PRRI/The Atlantic April 2016 Survey Total = 2,033 (813 Landline, 1,220 Cell phone) March 30 April 3, 2016

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7, PRRI/The Atlantic Survey Total = 2,033 (813 Landline, 1,220 Cell phone) March 30 3, Q.1 Now we d like your views on some political leaders. Would you say your overall opinion of [INSERT; RANDOMIZE LIST] is very, mostly, mostly, or very? And what about [INSERT NEXT]? a. Hillary Clinton Have not heard of Don t know/ Refused 17 23 20 34 * 6=100 Jan. 19 25 17 34 * 5=100 Nov. 19 28 16 30 2 4=100 Oct. 15 31 17 34 2 1=100 Oct. 2013 20 37 14 21 6 3=100 b. Bernie Sanders Have not heard of Don t know/ Refused 18 29 21 20 4 8=100 Jan. 15 27 23 19 5 11=100 Oct. 14 23 18 16 26 3=100

2 c. Donald Trump Have not heard of Don t know/ Refused 8 16 18 52 * 6=100 Jan. 12 19 22 42 * 5=100 Nov. 11 16 21 44 2 6=100 Oct. 9 21 21 45 3 1=100 d. Ted Cruz Have not heard of Don t know/ Refused 7 22 28 29 4 10=100 Jan. 9 29 24 21 6 11=100 Nov. 6 15 19 22 28 9=100 Oct. 4 16 24 27 27 2=100 Oct. 2013 6 13 17 16 45 3=100 PARTY Generally speaking, do you usually think of yourself as? 23 A Republican 33 A Democrat 36 An independent 1 Other (SPECIFY) 6 Don t know/refused IF INDEPENDENT OR OTHER [PARTY=3,4,0,8,9], ASK [N=840]: PARTYLN As of today do you lean more towards the Republican Party or more towards the Democratic Party? 29 Republican 41 Democrat 8 Independent 4 Other (SPECIFY) 19 Don t know/refused

3 IF REPUBLICAN [PARTY=1], ASK [N=513]: PARTYST1 And would you call yourself a strong Republican or not a very strong Republican? 59 Strong Republican 38 Not a strong Republican 4 Don't Know/Refused IF DEMOCRAT [PARTY=2], ASK [N=680]: PARTYST2 And would you call yourself a strong Democrat or not a very strong Democrat? 61 Strong Democrat 36 Not a strong Democrat 3 Don't Know/Refused IF IDENTIFY AS DEMOCRAT OR LEAN DEMOCRAT (PARTY=2 OR PARTYLN=2) AND REGISTERED TO VOTE (REGVOTE =1), ASK ASK [N=788]: Q.2 Which of the following Democratic candidates would you most like to see as the Democratic Party s nominee for president? [READ: RANDOMIZE LIST] Jan. Dec. Nov. 1 Oct. 46 49 52 64 49 Hillary Clinton - - - - 21 Joe Biden 47 35 31 28 24 Bernie Sanders - 3 4 3 1 Martin O Malley - - - - 1 Jim Webb 1 2 1 1 2 Other (SPECIFY) 6 10 13 5 1 Don t know/refused 100 100 100 100 1 Results for November do not include independents who lean towards the Democratic Party.

4 IF IDENTIFY AS REPUBLICAN OR LEAN REPUBLICAN (PARTY=1 OR PARTYLN=1) AND REGISTERED TO VOTE (REGVOTE = 1), ASK [N=676]: Q.3 Which of the following Republican candidates would you most like to see as the Republican Party s nominee for president? [READ: RANDOMIZE ORDER] Jan. Dec. Nov. 2 Oct. - 3 4 0 3 Rand Paul 31 16 11 8 5 Ted Cruz - 10 12 9 10 Marco Rubio - - - - 3 Scott Walker - 4 9 9 10 Jeb Bush - 2 3 4 3 Chris Christie 37 32 23 23 28 Donald Trump - 13 16 25 14 Ben Carson - 2 2 3 11 Carly Fiorina 23 2 2 4 3 John Kasich - 1 2 4 5 Mike Huckabee - - - - 1 Bobby Jindal - - - - 1 Rick Santorum 2 * 2 * 1 Other (SPECIFY) 7 14 14 11 1 Don t know/refused 100 100 100 100 ASK ALL: Q.4 Now, we would like to get your views on some issues that are being discussed in the country today. Do you strongly favor, favor, oppose or strongly oppose [INSERT; RANDOMIZE]? What about [INSERT NEXT]? [READ AS NECESSARY: Do you strongly favor, favor, oppose or strongly oppose this?] a. Banning people who are Muslim from entering the U.S. 9 Strongly favor 15 Favor 32 Oppose 35 Strongly oppose 9 Don t know/refused 2 Results for November do not include independents who lean towards the Republican Party.

5 b. Increasing the tax rate on Americans earning more than $250,000 a year Aug. 2014 June 2013 Sept. 2012 27 26 29 33 Strongly favor 32 31 34 28 Favor 21 24 22 19 Oppose 14 13 12 17 Strongly oppose 5 5 3 4 Don t know/refused 100 100 100 NO QUESTION 5 Q.6 Now, as I read a few statements, please tell me if you completely agree, mostly agree, mostly DISagree or completely disagree with each one. First [INSERT; RANDOMIZE]. Next [READ AS NECESSARY: Do you completely agree, mostly agree, mostly DISagree or completely disagree?] a. It bothers me when I come in contact with immigrants who speak little or no English Oct. June 2012 3 14 22 20 Completely agree 20 26 20 agree 30 26 27 disagree 34 25 30 Completely disagree 3 1 2 Don t know/refused 100 100 b. Over the past couple of decades, the government has paid too much attention to the problems of blacks and other minorities Aug. 2014 Aug. 2012 Sept. 2010 11 14 12 11 Completely agree 21 24 28 26 agree 34 36 37 40 disagree 29 20 20 20 Completely disagree 5 5 3 3 Don t know/refused 100 100 100 3 Pew Research Center for the People & the Press, 2012 Values Survey, June 2012.

6 c. Society as a whole has become too soft and feminine Oct. 2011 16 15 Completely agree 26 23 agree 29 33 disagree 24 26 Completely disagree 5 3 Don t know/refused 100 d. Because things have gotten so far off track in this country, we need a leader who is willing to break some rules if that s what it takes to set things right 19 Completely agree 26 agree 24 disagree 27 Completely disagree 4 Don t know/refused e. Society is better off when men and women stick to the jobs and tasks they are naturally suited for 13 Completely agree 26 agree 24 disagree 31 Completely disagree 5 Don t know/refused f. Discrimination against women is no longer a problem in the United States May 2011 9 9 Completely agree 22 23 agree 37 38 disagree 31 30 Completely disagree 2 1 Don t know/refused 100 NO Q7 & Q8

7 ASK ALL: Q.9 How worried are you that you or someone in your family will be a victim of terrorism? Dec. Nov. 2014 16 17 11 worried 29 30 22 Somewhat worried 31 30 35 Not too worried 24 23 31 Not at all worried 1 * 1 Don t know/refused 100 100 ATTEND Aside from weddings and funerals, how often do you attend religious services... more than once a week, once a week, once or twice a month, a few times a year, seldom, or never? 10 More than once a week 25 Once a week 12 Once or twice a month 17 A few times a year 18 Seldom 18 Never 1 Don t know/refused Q.10 In general, how often, if at all, do you participate in a non- religious activity group, such as sports team, book club, PTA or neighborhood association... more than once a week, once a week, once or twice a month, a few times a year, seldom, or never? 12 More than once a week 10 Once a week 20 Once or twice a month 17 A few times a year 18 Seldom 22 Never 1 Don t know/refused

8 Q.11 Thinking about your current financial situation. Would you say you are currently in excellent financial shape, good shape, only fair shape, or in poor shape financially? Aug. 2014 Aug. 2012 March 2010 8 7 6 9 Excellent 36 34 36 41 Good 37 37 36 33 Fair 17 20 20 13 Poor 2 2 1 3 Don t know/refused 100 100 100

9 Survey Methodology The survey was designed and conducted by Public Religion Research Institute in partnership with The Atlantic. Results of the survey were based on bilingual (Spanish and English) RDD telephone interviews conducted between March 30,, and 3,, by professional interviewers under the direction of SSRS. Interviews were conducted among a random sample of 2,033 adults 18 years of age or older living in the United States (1,220 respondents were interviewed on a cell phone). The selection of respondents within households was accomplished by randomly requesting to speak with the youngest adult male or female currently living in the household. Data collection is based on stratified, single- stage, random- digit- dialing (RDD) sample of landline telephone households and randomly generated cell phone numbers. The sample is designed to represent the total U.S. adult population and includes respondents from all 50 states, including Hawaii and Alaska. The landline and cell phone samples are provided by Marketing Systems Group. The weighting is accomplished in two separate stages. The first stage of weighting corrects for different probabilities of selection associated with the number of adults in each household and each respondent s telephone usage patterns. 4 In the second stage, sample demographics are balanced to match target population parameters for gender, age, education, race and Hispanic ethnicity, region (U.S. Census definitions), population density and telephone usage. The population density parameter was derived from Census 2010 data. The telephone usage parameter came from an analysis of the January- September 2014 National Health Interview Survey. All other weighting parameters are derived from an analysis of the U.S. Census Bureau s May Current Population Survey. The sample weighting is accomplished using an iterative proportional fitting (IFP) process that simultaneously balances the distributions of all variables. Weights were trimmed to prevent individual interviews from having too much influence on the final results. The use of these weights in statistical analysis ensures that the demographic characteristics of the sample closely approximate the demographic characteristics of the target populations. The margin of error for the survey is +/- 2.5 percentage points at the 95% level of confidence. The design effect for the survey is 1.3. In addition to sampling error, surveys may also be subject to error or bias due to question wording, context and order effects. 4 Telephone usage refers to whether respondents have only a landline telephone, only a cell phone, or both types.

10 Appendix Table 1. Demographic, Political, Religious, and Issue Subgroup Sample Sizes (All figures are unweighted) General Public Total Sample 2,033 Male 1,008 Female 1,025 Republican 513 Independent 705 Democrat 680 Democrat/Democratic- leaning voter 788 Republican/Republican- leaning voter 676 White, non- Hispanic 1,369 Black, non- Hispanic 206 Hispanic 263 18-29 351 30-49 529 50-64 607 65+ 543 White evangelical Protestant 348 White mainline Protestant 296 Black Protestant 145 Other non- white Protestant 131 Catholic 432 White Catholic 273 Hispanic Catholic 128 Religiously unaffiliated 441 Non- Christian religion 121 Clinton supporter 507 Sanders supporter 428 Cruz supporter 240 Kasich supporter 187 Trump supporter 279