, a national telephone
survey of registered voters found only 6 percent of Americans are willing to pay $ 1,000 or more annually in higher taxes and utility costs to subsidize the cost of adding more sustainable energy to fight global warming.
A 2015 LAPCS
survey of registered voters showed 62 percent supporting charter schools.
As the largest statewide
survey of registered voters, the poll was conducted March 28 - April 7 and surveyed 1,504 registered voters, with a significant oversample of Latino voters and strong presence of cell phone samples.
A 2015 LAPCS
survey of registered voters showed 62 % supporting charter schools.
According to a newly released Siena College
Survey of registered voters in New York State, most would
(CNN)- It's a mixed bag for a Republican 2016 favorite in New Hampshire, according to a new
survey of registered voters in the state.
In a 2016 national
survey of registered voters, health care ranked number four on the list of importance behind the economy, terrorism, and foreign policy.
The poll comes after previous
surveys of registered voters have shown support for holding a convention, though it had been on a steady decline.
MoveOn Political Action commissioned Public Policy Polling to do
surveys of registered voters in 24 House congressional districts currently held by Republicans, and they say the surveys show a generic Democrat would beat the incumbent Republican member if elections were held today.
Not exact matches
A Monmouth University
survey released on Wednesday — conducted by telephone, and with a plus - or - minus 3.5 % margin
of error — found that 51 %
of registered voters said they would vote for or lean toward a Democratic candidate if the 2018 elections were held today, compared to just 36 % who said they would vote or lean Republican.
The
survey of 1,077
registered voters was conducted online by the Program for Public Consultation at the University
of Maryland from Dec. 6 - 8.
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.
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.
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.
According to a Pew Research Center
survey of 1,655
registered voters released today, more than half
of white evangelicals said they weren't satisfied with their ballot options (55 %), reflecting the feeling
of Americans at large (58 %).
A recent Pew
survey found that 56 percent
of Catholic
registered voters and 89 percent
of black Protestant
registered voters (two - thirds
of whom are evangelicals, according to Pew) side with Clinton in the upcoming election.
The Pew
survey found that 17 %
of registered voters think Obama is a Muslim, while 31 % say they do not know the president's religion.
Data were collected via landline and cellular telephone
surveys Feb. 24 - 26 among 600
registered voters, including 222 parents or guardians
of children in K - 12 public or charter schools.
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.
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.
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.
The
survey of 1,000
Registered New York
Voters was conducted on May 21 - 22, 2013 by Rasmussen Reports.
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.
In NY1 - Marist's previous
survey, nearly half
of registered voters — 48 % — reported they would be less likely to vote for a candidate with Bloomberg's backing while 30 % thought a Bloomberg endorsement would make them more likely to do so.
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.
In fact, a new
survey released just this past Fri., Sept. 27th by the non-profit research group Public Religion Research Institute, found that nationally, 56 percent
of registered Hispanic
voters identified with the Democrats, and only 19 percent identified with Republicans — the same number identified themselves as independents.
Pollster Larry Harris says that disparity is not unusual, because it generally reflects where the most number
of registered voters live in the area that was
surveyed.
The poll, which was conducted over two days on May 4 and 5,
surveyed 532
registered voters and has a margin
of error
of plus or minus 4.2 percent.
Live interviewers
surveyed 1,317
registered voters via land lines and cell phones, and the poll has a 2.7 percent margin
of error.
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.
The poll
surveyed 800
registered voters — not likely primary
voters, it should be noted — and has a 4.1 percent margin
of error.
According to a University
of Delaware Center for Political Communication
survey, 49 percent
of Delaware
registered voters support Coons, with three in ten backing O'Donnell.
In The Marist Poll's latest
survey in New York State, 53 %
of registered voters statewide report Schumer is doing either an excellent or good job in office.
Most polls question likely
voters closer to election day because it is a more accurate measure than
surveying registered voters, many
of whom won't vote.
The
survey focused on key
voters — «prime» Democrats who either
registered since 2014, voted in one
of the last two Democratic primaries or in the last two general elections.
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 new poll — based on
surveys last week
of 810
registered voters — found about half
of New Yorkers support Governor Andrew Cuomo's call for greater disclosure requirements to be inserted into the state's $ 141.6 billion budget.
The poll, which
surveyed registered New York Democrats, found that 50 percent
of voters did not have a selection in the city comptroller race.
An Emerson College public opinion
survey released in November showed that 62 percent
of registered New York
voters are in favor
of legalizing and taxing pot.
Monday's Siena College
voter survey — which showed 78 percent
of New York
voters backing an increase and broad support among
registered Republicans — was naturally cited by Silver.
A Marist College Institute for Public Opinion
survey released Tuesday morning indicates that 66 percent
of New York State
registered voters don't think Paterson should resign in wake
of a political scandal that ended his hopes
of running this year for a full term in office.
The poll
surveyed 2,477
registered voters in New York and found that 78 percent believe state government is dysfunctional and the recent logjam in the state Senate makes 42 percent
of those polled embarrassed to be New Yorkers.
According to a Siena College Research Institute
survey released Monday morning, 55 percent
of New York State
registered voters want Paterson to stick it out, with 37 percent calling on him to resign.
A Siena College Research Institute
survey released Monday indicated that 55 percent
of New York State
registered voters want Paterson to stick it out, with 37 percent calling on him to resign.
In Marist's previous
survey, 55 %
of registered voters statewide said they would back Cuomo while 29 % said they would pick Paladino.
The Mason - Dixon Polling & Strategy
survey of 625
registered voters measured Hogan's possible electoral performance against Prince George's County Executive Rushern Baker III, Baltimore County Executive Kevin Kamenetz, former NAACP President Ben Jealous, and state Sen. Rich Madaleno.
In Marist's previous
survey, a majority
of registered Republican
voters — 51 % — were very enthusiastic.