A Quinnipiac University poll of
city voters released the day before the budget agreement found that 52 percent of respondents opposed it.
Not exact matches
City voters prefer a millionaire's tax over congestion pricing as a way to fund the MTA, according to a Quinnipiac poll
released on Friday, Oct. 6, 2017.
Cuomo leads Nixon of New York
City by 68 to 21 percent among registered
voters, according to the poll
released on Thursday, April 12.
A Quinnipiac poll
released Oct. 5 had de Blasio with huge leads over the three other candidates vying for
City Hall, with 61 percent of likely
voters in his corner and just 17 percent for Malliotakis.
A Clarus Poll
released Wednesday evening indicates that challenger and D.C.
City Council Chairman Vincent Gray leads Fenty 45 to 38 percent among likely Democratic primary
voters, with 14 percent undecided.
Sixty - four percent of registered
voters who were surveyed said they support a proposal to increase taxes on the
city's wealthiest earners, while only 21 percent favored tolling motorists entering Manhattan, according to the Quinnipiac University Poll
released on Friday.
A Quinnipiac University poll
released on Thursday was a mixed bag for New York
City Mayor Bill de Blasio, with
voters there split on the way he is handling his job as mayor.
Only about four in 10
city voters approved of the job he was doing in a Quinnipiac University poll
released last week.
Washington (CNN) A majority of Democratic
voters in New York
City believe New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo would be better for the city than his primary opponent Cynthia Nixon, according to a Quinnipiac University poll released Wednes
City believe New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo would be better for the
city than his primary opponent Cynthia Nixon, according to a Quinnipiac University poll released Wednes
city than his primary opponent Cynthia Nixon, according to a Quinnipiac University poll
released Wednesday.
More than half of
city voters say the mayor has lost focus after taking office for the third time in 2010, according to a new Quinnipiac poll
released Wednesday.
ALBANY — A poll
released Tuesday has Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo matching his lowest favorability among
voters since taking office in 2011, but because of strong Democratic and New York
City support, he remains well positioned to fend off a primary challenge from Cynthia Nixon.
In upcoming
releases leading up to the September 10 primary and the November general election,
voters will be able to make contributions to the candidates using the system, and the tool will also indicate how much that contribution is worth through the
city's public financing program.
And a Marist poll
released Tuesday also indicates that a majority of New York
City voters say Weiner deserves a second chance.
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Onondaga County
voters are almost evenly split over whether the
city of Syracuse and Onondaga County governments should merge, according to a Siena College poll
released Thursday.
A majority of New York
voters says the
city is becoming «less safe» under Mayor Bill de Blasio, while they believe his predecessors, Rudy Giuliani and Mike Bloomberg, made the Big Apple a better place to live, a poll to be
released today reveals.
Mayor Bill de Blasio has the lowest net approval rating of his time in
City Hall, with 44 percent of
voters disapproving of the Democratic mayor, according to a Quinnipiac University poll
released this afternoon.
Still, the reason why critics are right to say Trump should
release his taxes — that
voters should be able to gauge his tax bill and charitable donations, and that the returns might expose financial conflicts of interest — apply as much to
City Hall as to the White House.
Mayor Bill de Blasio's approval rating has ticked up amid his concerted effort to convey a more forceful public image, and he now receives positive marks from half of New York
City voters, a Quinnipiac University poll
released on Tuesday found.
His approval rating is higher among New York
City voters, at 44 %, and equal to Mayor Bill de Blasio's approval rating in a similar poll
released last week.
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE Contact: Chandra M. Hayslett, Communications Director
[email protected] 212-257-4350 New Yorkers Overwhelmingly Want Deal on New Teacher Evaluation System New Poll Shows Robust and Resilient Support; No Excuse Seen for Losing $ 300 million New York (Nov. 29, 2012)-- A new teacher evaluation system that would ensure that New York
City received $ 300 million in additional State education funding enjoys overwhelming support among
City voters in general and parents in particular, according to a new poll
released today by StudentsFirstNY, the education reform advocacy group, and conducted by Anzalone Liszt Research.
J.C. Polanco
releases first video ad of his campaign for NYC Public Advocate 60 - second spot introduces Public Advocate candidate to
voters, highlights priorities J.C. Polanco, the Republican and Reform Party candidate for New York
City Public Advocate, today unveiled his -LSB-...]
Gov. Andrew Cuomo's favorability and job approval ratings over the last two months have fallen as
voters give him low marks for handling New York
City's transit problems, a Siena College poll
released on Tuesday found.
A majority of New York
City voters continue to disapprove of Mayor Bill de Blasio's job performance, according to a Q poll
released yesterday, but he would still probably fare well in a matchup against at least two of his potential Democratic primary rivals.
By a solid 64 - 21 percent, New York
City registered
voters prefer a millionaires» tax instead of a form of congestion pricing as the best way to raise money for mass transit, according to a Quinnipiac University poll
released today.
Public Advocate Bill de Blasio and
City Council Speaker Christine Quinn are tied at 24 % among likely primary
voters, while former Rep. Anthony Weiner remains at the back of the pack, according to the new NBC4 / Wall Street Journal / Marist poll
released Thursday.
(CNN)- More than two - thirds of New York
City voters feel optimistic about Mayor Bill de Blasio's next four years in office, according to a new poll
released Thursday from Quinnipiac University.
Last week, the Saratoga Springs Charter Review Commission
released a financial snapshot of the proposed
city charter that will go before
voters on Election Day.
Just four days before
voters head to the polls on Tuesday, November 7, New York
City Comptroller Scott Stringer released a damning report highlighting the dysfunctional election operations of the New York City Board of Elections, a quasi-city agency that administers elections in the c
City Comptroller Scott Stringer
released a damning report highlighting the dysfunctional election operations of the New York
City Board of Elections, a quasi-city agency that administers elections in the c
City Board of Elections, a quasi-
city agency that administers elections in the c
city agency that administers elections in the
citycity.
But
city voters by a large margin say Gov. Cuomo would be more effective at sticking up for New York's interests under Trump than Hizzoner, the Quinnipiac University poll
released Thursday found.
Hartzog also said that funding for DemocracyNYC, a
voter engagement program announced by the mayor in his State of the
City speech last month, would be included in the executive budget which is
released after the Council has held weeks of hearings and had an opportunity to respond to the preliminary spending plan.
Voters in New York
City put much more faith in the UFT than in Mayor Michael Bloomberg when it comes to protecting public school students» interests, according to a Quinnipiac University poll
released on Feb. 8.
A majority of New York
City voters believe Mayor Bill de Blasio does favors for his political donors, a new Quinnipiac poll
released Wednesday shows.
«If Michael Bloomberg starts thinking presidential, there will be no great send - off from New York
City voters,» Marist College Institute for Public Opinion director Dr. Lee M. Miringoff said in a statement
releasing the findings.
CITY COUNCIL —
City Council leaders continued their attack on the Board of Elections Tuesday,
releasing the results of a survey that showed more than a third of
voters last week were confused by the new computerized polling system.
A Quinnipiac poll
released Tuesday said the
city's public advocate has support from 30 percent of likely Democratic voters, six percentage points higher than City Council Speaker Christine Qu
city's public advocate has support from 30 percent of likely Democratic
voters, six percentage points higher than
City Council Speaker Christine Qu
City Council Speaker Christine Quinn.
(CNN)- He may be struggling to woo the political rank and file, but a new poll suggests that Michael Bloomberg is getting a far warmer reception among his
city's
voters: in a Quinnipiac poll
released Tuesday, nearly two out of three New Yorkers approve of how Michael Bloomberg is handling his duties as mayor, giving him double - digit leads over two Democratic challengers as he runs for re-election to a third term.
When asked, he didn't express much concern after a Quinnipiac University poll
released August 1 showed that 51 percent of New York
City voters don't think he deserves to be re-elected in
According to a Quinnipiac University survey
released Thursday morning, 52 percent of likely New York
City voters support Bloomberg, an Independent, with 36 percent backing New York
City Comptroller William Thompson, who recently won the Democratic primary for mayor, and two percent supporting Conservative Party candidate Stephen Christopher.
A Siena Research Institute poll
released last week found 61 percent of New York State
voters surveyed — and 70 percent of
city voters — view Trump unfavorably.
Mr. Cuomo garnered a 58 percent approval rating from
city voters in a Quinnipiac Poll
released this week, and it seemed that Mayor Bill de Blasio's attacks on the governor weren't particular helpful — the mayor's polls are lower than ever, and New Yorkers are split when asked about their feud.
A new Quinnipiac poll
released on Nov. 19 found that New York
City voters are divided on the idea of more charter schools, but many believe those charters should pay rent for using public school buildings.
The board's much - maligned Primary Day performance is also being audited by the office of Scott M. Stringer, the
city comptroller, who on Wednesday
released an online form for
voters to submit information about their experiences.
This comes just days after The New York Times / Siena College Poll
released last week showed a resounding majority (See NECSN's
release here) of New York
City likely
voters favor creating more public charter schools.