on this
measure. ...
Pew 3/23
Obama Tests Well
at Start of Reelection Run
Barack Obama currently fares as well against a generic opponent in the
upcoming presidential election as George W. Bush did in April 2003, a time
when Bush's job approval rating was much higher than Obama's is today. ...
CBS News 3/23
Eight in 10
Americans want budget compromise
As President Obama and Democrats in Congress prepare to square off at
least one more time with Republicans over the federal budget, about eight
in 10 Americans would like to see both sides strike a compromise rather
than let the federal government shut down, according to the latest CBS
News poll. ...
CBS News 3/23
Nearly 7 in 10
support air strikes in Libya
Nearly seven in ten Americans support the use of military air strikes in
Libya in order to protect civilians from attacks by Libyan leader Muammar
Qaddafi, a new CBS News poll finds. ...
David Hill 3/23
Five items that
point to Obama loss
One of the best things about being a pollster is the process of discovery
-- figuring out how politics and elections work. Over time, I've
discovered five questions that predict whether an officeholder is likely
to be reelected. ...
Mark Mellman 3/23
Wirthlin: The
passing of a giant
With Richard Wirthlin's passing, the world of survey research lost a
pioneer, the business of political consulting lost a giant and I lost a
role model, whose creative mind, interpretative genius, personal grace and
commitment to his core values were unsurpassed. ...
Public Religion Research Institute
3/22
Catholic Attitudes
on Gay and Lesbian Issues
Catholics are more supportive of legal recognitions of same-sex
relationships than members of any other Christian tradition and Americans
overall. Nearly three-quarters of Catholics favor either allowing gay and
lesbian people to marry (43%) or allowing them to form civil unions (31%).
...
Bill McInturff and Lori Weigel
3/22
The Health Debate
Is Far From Over
... Being asked to assess differences following the passage of federal
health care legislation is revealing for what is absent -- a change in
attitudes. Our latest opinion research data almost a full year post
passage looks eerily similar to the data immediately following the law's
enactment. ...
Celinda Lake, David Mermin and Dan Spicer
3/22
Despite Deep
Divisions, Health Law Will Win Over Public
It may be difficult to see from here, but there is little doubt that the
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act will eventually take its
rightful place alongside the most cherished social programs such as Social
Security and Medicare. ...
American Enterprise Institute (pdf)
3/22
Update on
President Obama
The uptick in positive views of President Obama in late December and
January appears to be receding. President Obama's support among whites is
currently 39 percent, a particularly anemic showing. ...
Gallup 3/22
Americans Approve
of Military Action, 47% to 37%
A Gallup poll conducted Monday finds more Americans approving than
disapproving of the military action against Libya by the United States and
other countries. ...
Gallup 3/22
One Year Later,
Americans Split on Health care Law
One year after President Obama signed the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act into law, Americans are divided on its passage, with
46% saying it was a good thing and 44% saying it was a bad thing. ...
Pew
3/21
Opposition to
Nuclear Power Rises Amid Japanese Crisis
Not surprisingly,
public support for the increased use of nuclear power has declined amid
the ongoing nuclear emergency in Japan. Currently, 39% say they favor
promoting the increased use of nuclear power while 52% are opposed. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
3/21
Study Raises New
Questions for Opt-in Online Data
A paper published by the U.S. Census Bureau reinforces serious questions
about the reliability of surveys filled in by volunteer participants on
the internet – and extends those concerns in a new direction. ...
Gallup 3/21
Worries About
Economy, Budget Top Other Issues
Nearly three in four Americans (71%) say they worry about the economy "a
great deal," more than worry about 13 other issues Gallup measured in a
March 3-6 poll. ...
National Journal
3/18
Why Americans
still long for their own homes
... Even after a historic real-estate market upheaval that has sent
foreclosure rates skyrocketing and housing values plummeting,
homeownership retains a powerful, almost tidal, grip on the American
imagination. ...
Bob Moore and Marty Wilson 3/18
Not All Hope Is
Lost: Latinos & California Republicans
The growth of the Latino vote in California should compel the state's
Republican candidates to learn more about this growing demographic whose
share of the statewide vote has consistently grown. ...
ABC News 3/18
Support for Gay
Marriage Reaches a Milestone
More than half of Americans say it should be legal for gays and lesbians
to marry, a first in nearly a decade of polls by ABC News and The
Washington Post. ...
Kaiser (pdf) 3/18
Kaiser Health
Tracking Poll
Little has changed on the public opinion front since President Obama
signed the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act into law last March
23. More than half of Americans continue to report that they are confused
about the law and don’t understand how it will impact them personally. ...
Fox News 3/18
Most Voters Don't
Want Military Sent to Libya
... A Fox News poll released Thursday found 59% of voters think the
primary goal of U.S. foreign policy should "always be promoting
democracy." At the same time, 65% oppose the U.S. military getting
involved in Libya. ...
New York Times: Adam Clymer
3/18
Richard Wirthlin,
Pollster Who Advised Reagan, Dies at 80
Richard B. Wirthlin, the political consultant and pollster who for 20
years helped Ronald Reagan shape his political message and strategies,
both in presidential campaigns and in the White House, died on Wednesday
at his home in Salt Lake City. ...
Bloomberg 3/17
Consumer Comfort
in Drops to Lowest Level Since August
Consumer confidence plunged last week to the lowest level since August as
rising gasoline prices made Americans more pessimistic about the economic
outlook and their finances. ...
ABC News 3/17
State Budgets vs.
Soc. Security: What's the Real Third Rail?
While Social Security long has been seen as the deadly third rail of
American politics, an ABC News/Washington Post poll finds that state
budgets may in fact pose the greater hazard to ax-wielding lawmakers. ...
Pew 3/17
The Internet and
Campaign 2010
... Fully 73% of adult internet users (representing 54% of all US adults)
went online to get news or information about the 2010 midterm elections,
or to get involved in the campaign in one way or another. ...
USA Today 3/16
Fears of nuclear
disaster in U.S. rise after Japan quake
Americans' support for nuclear power has fallen, as 70% of those surveyed
in a new USA TODAY/Gallup Poll say they've grown more concerned about the
industry's safety based on the crisis unfolding at reactors in Japan. ...
Pew
3/16
Republicans Are
Losing Ground on the Deficit
As the budget debate moves into a crucial phase, far fewer Americans say
that Republicans in Congress have the better approach to the budget
deficit than did so in November, shortly after the GOP's sweeping election
victories. ...
Gallup 3/16
Expanding Energy
Output Still Trumps Green Concerns
Americans, by 50% to 41%, say the nation should prioritize the development
of energy supplies over protecting the environment when the two goals are
at odds. ...
Employee Benefit Research Institute
3/16
Retirement Survey:
Confidence Drops to Record Lows
The 21st wave of the Retirement Confidence Survey finds that Americans'
confidence in their ability to afford a comfortable retirement has plunged
to a new low at the same time that the recent declines in other retirement
confidence indicators appear to be stabilizing. ...
Washington Post
3/16
Sarah Palin losing
more ground among Republicans
Sarah Palin's ratings within the Republican Party are slumping, according
to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll, a potentially troubling sign for
the former Alaska governor as she weighs whether to enter the 2012
presidential race. ...
Sacramento Bee
3/16
CA: Jerry Brown
has voter support for extending taxes
Gov. Jerry Brown has voter support for calling a June special election and
extending higher taxes, but his window of opportunity may close soon,
according to results from the latest Field Poll. ...
Mark Mellman 3/16
The politics of
cutting budgets
... Understanding voter sentiment on budget issues requires appreciating
contradictions -- Americans want to cut the budget in general, but they
oppose cutting almost everything in specific. ...
David Hill 3/16
2012 will be about
Obama
... The 2012 election will be a reelection contest. It will focus narrowly
on the incumbent. Has Barack Obama handled the presidency well enough to
deserve reelection? ...
Gallup 3/15
Huckabee, Bachmann
Have Most Intense Following
Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee leads the field of possible GOP
presidential candidates in "positive intensity" among Republicans
nationwide. ...
Washington Post
3/15
Budget impasse
cements disapproval of Washington
The early battles in Washington this year have cemented the public's
disapproval of the political system and the country's leadership, with
confidence in congressional Republicans sagging and majorities
disapproving of how President Obama is handling top domestic issues,
according to a new Washington Post-ABC News poll. ...
Pew
3/14
Public Wary of
Military Intervention in Libya
The public by a wide margin says the United States does not have a
responsibility to do something about the fighting between government
forces and anti-government groups in Libya. ...
ABC News 3/14
Support for a
Libyan No-Fly Zone Comes with Questions
More than half of Americans support U.S. participation in creating a
no-fly zone over Libya, but support for unilateral U.S. military action is
lower. ...
Gallup 3/14
Concerns About
Global Warming Stable at Lower Levels
Americans continue to express less concern about global warming than they
have in the past, with 51% saying they worry a great deal or fair amount
about the problem. ...
Bloomberg: Albert Hunt
3/13
Trickle-Down
Misperceptions Muddle Debt Debate
... Politicians of both parties have done a poor job of educating the
public, and voters are sending conflicting, and in some cases, misguided,
messages. A Bloomberg National Poll published last week, in line with
other surveys, is instructive. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
3/12
Japan's Nuclear
Crisis May Resonate in the U.S.
The crisis at the Fukushima and Daini nuclear plants in Japan comes at a
sensitive time for an industry that's been looking for new life in the
United States. ... Accidents matter: In 1988, two years after the
Chernobyl disaster, just 30% of Americans in a Harris poll supported
building more nuclear power plants in this country. ...
Gallup 3/11
Congressional
Approval Back Below 20%
Congress' approval rating is down to 18% after being in the 20% range the
first two months of the year, and is essentially back to where it was just
after last November's midterm elections. ...
Gallup 3/10
Concern About
Economy Rises to 12-Month High
Seventy-two percent of Americans cite some aspect of the U.S. economy as
the "most important problem" facing the country today. This is the highest
net mention of the economy since February 2010. ...
Bloomberg 3/10
Obama Lacks
Economic Strategy
Americans say President Barack Obama lacks an effective strategy for
improving the U.S. economy. They have much less confidence in the
Republican vision for success. ...
Reuters 3/9
Americans see U.S.
on wrong track
Americans' confidence in the way the country is going has slumped to a
two-year low in the last month, and one pollster blamed soaring gas
prices. ...
Bloomberg 3/9
Americans Oppose
Republican Attack on Unions
Americans reject Republican efforts to curb bargaining rights of unions
whose power they say is dwarfed by corporations, a Bloomberg National Poll
finds. ...
Bloomberg 3/9
Government
Shutdown Opposed by Americans
Americans are sending a message to congressional Republicans: Don't shut
down the federal government or slash spending on popular programs. ...
Gallup 3/9
Americans' Message
to States: Cut, Don't Tax and Borrow
Of seven possible ways to balance their own state's budget, Americans are
most likely to favor cutting back on state programs (65%) and reducing the
number of state workers (62%). ...
Resurgent Republic (pdf)
3/9
Voters to
Congress: Cut Federal Spending Now
Most registered voters support efforts to cut federal spending now. They
want those cuts to begin in this fiscal year and not wait until the next.
...
Mark S. Mellman
3/9
Warnings from
Wisconsin
Wisconsin is flashing a big red (or better blue) warning light to
Republicans everywhere -- uncompromising pursuit of an extreme agenda will
hurt, badly. ...
David Hill 3/9
Hearings won't
change many minds
... Non-Muslims already possess fairly robust opinions about Islam and its
relationship to terrorism. Muslims have already made up their minds, too.
So why would either side be interested in what the president or Congress
has to say? ...
MAPOS (pdf) 3/8
Mosques Help
Muslims Integrate into Political Life
... A large scale national survey of the Muslim American population finds
that involvement with the mosque, and increased religiosity increases
civic engagement and support for American democratic values. ...
National Journal
3/8
Poll Shows
Americans Can Handle End-of-Life Chat
Americans say they are not squeamish about death, with an overwhelming
percentage supporting informed public discussion of the issue, according
to a National Journal-sponsored survey. ...
Brown University
3/7
Weak supporting
evidence
Experiments by Brown University psychologists have produced positive
evidence that people often think about positive evidence the wrong way --
if it is weak. ...
Gallup 3/7
Lack of GOP
Front-Runner for 2012 Is Atypical
The wide-open battle for the 2012 Republican presidential nomination --
with nearly a three-way tie among Mike Huckabee, Sarah Palin, and Mitt
Romney -- is quite different from the typical pattern observed in past
Republican nomination contests. ...
World Public Opinion
3/7
Positive Views of
Brazil on the Rise in BBC Poll
Positive views of Brazil have sharply improved in the annual BBC World
Service Country Rating Poll of 27 countries around the world. ... Views of
the US continued their overall improvement in 2011. ...
Wisconsin Policy Research Institute
3/6
Highly Polarized
Wisconsinites Split Over Walker Plan
Wisconsinites are deeply divided over Gov. Scott Walker's plans regarding
public employee benefits, wages and unions, according to a Wisconsin
Policy Research Institute poll showing 51 percent somewhat or strongly
opposed and 46 percent somewhat or strongly in favor. ...
World Public Opinion
3/3
Federal Budget
Proposals
An innovative study has found that when a representative sample of the
American public was presented the federal budget, they proposed changes
far different from those the Obama administration or the Republican-led
House have proposed. ...
Pew
3/3
Fewer Angry at
Government, But Discontent Remains High
The public
remains deeply frustrated with the federal government, but fewer Americans
say they are angry at government than did so last fall. ...
NBC News: Mark Murray
3/3
Voters
deficit-worried but wary of cuts
As politicians in Washington -- and across the country -- seek to cut
spending to reduce their budget deficits, the latest NBC News/Wall Street
Journal poll finds that the American public is divided about how far they
should go. ...
McClatchy 3/2
Southern
Republicans prefer Huckabee for 2012
Less than a year before the South's first presidential primary, a new poll
shows former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee leading a field of prospective
Republican candidates among Southern voters. ...
Mark Mellman 3/2
Scott Walker's
wacky world
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker's (R) jihad against public employee unions is
about 30 years late and likely to make Republicans even less popular with
voters, who endorse collective bargaining rights for public employees --
professionals for whom they have abiding respect. ...
New York Times
3/1
Majority in Poll
Back Employees In Public Unions
As labor battles erupt in state capitals around the nation, a majority of
Americans say they oppose efforts to weaken the collective bargaining
rights of public employee unions and are also against cutting the pay or
benefits of public workers to reduce state budget deficits, according to
the latest New York Times/CBS News poll. ...
Des Moines Register
2/28
Iowa Poll: Palin's
favorability rating slips
Sarah Palin's popularity has declined among the very voters the former
Alaska governor would need to impress first were she to seek the 2012
Republican nomination for president, The Des Moines Register's new Iowa
Poll shows. ...
Frank Newport
2/27
What's lost in the
House budget cuts
The House-passed budget proposal includes $150 million in cuts for U.S.
Census Bureau operations. These are penny-wise and pound-foolish. ...
Wall Street Journal: Carl Bialik
2/25
Pollsters Struggle
for Accurate Picture of Mideast
At the height of this month's protests in Egypt, pollsters phoned hundreds
of Egyptians on their cellphones and landlines to ask them, among other
things, who should be the next president of the country. ...
Gallup 2/25
Mississippi Rates
as the Most Conservative U.S. State
Mississippi is home to the largest percentage of conservatives among U.S.
states, with a slim majority identifying their political views as
conservative. ...
Bloomberg 2/24
Consumer Comfort
Increases to Highest Level Since 2008
Consumer confidence climbed last week to the highest level since April
2008 as Americans grew less pessimistic about their finances. ...
Kaiser (pdf) 2/24
Health Tracking
Poll
Public opinion on health reform remains dug in this month, with the public
roughly divided on the new law and partisans holding opposite views, a
pattern that has been in place since passage last March. ...
Gallup 2/24
Neither Party Has
Edge on Federal Budget Dealings
Americans are closely divided over whether the Republicans in Congress
(42%) or President Obama and the Democrats (39%) are doing the better job
in the current efforts to agree on a new federal budget. ...
Pew 2/23
The Tea Party,
Religion and Social Issues
... A new analysis by the Pew Research Center's Forum on Religion & Public
Life finds that Tea Party supporters tend to have conservative opinions
not just about economic matters, but also about social issues such as
abortion and same-sex marriage. ... And they draw disproportionate support
from the ranks of white evangelical Protestants. ...
Gallup 2/23
DC, HI Still Most
Approving of Obama; All States Decline
Residents of
Hawaii gave native son President Barack Obama the highest average 2010 job
approval rating (66%) of any of the 50 states, surpassed only by the 84%
Obama received in the District of Columbia. ...
David Hill
2/23
Shutdown won't top
the polls
With the trains rolling toward a collision on the budget and a federal
government shutdown looming, isn't it reasonable to assume that the budget
and deficit will become dominant issues in this election cycle? ...
Gallup 2/22
Scaling Back State
Programs Is Least of Three Fiscal Evils
As Wisconsin and numerous other states struggle to reduce untenable budget
deficits, a new USA Today/Gallup poll finds that not one of three major
fiscal strategies available to state lawmakers is very popular. ...
USA Today 2/22
61% oppose limits
on union bargaining power
The public strongly opposes laws taking away the collective bargaining
power of public employee unions as a way to ease state financial troubles,
according to a new USA TODAY/Gallup Poll. ...
Washington Post
2/22
Whites without
college degrees pessimistic about economy
The deep recession has had a profound effect on virtually every segment of
the country's population. But if there is an epicenter of financial stress
and frustration, it is among whites without college degrees. ...
Commonwealth Fund
2/21
Affordable Care
Act Sets Nation on Right Course
More than nine of 10 leaders in health and health care policy believe the
Affordable Care Act sets the right course for health reform, according to
a new survey. ...
Gallup 2/21
Number of Solidly
Dem States Cut in Half From '08 to '10
Gallup's analysis of party affiliation in the U.S. states shows a marked
decline in the number of solidly Democratic states from 2008 (30) to 2010
(14). The number of politically competitive states increased over the same
period, from 10 to 18, with more limited growth in the number of leaning
or solidly Republican states. ...
New York Times
2/18
Many See Economy
Improving, but Not for Them
Americans are becoming more optimistic about the prospects for the
economy, but are still concerned about their own financial situation. ...
Religion News Service
2/18
Most Americans
support congressional probe on Muslims
Americans haven't heard much about upcoming congressional hearings on the
radicalization of U.S. Muslims, yet more than half think it's a good idea,
and nearly as many believe Muslims here haven't done enough to fight
extremists in their midst, according to a new poll. ...
Gallup 2/18
Americans Continue
to Rate Iran as Greatest U.S. Enemy
Americans are most likely to mention Iran when asked which country they
consider to be the United States' greatest enemy. China and North Korea
tie for second, with Afghanistan and Iraq rounding out the top five. ...
Pew
2/17
Unions Seen as
Good for Workers, Not Competitiveness
The favorability ratings for labor unions remain at nearly their lowest
level in a quarter century with 45% expressing a positive view. Yet the
public expresses similar opinions about business corporations – 47% have a
favorable impression – and this rating is also near a historic low. ...
Thomas F. Schaller
2/17
The Latino
Threshold
... First, as the white share of the electorate shrinks, the share of the
Latino vote Republicans need to remain competitive will gradually inch
higher. It is axiomatic that if one party attracts a minority share of
votes from any group or subset, if that subset is growing as a share of
the electorate these losses are magnified. ...
Globe and Mail
2/16
Do polls harm
democracy or serve the public interest?
Two seasoned pollsters have written a spirited defence of their practices,
warning that limiting political polls would allow politicians and even the
media to "push their own distorted view of public opinion." ...
Pew 2/16
Split Verdict On
Changes in Family Structure
The American public is sharply divided in its judgments about the sweeping
changes in the structure of the American family that have unfolded over
the past half century. About a third generally accepts the changes; a
third is tolerant but skeptical; and a third considers them bad for
society. ...
CBS News 2/16
Most Americans
Uneasy About the U.S. Economy
Most Americans believe the U.S. is still in an economic recession, but
their optimism about the economic future is increasing, according to a new
CBS News poll. ...
David Hill 2/16
Jobs won't
dominate the 2012 agenda
... I'm not predicting that the economy won't be the No. 1 issue in 2012,
but I foresee with high probability that the issue agenda will flatten out
as competing issues rise. ...
Gallup 2/15
Americans Split on
Whether Egypt Will Spur Democracy
Americans are about evenly divided, 47% to 44%, in their views of whether
the recent events in Egypt will result in democracy taking hold in other
Middle Eastern countries. ...
Democracy Corps (pdf)
2/15
Winning the Budget
Debate
The Republican assault on the budget is starting to lose the country --
just as they unveil the scale of their cuts and the specific targets. ...
Gallup
2/15
Americans Remain
Divided on Defense Spending
At a time when the Obama administration and Secretary of Defense Robert
Gates have called for a $78 billion reduction in defense spending over the
next five years, Americans lean toward the position that the government is
spending too much on national defense rather than too little. ...
Washington Post
2/14
Americans rank
transportation needs high
Upkeep of roads, bridges and transit systems is a high priority to an
overwhelming margin of Americans, but by an even greater margin they don't
want to pay more for it, according to a survey that will be released this
week. ...
The Canadian Press
2/14
Pollsters advise
voters to be wary of polls
Canada's notoriously competitive pollsters have some surprisingly uniform
advice about the parade of confusing and conflicting numbers they're about
to toss at voters ahead of a possible spring election: Take political
horse race polls with a small boulder of salt. ...
Gallup 2/14
China Surges in
Americans' Views of Top World Economy
By 52% to 32%, Americans are more likely to name China than the United
States as the leading economic power in the world today, with Japan a
distant third at 7%. ...
Pew 2/11
Tea Party's Hard
Line on Spending Divides GOP
The divisions among House Republicans over how deeply to cut federal
spending reflect fundamental differences within the GOP base. ...
impreMedia 2/11
Immigration,
Economy Are Top Concerns for U.S. Latinos
... When asked
what are the most important issues facing the Latino community that
Congress and the President should address, respondents ranked immigration,
47% as top priority followed by the economy 44%. ...
Chicago Tribune
2/11
Chicago: Poll
shows Emanuel with big lead in mayoral race
A new Chicago Tribune/WGN poll shows former White House chief of staff
Rahm Emanuel closing in on becoming Chicago's next mayor -- possibly
without any runoff election. ...
Alan Abramowitz
2/10
Obama's Advantage
... Barack Obama will be seeking reelection as a first term incumbent and
first term incumbents rarely lose. ... Jimmy Carter in 1980 was the only
first term incumbent party candidate in the past century to lose and it
took a devastating combination of recession, inflation, and public
frustration over the seemingly endless Iran hostage crisis to bring him
down. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
2/10
Economic
Sentiment: Driving in a Blizzard
Students of the
public mood should keep an eye right now on two factors above all: The
pace of job creation – and the price of gasoline. Both are critical in
terms of economic attitudes, which in turn are an essential element of the
public's broader sentiment on political, policy and social issues alike.
...
Pew
2/10
Changing Views of
Federal Spending
The public's
views about federal spending are beginning to change. Across a range of
federal programs, Americans are no longer calling for increased spending,
as they have for many years. ...
Gallup 2/10
Republicans Remain
Reticent to Approve of New Congress
Republicans give Congress lackluster approval ratings -- as do the rest of
Americans -- despite their party's increased share of power. ...
Gallup 2/9
China Tops List of
Countries Vitally Important to U.S.
Seven out of 10 Americans say what happens in China is vitally important
to the U.S., putting China at the top of 12 countries Gallup asked
Americans to rate on this dimension, significantly ahead of North Korea
and Iran. ...
ABC7 2/9
Chicago: Emanuel
leading mayor's race
ABC7's exclusive poll on the Chicago mayor's race provides a snapshot of
how the candidates are doing as we head into the final two weeks of the
campaign. Rahm Emanuel's 54% share in the survey suggests an overwhelming
lead. ...
Gallup 2/9
Obama's Approval
Rating on Deficit Sinks to New Low
President Barack Obama's approval rating for handling the federal budget
deficit has gone from bad to worse in recent months, even as his ratings
on all other major national issues have generally held steady. ...
Pew
2/8
No Consensus on
How Egypt Protests Will Affect U.S.
Americans do not have a clear point of view on how the massive
anti-government protests in Egypt will affect the United States. ...
Gallup 2/7
Americans
Sympathetic to Egyptian Protesters
Most Americans support the protesters who have called for a change in the
government in Egypt, with 82% saying they are sympathetic to the
protesters (including 42% who are very sympathetic), while 11% are
unsympathetic. ...
Gallup 2/7
Americans Lean
Toward Revising No Child Left Behind
As the Obama administration and Congress ponder the fate of the No Child
Left Behind Act, Americans are inclined to retain it but not necessarily
in its present form. ...
CBS News: Jennifer De Pinto
2/6
Ronald Reagan's
Presidency: A Polling Retrospective
... In the fall of 1988, as Reagan's presidency was ending, 60 percent of
Americans approved of the job he was doing; just 30 percent disapproved.
Among recent U.S. presidents, only Bill Clinton has exited the presidency
with a higher approval rating. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
2/4
Reagan at 100:
Rosy Retrospection
... Reagan was transformational, igniting a departure of conservative
Democrats from their party to his; the "Reagan Revolution" lasted a
generation. ... But "one of the most popular presidents in American
history?" ...
Democracy Corps (pdf)
2/4
The Economic
Narrative in the 'State of the Union'
Dial testing and follow-up discussions with 50 swing voters in Denver,
Colorado showed that President Obama's 2011 State of the Union, for the
most part, struck a powerful chord as he described his economic vision for
the country. ...
Gallup 2/4
Obama's Ratings
More Polarized in Year 2 Than Year 1
President Barack Obama's job approval ratings were even more polarized
during his second year in office than during his first, when he registered
the most polarized ratings for a first-year president. ...
German Marshall Fund of the United States
2/3
Governments
Receive Low Marks On Immigration
A new public opinion survey out today shows that as North American and
European countries continue to recover from the global economic crisis,
there is a nearly consensus view that governments are managing immigration
poorly. ...
WorldPublicOpinion.org
2/3
Public Shows How
it Would Cut the Budget Deficit
A new study finds that when average Americans are presented the federal
budget in some detail, most are able to dramatically reduce the budget
deficit and resolve the Social Security shortfall. ...
Rhodes Cook 2/3
Obama and
Reelection: One Term or Two?
When it comes to presidents and reelection, two things seem clear. If they
appear to be in control of events, they win. If events seem to be
controlling them, they lose. ...
Public Agenda
2/3
Slip-Sliding Away:
The Economy and the American Dream
Despite signs of recovery from the Great Recession, 4 in 10 Americans find
themselves living lives of constant economic struggle and worry, not just
about paying their bills today, but about whether they'll keep a
middle-class life in the long term, according to a new Public Agenda
survey. ...
Natural Resources Defense Council (pdf)
2/2
Americans want the
EPA to do more, not less
Almost two thirds of Americans (63 percent) say "the EPA needs to do more
to hold polluters accountable and protect the air and water," versus under
a third (29 percent) who think the EPA already "does too much and places
too many costly restrictions on businesses and individuals." ...
Mark Mellman
2/2
SOTU: Well liked
but ineffective
History, as I recounted in excruciating detail last week, would predict
little bounce for President Obama from his widely praised State of the
Union. So how'd he do? ...
Gallup 2/2
Alternative Energy
Bill Does Best Among Eight Proposals
Of eight actions Congress could take this year, Americans most favor an
energy bill that provides incentives for using alternative energy (83%),
an overhaul of the federal tax code (76%), and speeding up withdrawal of
U.S. troops from Afghanistan (72%). ...
McLaughlin & Associates (pdf)
1/31
National Survey
Results
Although President Obama has improved his ratings, he still has
significant negatives. Republicans have an advantage over Democrats for
U.S. Congress, but many voters are once again undecided in their future
choice for Congress in 2012. ...
Washington Post
1/31
Polls do a number
on Japan's leaders
The people of Japan love opinion polls that measure the popularity of
their prime minister. The problem is, they almost never love the prime
minister himself. ...
Gallup 1/31
Americans Believe
GOP Should Consider Tea Party Ideas
About 7 in 10 national adults, including 88% of Republicans, say it is
important that Republican leaders in Congress take the Tea Party
movement's positions and objectives into account as they address the
nation's problems. ...
Washington Post 1/29
More in U.S. grow
wary of globalization
A growing number of Americans consider the accelerating trend toward
globalization a bad thing for the United States. At the same time, a
majority now sees being the world's No. 1 economic power as an important
goal. ...
Gallup 1/28
The State of the
Union Speech and Public Opinion
Gallup reviews public opinion on 19 issues raised in President Obama's
2011 State of the Union address. ...
Resurgent Republic
1/27
Independents Look
For Tangible Results After SOTU
Voters had a mostly positive view of President Barack Obama's State of the
Union address, but his dial test approval tended to drop among
Independents when he proposed additional Federal spending. ...
Gallup 1/27
GOP Image
Net-Positive for First Time Since 2005
Americans' opinions of the Republican Party have improved to the point
where now more have a favorable than unfavorable opinion of the party. ...
PPIC 1/27
CA: Support for
Special Election, Shift to Local Gov'ts
Two-thirds of Californians say a special election on Governor Jerry
Brown's tax and fee proposal is a good idea, and a majority are generally
satisfied with his budget plan. ...
ABC: Gary Langer 1/26
Obama: The
Disconnect
President Obama's speech last night reminded me of what I'll call his
disconnect problem: Not a personal one, and not even so much a policy one,
but one that cuts to basic political philosophy. It's about the size and
role of government in society. ...
Democracy Corps (pdf)
1/26
Obama's Vision
Inspires Confidence
Dial testing and follow-up discussions with 50 swing voters in Denver,
Colorado, showed that President Obama's 2011 State of the Union struck a
powerful chord as he described his economic vision for the country. ...
Gallup 1/26
Opposition to Cuts
in Education, Social Security, Defense
Prior to the State of the Union address, a majority of Americans said they
favor cutting U.S. foreign aid, but more than 6 in 10 opposed cuts to
education, Social Security, and Medicare. ...
CBS 1/25
High Marks for
Obama's State of the Union Speech
An overwhelming majority of Americans approved of President Obama's
overall message in his State of the Union on Tuesday night, according to a
CBS News Poll of speech watchers. ...
CNN 1/25
Over half of
speech watchers have very positive reaction
A majority of Americans who watched President Obama's State of the Union
address said they had a very positive reaction to his speech, according to
a poll of people who viewed Tuesday night's address. ...
Kaiser 1/25
The Public's
Health Care Agenda for the 112th Congress
Though the public remains divided on health reform overall, opposition to
the new law ticked upward in January as Republicans ramped up efforts to
repeal it, according to a survey conducted by researchers from the Kaiser
Family Foundation and the Harvard School of Public Health. ...
Gallup 1/25
Post-State of
Union Approval Uptick Would Be Atypical
U.S. presidents rarely see a spike in public support after their delivery
of State of the Union addresses. ...
Women's Voices, Women Vote (pdf)
1/24
Another Look At
Health Care
As Democrats come together and map out strategies to reclaim the country,
research shows they need to put those voters who put them in power in 2006
and 2008 in the center of the narrative. ...
Gallup
1/24
Americans Link Gun
Laws, Mental Health to Mass Shootings
Monday's scheduled arraignment of Jared L. Loughner, the man accused of
killing six people and wounding more than a dozen others in Tucson on Jan.
8, again raises the issue of what can be done to prevent mass shootings.
...
New York Times: Charles M. Blow
1/22
Obama's Gun Play
President Obama is under renewed pressure from his base to demonstrate
that he is, indeed, a principled man of unwavering conviction rather than
a pliant political reed willingly bent and bowed by ever-shifting winds.
This time the issue is gun control. ...
Washington Post: Jon Cohen
1/21
Few say U.S.
well-positioned to compete in global economy
Barely more than a third of all Americans rate the country's ability to
compete economically in positive terms, according to a new Washington Post
poll. ...
Gallup 1/21
Obama Averages
46.7% Job Approval in Second Year
Barack Obama averaged 46.7% job approval in his second full year in
office, spanning Jan. 20, 2010-Jan. 19, 2011. That places Obama's approval
on the low end compared with other presidents elected to office since
World War II -- similar to the averages of Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton,
but better than Ronald Reagan's historical low second-year average. ...
New York Times
1/21
Wariness About
Cutting Entitlements
As President Obama and Congress brace to battle over how to reduce chronic
annual budget deficits, Americans overwhelmingly say that in general they
prefer cutting government spending to paying higher taxes, according to
the latest New York Times/CBS News poll. ...
WGN
1/21
Chicago: Emanuel
closing in on majority vote
Rahm Emanuel is
closing in on the majority he needs to end the mayor's race next month and
avoid a one-on-one runoff, a new Tribune/WGN poll shows. ...
Resurgent Republic
1/20
Fiscal Issues
Remain the Dominant Concern of Voters
Independent voters, who drove the Republican wave in the 2010 election,
continue to prefer conservative over liberal policies on fiscal issues,
energy, education, and health care. ...
FOX: Dana Blanton
1/20
Obama Falling
Below Expectations at Two-Year Mark
After two years
in office, over half of American voters say President Obama is failing to
live up to expectations, and a majority is dissatisfied with the way
things are going in the country today. ...
ABC: Gary Langer
1/20
GOP War Horses
Lead the 2012 Parade
A year from the first votes, three Republican war horses of the 2008
campaign are bunched in initial preferences for the 2012 presidential
nomination – but with none exceeding about 20 percent support, indicating
a wide-open contest for the right to challenge Barack Obama. ...
Pew
1/20
Economy Dominates
Public's Agenda
The public's policy agenda is again dominated by the economy and jobs with
other major issues viewed as less important. ... And with the economy
continuing to struggle, optimism about the country's long-term future has
declined. ...
NBC: Mark Murray
1/20
Obama bouncing
back
... According to the latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll, Obama's
approval rating has surged above 50 percent; confidence in the economy
also has spiked; and the Democratic Party -- but not the GOP -- now enjoys
a net-positive rating from the American public. ...
ABC: Gary Langer
1/19
Hu's an Economic
Threat?
Americans see more economic threat than opportunity in China, and divide
almost evenly on whether they regard it as a friendly or unfriendly nation
– results that underscore the challenging nature of relations between the
two powers. ...
Democracy Corps (pdf) 1/18
It's Jobs, Stupid
The voters have a
clear and dramatic message for the new Republicans in Congress and the
President on the eve of his State of the Union Address: focus on jobs and
the economy and show how America is going to be economically successful
again. ...
Resurgent Republic
1/18
Republican Plans
to Repeal Health Care Reform Law
A plurality of registered voters (49 to 44 percent) supports Republican
plans to repeal and replace the health care reform bill, including a
majority of Independents (54 to 36 percent support). ...
ABC 1/18
Obama Approval
Moves Ahead Though Challenges Remain
Aided by his response to the Tucson shootings, popular lame-duck
legislation and a hint of economic relief, Barack Obama has matched his
highest job approval rating in more than a year in the latest ABC
News/Washington Post poll, with his ratings for empathy likewise
rebounding. ...
Washington Post
1/17
High marks for
Obama on Tucson
Americans overwhelmingly describe the tone of political discourse in the
country as negative, verging on angry, according to a new Washington
Post-ABC News poll, but more than half say that the culture did not
contribute to the shootings in Tucson that killed six people and wounded
13, including Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.). ...
Los Angeles Times: George Skelton
1/17
CA: Polls
illuminate Gov. Brown' path
Gov. Jerry Brown must clear several hurdles before Californians will
accept his tax plan to balance the state books. Four tactical moves will
be particularly critical. ...
CBS 1/15
Americans Split on
What to Cut from Government
A new CBS News poll finds that Americans strongly prefer cutting spending
to raising taxes to reduce the federal deficit. ...
McClatchy 1/13
Obama rebounding,
would beat GOP rivals, crush Palin
President Barack Obama has bounced back from his low point after
November's elections and enjoys stronger support heading into the 2012
election cycle, particularly against Sarah Palin, according to a
McClatchy-Marist poll released Thursday. ...
Pew
1/13
Obama's Job
Ratings, Personal Image Unchanged
Neither the trouncing of the Democratic Party in the midterm elections nor
the surprising legislative accomplishments of the "lame duck" Congress has
had a measurable effect on opinions of Barack Obama. ...
Gallup 1/13
Jobs Are Top
Problem, While New High Cite Deficit
Americans say unemployment is the No. 1 problem facing the United States
at the start of 2011, with 29% naming it. ...
Pew
1/13
Strengthen Ties
with China, But Get Tough on Trade
As President Obama prepares to host Chinese President Hu Jintao next week,
Americans increasingly see Asia as the region of the world that is most
important to the United States. ...
Gallup 1/12
Most Doubt
Political Rhetoric Major Factor in AZ Shootings
A new USA Today/Gallup poll finds Americans dubious that the heated
language used in politics today was a major factor that influenced the
alleged gunman in last week's shootings in Tucson, Ariz. ...
CBS News 1/12
In Wake of AZ
Shootings, Americans Split on Gun Control
In the wake of Saturday's shootings in Tucson, Arizona, Americans are
split over whether gun control laws should be made stricter, according to
a new CBS News Poll. ...
David Hill 1/12
Politics' hegemony
over markets
I can't wait for Gallup and the other major public polls to start
reporting their first 2011 results on the direction of the country. With
all the positive momentum in the financial markets and concurrent good
directional news about signs of economic recovery, can't we anticipate
that those dark and foreboding "wrong track" percentages will finally
start to edge downward? ...
Gallup 1/11
Congress Job
Approval Rebounds to 20%
Americans' approval of the job Congress is doing rose in early January to
20%, after falling to a record-low 13% in mid-December and registering 17%
in November. ...
ABC News
1/11
Consumer Comfort
Index
Consumer confidence jumped to its highest level in more than two and a
half years this week, led by improved ratings of the buying climate and
national economy alike. ...
CBS News 1/11
Most Americans
Feel Rhetoric, Tucson Shooting Unrelated
Nearly six in 10 Americans say the country's heated political rhetoric is
not to blame for the Tucson shooting rampage that left six dead and
critically wounded U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, according to a CBS News
poll. ...
Gallup 1/10
Public Opinion
Context of Tucson Shootings
... Gallup trends on gun control show that Americans have grown less
supportive of strengthening gun laws in the United States over the last
two decades, notwithstanding a number of tragic gun attacks during that
period. ...
Gallup
1/10
Within GOP,
Huckabee Most Liked, Palin Best Known
Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee has the highest net favorable score
among Republicans nationwide in a field of potential GOP candidates for
2012, while former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin is the most recognized. ...
Washington Post: Chris Cillizza
1/10
Shooting
unlikely to sway public opinion about gun control
As the shootings of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords and 19 others in Arizona
continue to dominate the national conversation, there is considerable
speculation about whether the tragedy will spark a stiffening of federal
gun-control measures. The answer, based on polling and the aftermath of
other similar episodes of broad-scale gun violence, is no. ...
ABC News: Gary Langer
1/9
Gun Violence and
Views on Gun Control
Beyond discussion
of the tone of the political discourse, the Giffords shooting may prompt a
new look at gun violence in this country. From the perspective of public
preferences, it's worth knowing that previous heinous gun crimes have not
prompted greater support for gun control in general. ...
Chicago Sun-Times
1/8
Rahm Emanuel lead
grows in mayoral poll
Rahm Emanuel is in a solid lead in the first public poll for the Chicago
mayoral race taken since the field has shrunk to four major contenders:
Emanuel, Gery Chico, Carol Moseley Braun and Miguel Del Valle. ...
Matthew Dowd 1/7
The Over/Under for
2012
... The chattering class is speculating about President Obama's reelection
prospects, his campaign strategy, the location of his campaign
headquarters (likely Chicago), and the makeup of his organization -- not
to mention the maneuverings of potential Republican opponents. But if you
want to keep it simple, just pay attention to one number over the next 22
months: Obama's job-approval rating. ...
Gallup 1/7
46% Favor, 40%
Oppose Repealing Healthcare Law
Americans do not
strongly endorse the new Republican House majority's efforts to repeal the
landmark healthcare legislation passed last year. A new Gallup poll finds
that 46% of Americans want their representative in Congress to vote to
repeal the healthcare law, 40% want their representative to vote to let
the law stand, and 14% have no opinion. ...
NY1 1/6
NYC: Mayor's
Approval Rating Hits New Low
Mayor Michael Bloomberg's job approval rating has dipped to a new low.
According to a NY1/Marist College poll released Thursday, just 37 percent
of New Yorkers approve of the mayor's job performance -- the lowest since
Marist began tracking eight years ago. ...
The Birmingham News
1/6
Ala. Education
Assn.'s polling arm suspends operation
Capital Survey Research Center, the polling arm of the Alabama Education
Association, has suspended operation. A bill passed in the special session
of the Legislature last month bars deduction of AEA dues from state
paychecks if the money is used for political purposes, including polling
and political advertising. ...
Gallup 1/5
Democratic Party
ID Drops in 2010, Tying 22-Year Low
In 2010, 31% of
Americans identified as Democrats, down five percentage points from just
two years ago and tied for the lowest annual average Gallup has measured
in the last 22 years. ...
Gallup 1/5
111th Congress
Averaged 25% Approval
The 111th Congress received an average 25% approval rating from Americans
over the course of 2009 and 2010. While this is similar to the 23% average
approval rating for the 110th Congress spanning 2007 and 2008, it is among
the lowest average approval ratings for a Congress that Gallup has
recorded in the past two decades. ...
Pew 1/4
Internet Gains on
Television as Public's Main News Source
The internet is slowly closing in on television as Americans' main source
of national and international news. Currently, 41% say they get most of
their news about national and international news from the internet, which
is little changed over the past two years but up 17 points since 2007. ...
Gallup 1/3/11
Majority of
Americans Say 2011 Will Be Better Than 2010
Americans enter the new year with considerably more optimism than
pessimism about what it may bring: 58% say 2011 will be better than 2010,
20% say 2011 will be worse, and 21% say it will be the same. ...
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