Not exact matches
Quinnipiac University
surveyed 822 New York
City registered
voters with a margin of error of plus or minus 4.4 percentage points, including the design effect, between Sept. 27 and Oct. 4.
If this week is any indication, expect a late - December blizzard of studies, reports and
surveys predicting doomsday scenarios for New York's schools,
cities and other government entities if a tax cap goes through — despite a poll saying that
voters clearly want the mechanism.
A Quinnipiac Poll published Wednesday, which
surveyed 955
city voters, found that 56 percent approve of the job Cuomo is doing and 58 percent believe he would be better for the
city than Nixon.
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.
AARP conducted the telephone
survey of 1,302 registered
city voters age 50 and older, including 309 in Queens, between May 17 and June 30.
Quinnipiac
surveyed 1,017 New York
City voters from Feb. 20 to Feb. 25.
Quinnipiac
surveyed 1,082 New York
City voters between May 14 and May 20.
That poll put
city voters at 25 percent of the total turnout, compared to 19 percent in this weekend's
survey, which showed both candidates at 48 percent.
The New York Times / Siena College
survey was conducted July 9 - 15, with 1,010 registered New York
City voters, including 610 registered Democrats.
According to the new
survey, New York
City Public Advocate Bill de Balsio's at 12 % and former
City Comptroller Bill Thompson stands at 11 %, with everyone else in single digits and nearly a quarter of Democratic
voters undecided.
The poll
surveyed 1,108 New York
City voters between July 30 and August 4, and has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.9 percent.
The
survey was conducted October 29 through November 1, with 530 likely New York
City voters questioned by telephone.
The
survey found that 50 % of New York
City voters approve of the mayor's job performance, while 42 % don't.
According to a new NBC4 New York / Wall Street Journal / Marist
survey, de Blasio, the
city's public advocate, tops Lhota, the former chairman of New York's transit authority and deputy mayor to then GOP Mayor Rudy Giuliani, 65 % -22 % among likely
voters.
According to the
survey, Public Advocate Bill de Blasio stands at 10 % with
city Comptroller John Liu at 7 %, and nearly three in ten Democratic
voters unsure.
Quinnipiac University
surveyed 731 likely New York
City voters from Sept. 27 to Oct. 4, with a margin of error of plus or minus 4.7 percentage points.
Hours before he campaigns with former President Bill Clinton in New York
City, a Quinnipiac University
survey indicates that state Attorney General Andrew Cuomo, the Democrats» gubernatorial nominee, holds a 55 to 35 percent advantage among likely
voters over Buffalo businessman Carl Paladino, the Republican nominee, with seven percent undecided.
The
survey found 73 percent of New York
City residents polled are «generally optimistic» about the next four years under Democratic Mayor - elect Bill de Blasio, and with a broad majority of
voters backing his selection for police commissioner, Bill Bratton.
The poll
surveyed 877
city voters between July 20 and July 26, and has a plus or minus 4.1 percentage point margin of error.
As part of our Focus on Education reporting, WBFO's senior reporter Eileen Buckley discussed the
survey with Buffalo News education reporter Mary Pasciak, who helped compile an extensive online
voter guide to help inform
city voters about the candidates.
The poll, which
surveyed registered New York Democrats, found that 50 percent of
voters did not have a selection in the
city comptroller race.
The poll was conducted from Jan. 9 - 15 and
surveyed 1,288 New York
City voters using landline and cellular phones.
The Quinnipiac University
survey, conducted entirely after Weiner admitted in a news conference last week to lewd chats a year after such sexting forced him to resign from Congress, also indicates that the Democratic New York
City mayoral candidate's support among likely
voters has dropped significantly.
The poll, which
surveyed 497 likely Democratic
voters by phone, puts Perez Williams at 36 percent, Nicoletti at 34 percent and
City Auditor Marty Masterpole at 8 percent.
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.
He leads all candidates with 43 %, including 47 % of black
voters, according to the latest Quinnipiac
survey of likely New York
City Democratic primary
voters.
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.
The poll was paid for by Resorts World Casino to get the
city's pulse on gambling in the borough, but the
survey also questioned 300 likely Democratic
voters in Queens in late January to see who they liked for beep.
Mr. Cuomo also led Ms. Nixon in a
survey of Democratic New York
City voters, 64 to 21, in a Quinnipiac poll in late March.
The poll, which polled a representative sample of 700 citywide likely Democratic primary
voters, including 300 in Queens, found that 51 percent of those
surveyed opposed building new full - gambling casino sites in New York
City.
For example, Kansas
City, Missouri, has a track record of effectively addressing issues deemed a priority in quarterly citizen
surveys; as a result, in 2017,
voters were willing to approve an $ 800 million bond authorization (which will mean annual property tax increases for 20 years) so the
City can address their dissatisfaction with the state of local infrastructure, like streets, sidewalks and roads.