56 —
percentage of registered voters in North Carolina who do not support using school vouchers to help parents pay for their children to attend private or religious schools instead of public schools.
In a Siena College poll released in February,
the percentage of registered voters who had a favorable opinion of the governor dropped nine points from the month prior.
A look at registered Republicans as
a percentage of all registered voters gives a different perspective: Citywide, Republicans are a mere 10.8 % of all registered voters, with a low of 6.4 % in the Bronx and a high in Staten Island of 28.9 %.
Only a small
percentage of registered voters are expected for the race, which would fill the seat once held by Inez Dickens, who was elected to the state Assembly last fall.
it's really only a small
percentage of registered voters in Iowa who are going to show up at caucus.
Not exact matches
The Morning Consult survey polled 3,971
registered voters on May 11 - 15, with a margin
of error
of plus or minus 2
percentage points.
The Quinnipiac University Poll surveyed 1,561
registered voters nationwide between May 24 - 30, 2016 with a margin
of error
of plus or minus 2.5
percentage points.
of 1,991
registered voters, 62 percent say the administration is running somewhat or very chaotically, a rise
of 4
percentage points from a
In an April 26 - May 1 survey
of 1,991
registered voters, 62 percent say the administration is running somewhat or very chaotically, a rise
of 4
percentage points from a March 15 - 19 poll and 8 points from a March 1 - 5 poll.
If those running for any office don't receive a minimum
percentage of the available votes, say for example (I'll keep this small scale) 100
voters are
registered, and each candidate receives 25 or less votes, the election would be void, and new candidates selected.
23 % Is probably about the
percentage of people who voted in the last US presidential election relative to those who were not legally prohibited persons (Less than 60 %
of registered voters actually voted and there are a bunch on non-
registered persons).
Looking at medians rather than averages produces similar results to midterm years: Likely
voter polls have been unbiased, whereas
registered voter polls have had a median Democratic bias
of 2
percentage points.
The poll
of 1,165
registered state
voters has a margin
of error
of + / - 2.9
percentage points, with + / - 4.7 for questions asked only
of Democrats.
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.
On average,
registered voter polls
of Senate races have had a 1.1
percentage - point Democratic bias in these years, we estimate, whereas likely
voter polls have had a 0.7 - point Republican bias.
The new Siena poll, which surveyed 805
registered voters by telephone from Jan. 8 to 12, has a margin
of sampling error
of plus or minus four
percentage points.
There is little change since November 2012, but the
percentage of voters registered in the state's three recognized minor parties increased, and the
percentage of independent
voters also increased.
The poll
of 1,038
registered voters was conducted Feb. 9 through Feb. 12 and has a margin
of error
of 3.9
percentage points.
Since there are approximately 146,311,000
registered voters in the U.S., winning this district with the single vote cast would give a popular vote
percentage of 1 / (146,311,000 - 403,802) = 0.000000685367 %
The survey
of 692
registered voters was conducted April 8 - 12 and has a margin
of error
of plus or minus 4.3
percentage points.
The poll
of 1,298
registered voters, conducted from Aug. 8 through 12, has a margin
of error
of plus or minus 2.7
percentage points.
The poll
of 692
registered voters has a margin
of 4.3
percentage points.
The telephone poll
of 823 New York
registered voters has a plus or minus 3.9 -
percentage - point margin
of error.
The poll questioned 772
registered voters March 11 to Friday and had a margin
of error
of plus or minus 4
percentage points.
The survey
of 1,222
registered voters, conducted from Jan. 30 to Feb. 5, has a margin
of error
of plus or minus 2.8
percentage points.
The poll
of 1,066
registered voters, which was conducted from May 3 - 8, has a margin
of error
of plus or minus 3.8
percentage points.
The poll questioned 777
registered voters from April 4 - 6 and has a margin
of error
of plus or minus 3.5
percentage points.
The
percentage of voters registered «no party preference» also declined slightly, but the number
registered in other, unspecified Read more»
The poll
of 964
registered voters, which was conducted March 6 to March 11, has a margin
of error
of plus or minus 3.2
percentage points.
The poll
of 692
registered voters, conducted April 8 to April 12, has a margin
of error
of plus or minus 4.3
percentage points.
The Report suggests keeping the same
percentages, but changing the base from the number
of registered voters, to the number
of votes cast in the last presidential election.
The July 9 - 13 poll surveyed 793
registered voters and has a margin
of error
of plus or minus 4
percentage points.
The poll
of registered New York
voters, conducted via landline and cell phones, has a margin
of error
of plus or minus 4
percentage points.
The poll
of 802
registered voters between July 6 - 9 has a margin
of error
of plus or minus 3.9
percentage percent.
Among 930
registered voters the margin
of error was plus or minus 3.2
percentage points.