The poll out Tuesday shows 43 percent of
likely voters supporting Faso and 42 percent supporting Teachout.
According to a new Washington Post - Schar School poll, 50 % of
likely voters support Jones and 47 % support Moore in their race to fill a Senate seat most recently vacated by Attorney General Jeff Sessions.
Forty - five percent of
likely voters support or lean towards Hillary Clinton, while 41 percent support Donald Trump.
By a 55 - 31 percent margin,
likely voters support creating a system of public campaign financing in New York.
Fifty percent of
likely voters support Paul in the CNN / Time / Opinion Research Corporation survey, while 43 percent back Democratic nominee Jack Conway.
The poll indicates that 41 percent of
likely voters support Conservative candidate Doug Hoffman, with 36 percent backing Democrat Bill Owens, and 6 percent supporting Republican nominee Dede Scozzafava, who suspended her campaign on Saturday.
15 % of independent
likely voters support Gary Johnson, and 6 % support Stein.
Three percent of Florida
likely voters support another candidate, and 2 % are undecided.
A WMUR Granite State Poll released Thursday found that 50 percent of
likely voters support Ayotte, while 35 percent support Democratic Rep. Paul Hodes.
Overall, 46 percent of
likely voters support Stefanik, 33 percent Woolf, and 10 percent Funiciello, with 11 percent undecided.
A poll in late March found that 68 % of
likely voters supported the measure, but that was before tobacco companies and other opponents mounted a vigorous campaign against it.
The results were part of a new poll released Thursday from the Public Policy Institute of California also found 60 percent of
likely voters support Gov. Jerry Brown's plan to restructure the school funding system to one that provides more money to schools with greater numbers of disadvantaged students.
National surveys and statewide reports indicate that the majority of
likely voters support the use of taxpayer money to fund school choice programs.
In the Presidential race, 43 % of
likely voters supported Hillary Clinton and 31 % supported Donald Trump, 11 % were undecided, 9 % would not vote for President at all and 4 % would vote for a third party candidate
In an October 2016 poll conducted by Politico and the Harvard School of Public Health, 58 percent of
likely voters supported federal funding for Planned Parenthood, including almost half of Trump voters.
Not exact matches
The so - called kids» table is for the lower polling candidates, those with
support from less than 3 percent of
likely Republican
voters.
They will
likely also highlight Clinton's
support for debt free college education and gun control, which are both critical issues for young
voters.
Across party lines, roughly nine in 10 Americans
support solar power, and according to a poll commissioned last spring by The Alliance for Solar Choice (TASC), 69 percent of Republican
likely voters and 80 percent of Democratic
likely voters would be «unlikely» to reelect a politician who failed to raise the solar net metering cap.
If Kenney doesn't follow the lead of Brown, his fellow social conservative caucus colleague, it
likely signals one of two things: he does want the
support of
voters for whom parental rights regarding their pre-adolescents and teens are a big issue; or that he's calculated that a softening of his image would show weakness and isn't worth it, because his party has such a comfortable edge over Notley that he can afford to lose
voters wary of anything resembling social conservatism.
An average of four major national polls calculated by Real Clear Politics shows Trump leads the GOP pack with 34.5 percent of
support among
likely Republican
voters, while Cruz follows in second place with 19.3 percent.
A poll conducted by Illinois Policy found 42 percent of active
likely voters in Illinois oppose a progressive tax, with 29 percent unsure or having no opinion, and 29 percent
supporting.
Potential
voters for the president were more
likely to misperceive the three issues and
support the war; potential
voters for a Democratic nominee were less
likely to misperceive or to
support the war.
The committee says its program in Iowa has focused in large part on identifying and mobilizing unaffiliated
voters who are
likely to
support its candidate, Representative Bruce Braley, in his race against State Senator Joni Ernst, the Republican nominee.
The goal is to expand the universe of potential Democratic
voters, and party officials said they believed that 73 percent of the 23,000 unaffiliated
voters who had requested ballots were
likely to
support Mr. Braley.
By contrast, campaigns that let the various pieces exist in isolation will
likely waste resources and miss opportunities to turn
voters» passing interest into
support — and money.
Condi was
supported by others earlier as being a shock and awe VP choice.It won't happen.She has expressed no interest in being a public candidate, and
likely would be very bad at it.In many ways, she is a delicate flower; and would not easily survive in the political garden of vipers.And what would she add to the GOP ticket?A slight tick up for black
voters?
No
voters are particularly worried about the perceived risks involved in Scotland becoming independent and those who are generally more willing to take risks are more
likely to
support independence.
And, we know that the Obama campaign's
voter scoring system did a good job of identifying people
likely to
support Obama but less -
likely to show up at the polls (we know because those people did, in fact, show up at the polls after being aggressively courted by the campaign).
confirmed that «
voters are about six points more
likely to
support Trump when they're taking the poll online then when they're talking to a live interviewer,» said Dropp.
Between 38 and 40 percent of
voters said they would be more
likely to
support a candidate endorsed by one of those three big - name Dems.
Voters are more
likely to
support democracy and accept the outcome of democratic elections — which is important if electoral violence is to be avoided — if they trust that people like them will not be excluded from political and economic opportunities just because their candidate lost.
The latest New York Times / CBS News poll, conducted last week, showed
likely voters in the same age group
supporting Mr. Romney by a 15 - point margin — even wider than the gap on Election Day 2008.
An MP who knows that certain wards may be shifted to a neighbouring seat at the next election is
likely to ignore these
voters whilst focusing on building her
support in the new areas being added to his or her seat.
When canvassers like Darley - Emerson get a list of names, it has been edited according to the one criterion that matters: how
likely her visit is to generate a new vote towards the president's re-election — whether the canvasser remembers to ask who the
voter is
supporting or not.
A statewide telephone survey of
Likely Voters finds Cuomo with 54 %
support versus 38 % for Paladino, the winner of last Tuesday's state GOP Primary.
Sen. John McCain, R - Ariz., 5th term McCain is entering his third decade in the Senate, but with a presidential race at the top of the ticket, Arizona will
likely be targeted by national Democrats this year who would offer organizational
support to drive
voters to the polls.
Given the huge changes in overall levels of party
support for the Liberal Democrats, SNP and UKIP since the last election,
voters are
likely to be much more unsure of the parties relative standings in their constituency.
Pollster Steve Greenberg: «Right now, Sheehan has the
support of 51 percent of
likely Albany mayoral Democratic
voters, compared to 26 percent for Commisso and 13 percent for McLaughlin.
A new Rasmussen Reports telephone survey of
Likely Voters in the Empire State finds Cuomo with 51 %
support to Paladino's 37 %.
We will also filter for young
voters in your area who are
likely to
support gun control legislation.
The Greens are currently claiming on ITV that the collapse in Lib Dem
support and switch to them reflects the toxicity of their association with the Conservative Party: #BESFactCheck suggests that it is more
likely reflect the fact that
voters do not credit the Liberal Democrats with any of the major successes or the failures of the coalition government: fewer than one in five
voters believe that the Lib Dems in government have been responsible for the upturn in the economy, changes in the NHS, changes in levels of crime, changes in levels of immigration and changes in the standards of education.
«While Mike Bloomberg isn't a
likely candidate, a weak incumbent and a highly politicized, polarized opposition certainly opens the path for an independent centrist to actually reflect the views of most
voters and win their
support,» Bradley Tusk, the former campaign manager of Bloomberg's third mayoral campaign in 2009, told me.
For these reasons it is unclear how exactly the Liberal Democrats will craft a distinctive identity
likely to appeal to
voters and maximise electoral
support.
Tenney, a state assemblywoman, had the
support of 35 percent of
likely voters in the Time Warner Cable News / Siena College poll, ahead of Democrat Kim Myers, the daughter of the founder of Dick's Sporting Goods, who drew 30 percent.
A recent AARP survey found about three quarters to four fifths of the 50 + Queens
voters surveyed said they're «extremely» or «very»
likely to
support candidates who'll work on:
The poll, which surveyed 678
likely voters in the district, found 43 percent
supporting Faso, a former state Assembly minority leader, and 42 percent behind Teachout, a onetime gubernatorial candidate.
The survey, conducted after the video release but before the debate, showed Clinton with 46 percent
support among
likely voters in a four - way matchup including two minor party candidates, compared with 35 percent for Trump.
The Sanders searches included New Hampshire lists related to
likely voters, «HFA Turnout 60 - 100» and «HFA
Support 50 - 100,» that were conducted and saved by Uretsky.
Drapkin's account searched for and saved lists including less
likely Clinton
voters, «HFA
Support < 30» in Iowa, and «HFA Turnout 30 - 70»» in New Hampshire.
69 per cent say the new leader should defend the record of the previous government, especially on the economy; swing
voters say this would make them less
likely to consider
supporting Labour.