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Showing posts with label Quinnipiac University poll. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Quinnipiac University poll. Show all posts

Sunday, September 18, 2016

Young Voters Don't Go For Hillary And After Bernie, They Have Good Reason

Young voters: I’m not with her

Democrats go out of their way to court young voters with things like hollow celebrity endorsements and flashy social media outreach. It worked well for President Barack Obama— but the current Democratic presidential nominee is having a tougher time impressing young America.
That’s according to a series of recent polls which show Clinton just barely edging out Libertarian Gary Johnson in support from younger voters.
Reason reported:
A New York Times/CBS poll shows 26 percent of voters under the age of 29 supporting Johnson and a further 10 percent supporting Green presidential nominee Jill Stein. Similarly, a Quinnipiac poll shows Johnson at 29 percent of young voters, and Stein at 15. In that poll, Clinton barely edges out Johnson among young voters, getting 31 percent. Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump is at 26 percent among that demographic in the poll. Further, a Global Strategy Group poll of millennials in 11 battleground states found 73 percent of millennials saying that Trump was a racist, and just 38 percent supporting Clinton in a 4-way matchup.
The results have yielded unsurprising hand-wringing from older liberals who feel the vote of millennials belongs to them. Clara Jeffrey, editor-in-chief of Mother Jones, tweeted that she has “never hated millennials more” in response to the NYT/CBS poll, which earned refreshing responses from millennials. New York Times columnist Ross Douthat, meanwhile, quips that it looked “like ‘liberaltarianism’ is a real thing” and that Donald Trump was “very glad” of it.
While she’s still beating Donald Trump in youth support, Clinton’s lagging numbers suggest that the Democratic Party is losing serious ground with the demographic.
The trend is likely the result of a couple of key factors.
First, despite Clinton’s relentless attempts to portray herself as cool and hip, young voters more often view the 68-year-old as an establishment political dinosaur. In addition, many of Sen. Bernie Sander’s young supporters are shunning the Clinton campaign out of disgust after the DNC hack revealed the extent to which party insiders went to demolish his primary campaign.

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Rubio Takes Temporary Hold Of Second Place

10 Reasons Marco Rubio Has Surged Past Ben Carson Into Second Place

Image: 10 Reasons Marco Rubio Has Surged Past Ben Carson Into Second PlaceRepublican Presidential candidate Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL), speaks at the Wall Street Journal CEO Council meeting at the Four Seasons Hotel, November 16, 2015 in Washington, D.C. (Mark Wilson/Getty Images)
By Nick Sanchez   |   Wednesday, 02 Dec 2015 11:10 AM
Marco Rubio surged to second place in December among the field of Republican presidential candidates, overtaking a slumping Ben Carson and coming within striking distance of Donald Trump's top spot.

"A Quinnipiac University poll of Republican voters nationwide, released Wednesday, finds Trump leading the pack with 27 percent of the support, up from 24 percent last month. Rubio comes in second with 17 percent, up 3 points from November," Real Clear Politics reported this week. "[Ted] Cruz has gained 3 points, garnering 16 percent of the support and tying Carson, who lost 7 points over the past month."

Gathered below are 10 reasons the senator from Florida has surged in the polls and overtaken Carson:

 

1. Focus on foreign policy over Russia in Syria — Last week, Turkish fighter jets shot down a Russian warplane near the Syria-Turkey border, "the most serious incident between Russia and a NATO state in half a century," Reuters reported. The situation raised the specter of the Cold War, and shifted attention away from domestic issues toward foreign policy. This has benefited Marco Rubio, as he's become the top pick for voters who say foreign policy is the most important issue in the 2016 election. Unlike Trump, who's never held public office, Rubio is seen as having the know-how to deal with complicated overseas conflicts such as the Syrian Civil War. 

2. Favorability — Rubio leads the GOP pack when it comes to favorability ratings. A whopping 66 percent of likely Republican voters view him favorably, with a scant 8 percent viewing him unfavorably. By comparison, Trump and Carson have much higher unfavorable numbers, 27 percent and 13 percent, respectively.

3. Ben Carson slump — The famous neurosurgeon from Detroit surged to second in the polls from October to November as voters looked for alternatives to political outsider Donald Trump. After garnering media scrutiny over his strange theories on the Egyptian pyramids and his seeming lack of foreign policy understanding, his polling cratered by nearly 7 points from November to December. During his slip in the polls, Carson ceded the second place spot to a consistently rising Rubio.

4. He is the most likely candidate to beat Hillary Clinton —According to polling aggregated by Real Clear Politics, Trump, Carson, and Cruz are likely to lose to Clinton in a head-to-head matchup, statistically speaking. Rubio, however is the lone Republican candidate who can beat her, as he edges her out by 3 points according to national polls.

5. Focus on terrorism after Paris attacks — National security in the face of a growing ISIS threat has become a top issue in the 2016 race after deadly terrorist attacks rocked France in November. This shift in focus has boosted Trump, who's honed an image of strength in the minds of many voters, as well as Carson, and Rubio.


6. Voters still open minded on range of candidates — A vast majority of Republican primary voters, 65 percent, reported that they have not made up their mind when it comes to which candidate they'll vote for next year. This explains Rubio and Cruz's increases in the polls, as well as Carson's recent dip.

7. He's seen as a strong "insider" candidate
 — Trump, Carson, and Carly Fiorina have all benefited during the race from having never held elected office, saying that it will take a political outsider like them to clean up Washington. Among GOP voters who value prior political experience, however, Rubio gets high marks. As the field of candidates thins over the coming months, expect to see Rubio pick up the supporters of candidates who are bound to drop out of the race.

8. He continues to turn in strong debate performances — Rubio has been identified by voter and pundits on both the left and right as perhaps the strongest debater among over a dozen GOP presidential candidates. CNN wrote "Rubio steals the show" after the October debate, and similar headlines have been a boon to Rubio's campaign.

9. He's kept his campaign well-funded
 — Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, former Texas Gov. Rick Perry, and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal dropped out of the presidential race after failing to gain traction and fundraise enough to keep their campaign operations running at full strength. Rubio has drawn support from billionaire Paul Singer, as well as big-time funders like Tony Pritzker, managing partner of the Pritzker Group and an heir to the Hyatt Hotel fortune, Variety reported.

10. He has a proven track record of conservative victories
 — Fox News reported that Rubio is getting praise this week for a provision he put in last year's spending bill that prohibits billion-dollar bailouts for private insurers under the Affordable Care Act. "He saved us money on Obamacare where others have simply wanted to repeal it. He has already saved $2.5 billion by eliminating an unreasonable backstop by the taxpayers for a failed program," said Rep. Darrell Issa, former chairman of the House oversight committee, who endorsed Rubio on Monday. 

© 2015 Newsmax. All rights reserved.


Thursday, July 23, 2015

Trump Now Takes On Anderson Cooper. Its About Time Someone Pushes Back On The Media.

Donald Trump Blasts Anderson Cooper on CNN: "The People Don't Trust You"

Donald Trump Blasts Anderson Cooper on CNN: "The People Don't Trust You"

July 23, 2015
Trump's next target. 2016 presidential hopeful Donald Trump ripped into CNN anchor Anderson Cooper on Wednesday, July 22, telling the journalist that "the people don't trust" him.
Cooper sat down with Trump for an exclusive one-on-one interview onAnderson Cooper 360, and ticked off the real estate mogul after citing one poll in which he was trailing behind other Republican candidates.

"I just saw polls in Iowa, I'm doing really well!" Trump, 69, said to Cooper, who brought up the Quinnipiac Poll. (This particular poll shows that participants, by an overwhelming 2-1 vote, viewed the mogul negatively.) "I don't know, you keep bringing up negative," Trump continued on Wednesday. "You only want to bring up the negative. Why don't you bring up the positive?"

The two personalities then launched into a "he said, he said" debate. The billionaire claimed that Cooper came out swinging by mentioning the Quinnipiac Poll. Meanwhile, Cooper claimed that he had kicked off the interview with the Washington Post poll (which shows Trump leading the pack).
"Sure, sure, sure," Trump noted at one point sarcastically, prompting Cooper to retort: "You are way out of line."

Then, Trump attempted to school Cooper in ethical journalism, making claims that the "Silver Fox" was not trusted by the public. "I am leading across the board, and then you hit me with a poll that I've never seen this before," Trump noted. "All I know is I have a very big group of support, and I think one of the reasons is the people don’t trust you, and the people don’t trust the media. And I understand why."
"Right," Cooper responded, "and politicians."
Watch their spat above.

Thursday, July 10, 2014

Can The House Stop Obama?

Stopping This Imperial President

July 10, 2014 by  
 
Stopping This Imperial President
THINKSTOCK

Congratulations, liberty lovers! Your efforts to expose the disastrous policies and unConstitutional usurpations of power by the Barack Obama Administration are definitely paying off.
The three key fronts where these battles are being fought are in Congress, in the courts, and in public opinion. And I’m happy to report that in the past couple of weeks, we’ve scored some significant gains in all three of them.
Let’s begin today’s analysis with public opinion, which has begun to turn decisively in our favor. The immigration crisis, with tens of thousands of children pouring across our southern border, is just the latest example of the Obama Administration’s stunning incompetence… or worse.
Add to that the deceit and cover-up about what happened in Benghazi, Libya; the scandal over National Security Agency spying on its own citizens; and the Internal Revenue Service targeting of conservative groups. It’s no wonder more and more Americans are ready to shout: “Enough!”
Of course the public is fed up with this Administration’s refusal to protect our borders. What else would you expect? Every night, the TV news programs show more and more children pouring into this country, overflowing what facilities we have, with thousands being transported (at taxpayer expense) to other parts of the country.
If the Obama Administration won’t protect our borders, how can we trust it to do anything else right when it comes to stopping this illegal invasion? The answer, of course, is that we cannot.
Obama’s reputation is now in such tatters that in the latest Quinnipiac University national poll, he was rated as the worst President since World War II.
That’s right. In a survey of registered voters taken during the last week of June, Obama ranked ahead of George W. Bush, Jimmy Carter and Richard Nixon as the worst President in the past 70 years.
A here’s a real shocker: 45 percent of the respondents said that the country would have been better off if Mitt Romney had won the Presidency in 2012, while only 38 percent said it would be worse off. It should come as no surprise that Republicans and Democrats were sharply divided here, with Republicans choosing Romney by 84 percent to 5 percent and Democrats endorsing the President 74 percent to 10 percent. The biggest switch came among Independents, who this time around favored Romney by 47 percent to 33 percent. Too bad they didn’t do that when they voted two years ago!
Some 54 percent of those polled said that the Obama Administration is not competent to run the government, while just 44 percent said it is. The President’s approval rating was stalled at 40 percent in the survey, barely above his all-time low of 38 percent back in December 2013.
But public opinion isn’t the only area where Obama has suffered some serious setbacks. He’s also lost some decisive contests in the U.S. Supreme Court. In four recent decisions the Obama Administration is 0 for 4. In two of them, the justices voted unanimously against the White House. That means the former professor of Constitutional law is batting 0 for 18. Even the two justices he appointed agreed that his unConstitutional usurpations of power had to be curtailed.
Now it looks as though an even bigger challenge may be mounted to the President’s illegal actions. Here’s how House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) described the strategy in an article he wrote for CNN:
Every member of Congress swore an oath to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States. So did President Barack Obama.
But too often over the past five years, the President has circumvented the American people and their elected representatives through executive action, changing and creating his own laws, and excusing himself from enforcing statues he is sworn to uphold — at times even boasting about this willingness to do it, as if daring the American people to stop him.
Who can disagree with Boehner’s accusations? Yet as the Speaker pointed out, the President’s response was an arrogant, dismissive rejoinder: “So sue me.”
Well, actually, Mr. President, that’s exactly what Boehner said the House is going to do: “That’s why, later this month, we will bring legislation to the House floor that would authorize the House of Representatives to file suit in an effort to compel President Obama to follow his oath of office and faithfully execute the laws of our country.”
Frankly, I don’t have much hope that such a lawsuit will succeed in forcing the President to change his ways. First of all, with all that Obama and his lawyers can do to challenge and delay such an effort, will it even be decided by the Supreme Court before the President’s term of office is over?
And that’s even assuming the Nation’s highest court would agree with the House position, which I’m not sure is the case. Heck, if Chief Justice John Roberts could twist the Constitution enough to declare that the Affordable Care Act was Constitutional because it was a tax, who knows what he might decide here?
There is a better solution — one that doesn’t depend on a challenge slowly wending its way through the courts. And that is for the House of Representatives to wield what James Madison, the chief architect of the Constitution, called “the most complete and effectual weapon with which any constitution can arm the immediate representatives of the people.”
The quotation is from “Federalist No. 58.” Madison was referring to the fact that all legislation permitting the Federal government to raise taxes or to spend money must originate in the House of Representatives. It’s just this simple: If the House won’t authorize it, the President can’t spend it.
The House of Representatives doesn’t need a decision by the Supreme Court, or a vote in the U.S. Senate, to bring a halt to Obama’s usurpation of power. It can do it by simply refusing to pay for it. Or as Madison put it, this is the proper way “for obtaining a redress of every grievance, and for carrying into effect every just and salutary measure.”
Every great battle needs a battle cry. I want to propose one here: Defund the left!
Actually, this isn’t a new slogan; I heard it for the first time nearly 40 years ago, when conservatives tried to stop the Richard Nixon Administration from paying for leftist agitators to “organize” the poor.
The White House is using billions of our tax dollars to carry out Obama’s goal to “transform” this country. One of the best ways to help prevent the Administration’s success is to take away its funds.
Defund the left! Let’s demand that the House of Representatives start doing it now.
Until next time, keep some powder dry.
–Chip Wood

Friday, November 29, 2013

Thanksgiving Wish--Obama Wants Higher Ratings.What Will He Do To Make Them Better?

Obama Approval Numbers Show Even His Home State Is Abandoning Him

Obama Approval Numbers Show Even His Home State Is Abandoning Him


Barack Obama didn’t have a cheery Thanksgiving as his approval numbers plummeted in two states that normally support the President. Approval numbers in Obama’s home state of Illinois dropped seven points in the last year and are now down to 50 percent, while a Qunnipiac University poll left him with a 34 percent approval rating in the swing state of Ohio.
Although Obama maintains a 92 percent approval rating with African-Americans in Illinois, his numbers in the state have dropped significantly among women and Hispanics. The sharp decline in approval is particularly startling for the Obama administration because he defeated Mitt Romney by 17 points in Illinois during the last election.
Obama beat Romney by four points in Ohio, but it’s unlikely he’d be doing that in 2014 if his latest numbers in that state are any indication. He had 83 percent approval among African-American voters, but just 30 percent of men, 38 percent of women and 23 percent of white voters.
The Quinnipiac University poll shows that 54 percent of Americans disapprove of the job Obama is doing overall, compared to 39 percent who approve. Polling institute director Tim Malloy confirmed that “President Obama’s job approval rating has fallen to the level of former President George H.W. Bush at the same period of his Presidency.” Ratings from male and female voters from all age and economic backgrounds have shown higher disapproval ratings than approval ratings.
Much of Obama’s recent disapproval stems from the difficulties regarding the rollout of ObamaCare. Although the President acknowledged that “we fumbled the rollout on this health care law,” he insisted that the Affordable Health Care act website has “gotten a lot better over the last few weeks.” The White House has said they hope to fix all the website glitches by the end of the year, but that appears increasingly unlikely.
(Photo: Reuters)

Monday, November 25, 2013

Can Obama Fall Any Further And Still Govern? Will The Iran Deal Improve His Lot? The Answers Are No and No

CNN/ORC Poll: Majority Believes Obama Dishonest, Ineffective

Monday, 25 Nov 2013 11:27 AM
By Drew MacKenzie
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A new national poll shows that only four out of every 10 Americans believe President Barack Obama is managing the government "effectively" and 53 percent do not believe he is "honest and trustworthy."

The survey of 843 adults taken Nov. 18-20 by CNN/ORC International represents a dramatic drop of 12 percentage points from June, when 52 percent of respondents in another CNN/ORC poll said the president was effective in running the government

The CNN/ORC International survey also found that 53 percent of respondents do not believe Obama is "honest and trustworthy," a figure that for the first time represents "a clear majority" raising that concern.



"A lot of attention has focused on the president's numbers on honesty in new polling the past three weeks, but it looks like the recent controversy over Obamacare has had a bigger impact on his status as an effective manager of the government, and that may be what is really driving the drop in Obama's approval rating this fall," CNN Polling Director Keating Holland said.

The study also revealed that 56 percent of respondents do not agree with Obama on the big issues, which would include the Affordable Care Act. The same number said they do not admire the president.

According to the poll, 53 percent of the country does not think that Obama is "a strong and decisive leader," while 56 percent declared that he does not "inspire confidence."
These are the worst numbers for the president in CNN polls since he took office.

"It's clear that views of Obama as a person, once his strong suit, have taken a hit in October and throughout 2013," said Holland.

But there was some good news for the president. Seven out of 10 respondents described him as a likable person, while six out of 10 believe he has a vision of where the country is headed.

Still, his job approval rating continues to take a hit survey after survey. Earlier this month, for example, a Quinnipiac University poll showed only 39 percent of respondents now approve of how he's doing his job while 54 percent disapprove.


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