Sentences with phrase «percent of all registered voters»

Overall, 43 percent of registered voters said they strongly disapproved of Trump's job performance, more than double the voters who strongly approved (20 percent) of it.
Public opinion on the president's reaction was split along partisan lines, with 37 percent of registered voters — including two - thirds of Republicans — saying his remarks were either very or somewhat appropriate, while 46 percent found them very or somewhat inappropriate (including 70 percent of Democrats).
retained his spot atop the rankings after picking up 11 points from the previous quarter — 72 percent of registered voters in the Green Mountain State approve of his job performance.
Sixty percent of registered voters think corporations pay «too little» in taxes, according to a September poll from Morning Consult and Politico, surveying a little under 2,000 Americans.
They comprise twenty - five percent of all registered voters.
And forty - two percent consider themselves Republicans compared to thirty percent of all registered voters.
(Overall, 75 percent of registered voters want the Dreamers to stay.)
Under village law, 300 signatures, or 5 percent of the registered voters, are needed to get a referendum question on the ballot.
The new law reduces the number of signatures required for a referendum to 7.5 percent of the registered voters from 15 percent and increases the number of days for a petition drive to 30 from 21.
For instance, when looking at the internet as a persuasive tool, they say that «e-mail is not close to challenging direct mail and phone calls as ways to reach voters: A Pew Research Center survey last month found that 38 percent of registered voters had received phone calls about the midterm campaigns, while only 15 percent had received e-mail.»
According to a new survey report from the Pew Internet and American Life Project, 88 percent of registered voters have some kind of cell phone, and of those, over half are smartphone users.
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 new Marist College poll finds 56 percent of registered voters in New York State approve of the job Governor Andrew Cuomo is doing in office.
A stunning 52.3 percent of the registered voters in Kogi West Senatorial District want their Senator, Dino Melaye, recalled from the Senate
Museveni was re-elected on 20 February 2011 with a 68 percent majority with 59 percent of registered voters having voted.
Four years earlier, in September 2013, approximately 20 percent of registered voters cast ballots in the primary.
Only 24 percent of registered voters actually participated in the election.
It finds that only 24 percent of registered voters approve of how Malloy is handling his job, while 68 percent disapprove.
Only 26.5 percent of registered voters turned out.
Secretary of the State Denise Merrill is predicting 25 - to - 30 percent of registered voters, at most, will show up at the polls on Tuesday.
The downstate Suburbs (Suffolk, Nassau, Westchester and Rockland Counties) have cast 23 - 25 percent of the state's gubernatorial vote (while it accounts for 21 percent of the state's population and 23 percent of registered voters).
NYC's vote has fluctuated between a 27 - 30 percent share of the total gubernatorial vote (despite being 43 percent of the state's population and 39 percent of registered voters).
SB 69 increased their primary petitions from 1 percent of the last vote for their party nominee for governor to 1 percent of the registered voters in that party.»
Since one reason candidates ares often removed from the ballot is because a signer signs more than one petition is not applicable here because the Democratic and Republican candidates will not have to petition, I think getting 3,500 signatures or.8 percent of the registered voters shouldn't be hard if a candidate has any real supporters.
A Suffolk University poll shows that just 35 percent of registered voters have a favorable opinion of Clinton, compared with 55 percent who have an unfavorable one.
When political analysts added up turnout figures from the Nov. 3 elections, they could find only one word to describe a year when a mere 24.5 percent of registered voters showed up at the polls in Erie County: Abysmal.
This article running in the Dallas Observer states that the Dallas City Council run - off election had a participation rate of 4.21 percent of registered voters.
Seventy - two percent of the registered voters surveyed said young adults have «less opportunity to be successful» on the Island than they did in 1991.
Only 39 percent of registered voters have heard of the Hevesi Ride - a-Long program, and only 36 percent of those who knew about it cared.
In the 2017 general election, less than 22 percent of registered voters voted, compared to 55 percent in 1993, according to WNYC.
About 23 percent of registered voters are not enrolled in a party, according to the elections board.
But only 24 percent of registered voters turned out to vote.
«One of the real problems that is the chicken coming home to roost for this mayor is that the city is 43 percent of the state's population, 38 percent of the registered voters but it only cast 26 percent of the vote in 2014.
Forty - three percent of registered voters say they would vote for de Blasio, a Democrat.
In order to qualify for public financing, candidates must collect signatures and $ 5 contributions from 1 percent of registered voters in the city.
And 20 percent of registered voters said they have a favorable opinion of Nixon, compared to 19 percent who said they have an unfavorable opinion.
48 percent of registered voters say parents should be allowed to opt their children out of the tests, while 47 percent say parents should not be allowed to opt their kids out.
When asked who they would vote for in a Democratic primary, 66 percent of registered voters said they would vote for Cuomo, compared to 19 percent for Nixon, according to a poll released by the Siena College Research Institute on Monday morning.
All five were vying to run against state Sen. Jack Martins (R - Old Westbury) in the November general election in a district in which Nassau composes 50 percent of the registered voters, compared with 30 percent in Suffolk and 20 percent in Queens.
The bill lowers the number of signatures a new party must obtain to 0.25 percent of registered voters.
Bill de Blasio was elected mayor of New York with less than 20 percent of registered voters.
Statewide, 73 percent of registered voters polled supported the freeze, the Siena College poll found.
The goal of SVRD is not just to getting more young voters registered, but to actually get them to the voting booth — according to the city's Board of Elections, only 11 percent of registered voters 18 to 29 years old went to the polls in the 2013 mayoral election.
Spitzer himself has been floated several times as a mayoral candidate, although a Marist poll conducted back in October of 2012 found 57 percent of registered voters wanted him to stay out of the race.
To become a major party, at least 5 percent of all registered voters in the state must affiliate with the party by December 31 of the year before the election.
A recent Wall Street Journal / NBC poll showed 55 percent of registered voters think New York is headed in the wrong direction, the highest number in more than 10 years.
Democrats have 37,160 enrolled voters in Syracuse or 54 percent of all registered voters, according to the board of elections.
The number of signatures required on the petition is equal to at least 3 percent of all registered voters who are not affiliated with a recognized political party in the district the candidate seeks to represent.
Sixty - nine percent of registered voters say they don't think members of Congress will be able to break through the partisan gridlock to pass a comprehensive reform package this year, while 27 % have more faith in their elected leaders, according to the Quinnipiac University survey released Friday.
Only 25 percent of registered voters in New York City participated in the November 2014 elections, according to the New York City Campaign Finance Board, and a recent special election in The Bronx for a vacant City Council seat saw roughly 3,300 out of 85,000 registered voters cast ballots.
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