Sentences with phrase «voters polled while»

City Comptroller John Liu is the favorite of 7 percent of voters polled while former Councilman Sal Albanese registered in at 1 percent.

Not exact matches

While the money is modest compared with that donated by fossil fuel interests, the support provides GOP candidates with added credibility on clean energy, an issue polling shows swing voters care about.
But his polling numbers jump by nearly half among voters under 50, while support for the frontrunners, Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich, stays stagnant, or even drops slightly.
States permit poll watchers so long as they are registered, trained, and abide by state rules designed to make sure voters aren't impeded or intimidated while getting to and from the polls.
While Clinton may not poll as well as Obama has with young and minority voters, she will grab the interest of female voters, political observers say.
The poll also showed that 59 % of voters support full legalization of marijuana across the U.S., while 93 % support medical marijuana.
According to a 2016 Pew Research Center poll, the number of Republican voters who say they believe in human - caused climate change was 23 percent while the number of Democrats was 69 percent.
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 foul - mouthed Silverman pushes people to do whatever it takes to make it to the polls in spite of voter ID laws, while an uncensored Jackson orders disenchanted Obama supporters to «wake the f *** up» and get to work.
While Silverman warns viewers about being kept out of the polls, introducing herself as «your Jewish friend Sarah,» Jackson, who voiced the recent bedtime story for parents «Go the F**k to Sleep,» rhymes his warning to voters, in a video that's been seen over a million times on YouTube.
At the same time, black voters overwhelmingly supported Obama in 2008, while more recent polling shows a nearly equal level of support for the president's 2012 reelection.
While the governor's re-election may look good at the moment, the prospects for a 2020 campaign for governor are not widely supported among New York voters, the poll found.
«Quinnipiac only polled likely voters while Siena instead talked to anyone with a voter card.
For example, polling for IPPR showed that a striking 63 per cent of «DE» individuals think that it serves their interests badly, while «AB» voters are evenly split.
The Q - poll today found that while there's very little gap between male and female voters on whether to back Spitzer or Stringer, black voters support the former governor by a margin of 61 percent to 32 percent.
«A recent poll by the Siena Research Institute found only 27 people of voters are prepared to re-elect Gillibrand, while 40 percent prefer «someone else.»»
In that same month, our poll for the Independent on Sunday found that, while 39 per cent of voters agreed that «The NHS would be safer under Labour than the Conservatives», 47 per cent disagreed.
While it's too early to determine how solid Spitzer's lead is — it is still unclear if he will have enough petition signatures to gain ballot access — 67 percent of voters in the poll believe the former governor should be given a second chance after resigning amid a prostitution scandal in March 2008.
Nearly two - thirds of voters polled — 66 percent — would prefer Spitzer stay out of politics this year, while only 28 percent say he should throw his hat into the ring for an unspecified elected office and 6 percent are unsure.
The poll found that 36 percent of state voters want the current governor to run for president, while 39 percent say he shouldn't run.
(Actually, the latest poll found that while a majority of NYC voters don't think de Blasio deserves re-election, he's still trouncing all of his potential rivals, and the one who comes closest to beating him is a fellow Democrat — and erstwhile primary opponent — former NYC Council Speaker Chris Quinn).
The poll found only 19 % of voters said it doesn't bother them too much, while 8 % aren't upset at all.
But Cuomo's favorable rating remains well underwater in the district, where only 37 percent of voters polled hold a favorable opinion him, while 61 percent hold an unfavorable view.
Trump appeared to confirm Russia's involvement in the 2016 election while suggesting the Obama administration knew of Russian interference long before voters took to the polls.
It also revealed even greater anxiety about the future of public services, especially the NHS, while recent polling hints that voters» appetite for austerity may be waning.
Today's Siena poll finds GOP gubernatorial primary opponents Rick Lazio and Carl Paladino locked in a statistical dead heat (43 - 42), while Sen. Eric Schniederman and Nassau County DA Kathleen Rice are battling it out (25 - 23) in the five - way Democratic AG primary, with 29 percent of voters still undecided just three days before heading to the polls.
Liberals often claim that while there may be other forms of voter fraud in the United States, like voter registration fraud, the only kind of voter fraud that a voter ID law can possibly prevent is in - person voter fraud (where someone shows up at a polling station and votes when they're not legally permitted), and that there have been almost no documented cases of someone committing intentional in - person voter fraud in the United States.
While the governor has announced plans in support of public financing and empowering district attorneys during these situations, others are calling for term limits and according to a recent Siena poll, 82 percent of registered New York voters agree.
And while it's an uphill battle facing a heavily entrenched foe, outreach efforts will give Staten Island and Brooklyn voters — both old and new — food for thought the next time they go to the polls: ranging from alleged campaign finance fraud; to Grimm's threatening of a reporter with physical violence; to his latest federal fraud and tax charges, he is quite a colorful character with a very colorful history just begging to be lampooned.
And in what can be viewed as perhaps good news for Cuomo, the poll finds most voters, while they are concerned about the high level of corruption in New York politics, are not paying close attention to the machinations of a panel appointed by the governor.
Separate October Siena College polls showed that while just 37 percent of voters in the Southern Tier Senate district viewed Cuomo favorably, he was viewed favorably by 56 percent of voters across Nassau County.
A Quinnipiac University Poll published Thursday found that state voters were still not sold on congestion pricing — 49 percent polled opposed the idea, while 43 percent support it.
The poll found that 44 percent of Nassau voters had an unfavorable opinion of Mangano, a Bethpage Republican, while 42 percent had a favorable opinion and 14 percent had no opinion.
So while polls suggest Democratic voters have not yet picked their favorite among the crowded field — the cross examination portion of the debate — in which nearly all the candidates chose to grill Eric Schneiderman — served to illustrate who they deem the biggest threat.
The Siena College poll finds 53 percent of voters view Cuomo favorably, while 40 percent said they don't.
The Siena college poll finds that while 52 percent of Democrats would vote for Hillary Clinton, compared to 42 percent for Bernie Sanders, Clinton is ahead in voter - rich New York City and surrounding suburbs.
While upstate New York waits for the Gaming Commission to approve up to four casinos, anti-casino group Save East Greenbush has released the results of an Election Day exit poll that asked voters how they felt about a gaming hall going up on Thompson Hill Road.
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 YouGov poll commissioned by the SNP found more than two - thirds of voters do not trust the Tories while only 16 per cent of voters trust them to represent their voice in Holyrood.
While the inquiry could not rule out a modest late swing towards the Conservatives, initial claims that the polling errors were due to «shy Tories» (respondents who deliberately misreported their intentions) or «lazy Labour» (Labour voters who said they'd vote but ultimately didn't) did not stand up to scrutiny.
A Public Policy Polling survey released last Thursday reported that 16 % of New Hampshire Republican primary voters view Pataki favorably while 45 % view him unfavorably.
The spot will surely appeal to the same Republican primary voters who handed Trump an overwhelming victory in New York State, but another Heaney ad oddly addresses the need for the pledge of allegiance to be recited in school while promising to keep dangerous Syrians out — it's hard to believe polling showed that issue cluster popping.
No matter the internal strife over Donald Trump's presidential bid, the intensely competitive Republican primary contest is bringing a booming number of voters to the pollswhile Democratic turnout plunges, raising questions about whether these trends will last through November.
While only 39 % of New Yorkers think race relations in the state are excellent (4 %) or good (35 %)-- compared to 58 % who say they are fair (43 %) or poor (15 %)-- that is up from the 2015 Siena Poll, which had 31 % positive and 66 % negative, including 28 % poor, according to a new Siena College poll of New York State registered voters released Monday mornPoll, which had 31 % positive and 66 % negative, including 28 % poor, according to a new Siena College poll of New York State registered voters released Monday mornpoll of New York State registered voters released Monday morning.
The latest poll also shows that a majority of voters does not believe de Blasio deserves to be re-elected next year, while he finishes in a dead heat with two potential rivals.
This study is now 50 years old; each election since 1964 has been graced by an in - depth survey of voters conducted after polling day, while in -LSB-...]
While Cuomo has fallen below 70 percent, more than two - thirds of voters still view him favorably, including two - thirds of Republicans and more than half of conservatives,» said Siena poll spokesman Steve Greenberg.
Meanwhile, 42 percent of voters polled in the survey said it's Hanna who is running a negative campaign (to be sure, Republicans have hammered O'Brien for supporting a judge who later was accused of sexual harassment), while 23 percent say it's the Democratic candidate who went negative.
Forty - nine percent of voters in New York disapproved of how Gov. Andrew Cuomo is handling mass transit in the state, while a plurality also disapproved of a proposed congestion pricing plan that is aimed at raising money for trains and buses in New York City, according to a Quinnipiac University poll on Thursday.
Tuesday's Siena poll shows that 60 - percent of voters say they currently have a favorable view of him, while 35 - percent say unfavorable.
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