Black voters approve of Mr. de Blasio 68 - 19 percent, while Latino approve 56 - 34 percent.
64 percent of
black voters approve of Mr. de Blasio and only 24 percent disapprove, while whites continue to despise him.
Black voters approve 5 - 1; Hispanic voters approve by 19 percentage points and white voters disapprove almost 2 - 1,» Quinnipiac University Poll Assistant Director Maurice Carroll said in a statement.
A Quinnipiac University poll Wednesday found that 57 % of
black voters approve of the job Ms. McCray is doing as first lady, compared with 39 % of white voters.
Not exact matches
Kelly has a sky - high approval rating, with 66 percent of those polled stating they like the job he's doing, though there is a clear divide along race lines, with 78 of white
voters saying they
approve, versus just 51 percent of
black voters.
But among
Black voters, 71 percent
approve of de Blasio versus 21 percent who don't.
Black and Hispanic
voters approve of the mayor by large margins, but two - thirds of whites disapprove.
«Despite all the hoo - hah in the media about Police Commissioner William Bratton's «Broken Windows» theory of policing,
black, white and Hispanic
voters approve of Bratton and want their windows fixed,» said Quinnipiac pollster Maurice Carroll.
Forty - seven percent of
voters polled don't
approve of
Black's selection to replace Joel Klein as chancellor.
The poll found that the approval ratings are split among racial and residential lines, with 69 percent of white
voters approving of the job the mayor's doing, while only 52 percent of
black voters and 56 percent of Hispanic
voters responded positively.
Black voters still
approve of de Blasio by a lot; white
voters don't,» Quinnipiac University Poll Assistant Director Maurice Carroll said in a statement.
A 2015 BAEO survey of
Black voters in the state indicated strong across the board support for choice programs — 78 % supported parental choice, 66 %
approved of charter schools and 63 % favored vouchers / scholarships.
A 2015 BAEO survey of
Black voters in the state indicated strong across the board support for choice programs — 78 percent supported parental choice, 66 percent
approved of charter schools and 63 percent favored vouchers / scholarships.