SAINT ANSELM COLLEGE SURVEY CENTER FEBRUARY 2019 POLL EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Similar documents
SAINT ANSELM COLLEGE SURVEY CENTER FEBRUARY 2019 POLL ELECTED OFFICIALS FAVORABILITY/JOB PERFORMANCE

SAINT ANSELM COLLEGE SURVEY CENTER APRIL 2018 POLL EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

A SURVEY OF FLORIDA VOTERS ONE YEAR BEFORE THE PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARY. March 2019

EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE: SATURDAY MARCH 9 AT 8:00 P.M. ET

A SURVEY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE VOTER ATTITUDES APRIL 21-25, 2018

Respondents: Likely 2020 Democratic Primary Voters/Caucusers Nationwide with 250 oversample for African Americans, and 300 oversample for Latinos.

HIGH POINT UNIVERSITY POLL MEMO RELEASE 2/15/2018 (UPDATE)

National Tracking Poll

NATIONAL: LITTLE CHANGE IN DEM 2020 OUTLOOK

National Tracking Poll

May You Live in Interesting Times

Party ID with Leaners vs Long Run Party ID, Registered Voters January 16 20, 2019

455 Democratic likely caucusgoers 1,838 active registered voter contacts. Percentages may not add to 100% due to rounding.

National Tracking Poll

National Tracking Poll

1. Are you currently a resident of the United States and 18 years of age or older?

Emerson Poll: With No Joe, Clinton Leads Sanders By Wide Margin. Trump Solidifies Support in GOP Field. Carson and Rubio Pull Away From Pack.

National Tracking Poll

National Tracking Poll

Toplines November 2018 University of Massachusetts Amherst Post-Midterm Election Poll of Registered Voters

BIDEN IS ON TOP OF DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL PACK, QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY NATIONAL POLL FINDS; MOST VOTERS SAY THEY DEFINITELY WON T VOTE FOR TRUMP

THE GEORGE WASHINGTON BATTLEGROUND POLL

1. SCREENING. 1. IF CELL PHONE: Are you in a safe place where you can take a survey? YES 100

Conducted by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center

Akron Buckeye Poll: Ohio Presidential Politics. Ray C. Bliss Institute of Applied Politics University of Akron. Executive Summary

In battleground Virginia, Clinton beating all Republicans in 2016 presidential matchups; GOP voters divided, with Bush up, Christie down

National Survey Results 2020 General Election Likely Voters Political Environment, Trends & Analysis

1,107 Iowa likely voters in the 2016 general election and congressional district Margin of error: ± 2.9 percentage points

November 18, Media Contact: Jim Hellegaard Phone number:

GA GOP Presidential Primary 12/17/15. Fox 5 Atlanta. 538 (weighted) ±4.2% (95% confidence)

HOW THE POLL WAS CONDUCTED

Clinton leads all Republican challengers in 2016 presidential matchups in battleground Virginia; GOP voters divided, but Christie, Bush top pack

2. When general elections are held in the United States, how often do you vote? Would you say

The Polling Institute Saint Leo University 2019 Spring Poll Questions as Asked

College Voting in the 2018 Midterms: A Survey of US College Students. (Medium)

Republican Presidential Race in New Hampshire Shifts Following the Recent National Republican Presidential Debate

January 19, Media Contact: James Hellegaard Phone number:

UMass Lowell/7News Daily Tracking Poll of New Hampshire Voters Release 7 of 8

THE GEORGE WASHINGTON BATTLEGROUND POLL

Saint Leo University Polling Institute Data Report: May 2018 National Politics, Views of Patriotism, and NFL Rule on the National Anthem

GenForward March 2019 Toplines

THE POLITICO-GWU BATTLEGROUND POLL

A Post-Primary Rally Boosts Trump, Albeit with Challenges Aplenty

Compared to: Study #2122 June 19-22, Democratic likely caucusgoers in Iowa 1,805 contacts weighted by age, sex, and congressional district

WBUR Poll New Hampshire 2016 General Election Survey of 501 Likely Voters Field Dates October 10-12, 2016

Sanders is Up, GOP Race is Steady and Terrorism Worries are Back

New England College Polling Center Registered Likely NH Voters October 16, 2014 Poll Results

The 2016 Republican Primary Race: Trump Still Leads October 4-8, 2015

Pastor Views on Presidential Candidates. Survey of Protestant Pastors

NATIONAL: TRUMP HOLDS NATIONAL LEAD

IMMEDIATE RELEASE DECEMBER 22, 2014

NBC News/WSJ/Marist Poll March 2016 Michigan Questionnaire

HART RESEARCH ASSOCIATES/PUBLIC OPINION STRATEGIES Study # page 1

HART RESEARCH ASSOCIATES/PUBLIC OPINION STRATEGIES Study # page 1

New England College Polling Center Registered Likely NH Voters October 3, 2014 Poll Results

HART RESEARCH ASSOCIATES/PUBLIC OPINION STRATEGIES Study # page 1

455 Democratic likely caucusgoers 1,838 active registered voter contacts. Percentages may not add to 100% due to rounding.

Subject: Florida Statewide Republican Primary Election survey conducted for FloridaPolitics.com

In New Hampshire, Clinton Still Ahead, Warren Moves Up

The Republican Race: Trump Remains on Top He ll Get Things Done February 12-16, 2016

Scope of Research and Methodology. National survey conducted November 8, Florida statewide survey conducted November 8, 2016

RUBIO FIRST IN GOP PACK, RUNS BEST AGAINST CLINTON, QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY NATIONAL POLL FINDS; CLINTON ON TOP, BUT MOST VOTERS SAY SHE S NOT HONEST

2016 GOP Nominating Contest

New England College Polling Center Registered Likely NH Voters October 9, 2014 Poll Results

NJ VOTERS NAME CHRISTIE, CLINTON TOP CHOICES FOR PRESIDENT CLINTON LEADS IN HEAD-TO-HEAD MATCH UP

What s Happening Out There

Alabama Republican Presidential Primary Poll 2/26/16. None

Marist College Institute for Public Opinion Poughkeepsie, NY Phone Fax

HART RESEARCH ASSOCIATES/PUBLIC OPINION STRATEGIES Study # page 1

NEW HAMPSHIRE: CLINTON PULLS AHEAD OF SANDERS

CLINTON IN TROUBLE IN COLORADO, IOWA, VIRGINIA, QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY SWING STATE POLL FINDS; TRUMP S NEGATIVES ARE ALMOST 2-1

HALF OF U.S. VOTERS EMBARRASSED WITH TRUMP AS PRESIDENT, QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY NATIONAL POLL FINDS; TRUMP AT TOP OF GOP PACK, BUT CRUZ CLOSES IN

Clinton could win Texas in 2016

Florida Statewide January 2016

HART RESEARCH ASSOCIATES/PUBLIC OPINION STRATEGIES Study # page 1

NATIONAL: 2016 GOP REMAINS WIDE OPEN

October 29, 2016 Media Contact: Prof. Spencer Kimball Emerson College Polling Advisor

Likely New Hampshire Primary Voters Attitudes Toward Social Security

HART RESEARCH ASSOCIATES/PUBLIC OPINION STRATEGIES Study # page 1

Tot Rep Dem Ind Men Wom

Trump Back on Top, Cruz Climbs to Second December 4-8, 2015

Do you feel things in the country are going in the right direction, or do you feel things have gotten off on the wrong track? 67% 56% 51% 51% 49% 49%

GOV. KASICH IS NUMBER ONE IN OHIO PRESIDENTIAL RACE, QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY POLL FINDS; CLINTON TIES OR TRAILS ALL REPUBLICANS

Subject: Sanders leads in Wisconsin; GOP Race Close; VA Privatization Issue Hurts Johnson

Trump Has 2:1 Lead over Rubio and Cruz (Trump 41%, Rubio 20%, Cruz 16%)

Oct14f Generally available Available but limits Should not be permitted Don't know/no answer

University of Texas / Texas Tribune Texas Statewide Survey

Marist College Institute for Public Opinion Poughkeepsie, NY Phone Fax

Conducted by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center

Trump and Sanders Have Big Leads in MetroNews West Virginia Poll

National JSU Poll: Republicans Carson, Paul, Huckabee, Fiorina, and Santorum Lose Ground to Trump, Cruz and Rubio

A Winning Middle Class Reform Government & Politics Message. December 16, 2015

Toplines. UMass Amherst/WBZ Poll of MA Likely Primary Voters

_ 06. Ben Carson 0% 27% 72% 19% 7% 9% 07. Ted Cruz 0% 23% 57% 33% 16% 10% _ 08. John Kasich 2% 18% 54% 24% 9% 20%

(212) FOR RELEASE: JUNE

NBC News/WSJ/Marist Poll. April New York Questionnaire

Trump Leads Grows Nationally; 41% of His Voters Want to Bomb Country From Aladdin; Clinton Maintains Big Lead

American Dental Association

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

Marist College Institute for Public Opinion Poughkeepsie, NY Phone Fax

Transcription:

SAINT ANSELM COLLEGE SURVEY CENTER FEBRUARY 2019 POLL EXECUTIVE SUMMARY These results are from the Saint Anselm College Survey Center poll based on interviews with 600 randomlyselected registered voters in the state of New Hampshire. Interviews were conducted by landline and cellular phone between February 6 th and February 9 th. The overall survey has a margin of sampling error of 4.0% with a confidence interval of 95%; the margin of sampling error on questions specific to the 1 st and 2 nd Congressional Districts is 5.8% and 5.6% respectively. 258 respondents indicated their intention to vote in the Democratic Presidential Primary, 242 in the Republican Presidential Primary, and 98 were unsure or not planning to vote. New Hampshire Institute of Politics Executive Director Neil Levesque summarized the results, saying, The field is beginning to take shape a year out from the 2020 New Hampshire Primary. It s still early, but a handful of candidates are already well-known to voters. Familiar faces Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders, and Elizabeth Warren are almost universally recognized, although the latter two start with some unfavorable baggage. Firsttime candidates Cory Booker and Kamala Harris are already well-known and well-liked, with potential candidate Beto O Rourke not far behind. Potential candidate Michael Bloomberg is well-known, but carries the highest unfavorable opinion of any candidate tested. Levesque continued, The electorate is polarized, with Democrats nearly unanimous in their view that the country is on the wrong track, at 94%, and in their opposition to President Trump, with 96% having an unfavorable impression and disapproving of his job performance. Undeclared voters tend to agree with Democrats, with only 32% saying the country is on the right track, 59% having an unfavorable view of Trump, and 56% disapproving of his job performance. As has been the case since our first poll a year ago, the Republicans are more fractured: 70% think the country is on the right track, 81% have a favorable view of Trump, and 83% approve of the job he is doing. The dynamic in the Democratic Primary is driven by the confidence that Democratic voters have that Trump will be defeated, with 84% believing it unlikely that he will be re-elected. They are therefore most likely to support a candidate that reflects their policy priorities (48%), over one that will take the fight to Trump (30%) or have the best chance of winning the general election (20%). They are most supportive of candidates that endorse the Green New Deal (89% more likely), followed by Medicare for All (83%), regulating big banks and 1

Wall Street (83%), a tax on ultra-wealthy (77%), and free tuition for higher education (58%). It is no accident that the popular candidates in this race have embraced emerging progressive themes; that s where the voters are and that s what they want to send against Trump. On the Republican side, 71% of Republicans overall believe Trump will be re-elected. There is some concern about Trump as reflected in 51% of Republican primary voters willingness to consider a primary challenger. However, only 26% of those voters primary actually have a specific potential challenger in mind. Only 19% believe that Trump would hurt other Republican candidates running for office, and only 9% disapprove of his handling of the border wall funding dispute. Perhaps most telling of his support within the party, only 17% would discourage him from running, and 77% would encourage him. As of today, Trump doesn t seem to be in much danger from an insurgency within the party. New Hampshire s elected officials start off this cycle in strong shape. Governor Chris Sununu is currently the most popular politician in the state, with 64% of voters reporting a favorable impression of him. Senators Jeanne Shaheen and Maggie Hassan are at 57% and 53% respectively. In the House delegation, Freshman Congressman Chris Pappas has carried over his personal popularity from the campaign and is at 56% favorability, with Congresswoman Annie Kuster at 46%. Levesque concluded. New Hampshire voters also approve of the job the Governor and Congressional delegation is doing. Sununu has a 70% job approval, followed by Shaheen at 60% and Hassan at 55%. Pappas sits at 49%, while Kuster continues to build on her growth over the last year and is now at just over 50%. The popularity of both Sununu and Shaheen as the senior member of the Congressional delegation suggests that New Hampshire is still very much a swing state where quality of candidates and campaigns can determine the outcome of races. HIGHLIGHTS OF SURVEY: Democratic Presidential Candidate Name Recognition: Favorable Unfavorable No Opinion Name Recognition Joe Biden 80.0 12.8 6.8 99.6 Michael Bloomberg 30.4 31.7 31.9 93.9 Cory Booker 60.9 9.3 18.4 88.7 Sherrod Brown 19.7 4.6 29.4 53.7 Pete Buttigieg 11.7 2.6 22.4 36.7 Julian Castro 32.4 6.2 34.7 73.3 John Delaney 11.3 7.2 33.8 52.3 Tulsi Gabbard 13.4 7.9 27.0 48.2 Kirsten Gillibrand 35.2 14.9 29.9 80.0 Kamala Harris 62.5 7.7 17.6 87.8 Amy Klobuchar 30.3 5.0 29.7 65.0 Beto O Rourke 51.6 8.2 20.6 80.4 Bernie Sanders 65.3 24.8 9.5 99.6 Elizabeth Warren 60.2 28.3 9.7 98.2 2

Direction of the Country (All Voters) Would you say that things in our country are heading in the right direction, or have things gotten off on the wrong track? All Voters Feb 2019 Oct 2018 Apr 2018 Feb 2018 Right Track 35.6 37.1 33.7 31.2 Wrong Track 56.8 55.6 57.7 59.2 No Opinion 7.6 7.3 8.6 9.6 Democrat Right Track 3.9 1.4 4.3 1.5 Wrong Track 93.8 94.2 93.5 94.7 No Opinion 2.2 4.3 2.2 3.8 Republican Right Track 70.4 75.2 63.0 66.1 Wrong Track 18.3 17.2 24.9 21.0 No Opinion 11.3 7.6 12.2 12.9 Undeclared Right Track 32.2 33.9 33.2 28.8 Wrong Track 58.9 56.7 56.3 59.4 No Opinion 8.9 9.4 10.5 11.8 Impression of President Trump (All Voters) Favorable Unfavorable No Opinion Democrat 3.9 95.5 0.6 Republican 81.1 17.8 1.1 Undeclared 37.7 58.9 3.4 All 41.0 57.0 1.9 Trend: Feb 2019 Oct 2018 Apr 2018 Feb 2018 Favorable 41.0 40.6 39.8 35.8 Unfavorable 57.0 56.6 58.1 61.5 No Opinion 1.9 2.8 2.0 2.7 Job Approval of President Trump (All Voters): Approve Disapprove No Opinion Democrat 3.9 95.5 0.6 Republican 82.7 16.2 1.1 Undeclared 40.7 55.9 3.4 All 42.7 55.4 1.8 3

Trend: Feb 2019 Oct 2018 Apr 2018 Feb 2018 Approve 42.7 42.6 40.9 36.3 Disapprove 55.4 54.2 57.5 60.9 No Opinion 1.8 3.1 1.6 2.8 Likelihood of Trump Impeachment (All Voters): Do you believe that it is likely or unlikely that President Trump will be impeached by the House of Representatives before the next election? Likely Unlikely No Opinion Democrat 34.8 53.9 11.2 Republican 6.5 90.8 2.7 Undeclared 17.7 70.9 11.4 All 19.3 72.0 8.7 Likelihood of Trump Reelection (All Voters): Do you believe that it is likely or unlikely that President Trump will be re-elected? Likely Unlikely No Opinion Democrat 6.2 84.3 9.6 Republican 71.4 20.0 8.6 Undeclared 36.6 49.4 14.0 All 38.3 50.7 11.0 Third Party or Independent Challenger (All Voters): Of the following three statements, which would best describe your willingness to consider a third-party or independent candidate for President? I think it is important to have an alternative to the major parties, and would definitely consider a thirdparty or independent candidate. I wouldn t rule out a third-party or independent candidate, but will likely support a major party candidate. I will only consider a major party candidate. Definitely Likely Major Only Major No Opinion Consider Party Party Democrat 12.9 43.3 42.7 1.1 Republican 27.0 41.1 29.2 2.7 Undeclared 37.1 40.5 20.7 1.7 All 26.8 41.5 29.8 1.8 4

Issues (All Voters): I m going to read a list of issues that some people in New Hampshire have said are important to them. Please listen carefully and then let me know which one issue you would like your elected officials to focus on. RANDOMIZED Making higher education more affordable; Addressing immigration and border security concerns; Strengthening the economy; Addressing environmental concerns, including climate change; Dealing with campaign finance and government ethics; Reducing the federal deficit; Addressing substance abuse; Making health care more affordable. All Voters Democrat Republican Undeclared Immigration/Border 28.5 4.5 54.1 26.6 Health Care 25.2 44.9 13.0 19.8 Environment 13.8 21.3 2.2 17.3 Economy 8.8 5.1 11.9 9.3 Campaign Finance/Ethics 6.3 11.2 1.1 6.8 Federal Deficit 6.2 4.5 8.1 5.9 Higher Education 6.0 5.1 4.9 7.6 Substance Abuse 3.8 1.7 4.3 5.1 Other 1.3 1.7 0.5 1.7 What Democratic Primary Voters Seek in a Candidate (Dem Primary Voters Only): Which of the following three statements best describes what is most important to you in a presidential candidate: I will support the candidate that best represents my policy priorities on issues that are important to me. I will support the candidate that I believe has the best chance of winning the general election. I will support the candidate that will best take the fight to Donald Trump. Policy Best Chance Take Fight to No Opinion Priorities to Win Trump Dem Primary Voters 47.9 19.8 30.1 2.2 5

Democratic Primary Voter Policy Preferences (Dem Primary Voters Only): I m going to read a list of policy proposals that have been suggested or endorsed by presidential candidates. After each one, please tell me if you would be more likely or less likely to support a candidate based on their support for this proposal: RANDOMIZED A Green New Deal to reorient our economy to mitigate climate change; A tax on ultra-wealthy individuals to help pay for social programs; Medicare for All to give everyone access to affordable quality health care; Free tuition for higher education; Reestablish regulations on big banks and Wall Street. More Likely Less Likely No Difference No Opinion Green New Deal 88.6 3.7 3.7 4.1 Medicare for All 83.4 8.1 1.3 7.2 Regulate Banks, Wall St 82.6 4.2 7.6 5.6 Tax on Ultra-Wealthy 77.1 9.9 6.9 6.0 Free Higher Ed Tuition 58.3 23.3 10.8 7.6 Support for Primary Challenge to Trump (GOP Primary Voters Only): Would you support a primary challenge to President Trump? Yes No Unsure GOP Primary Voters 51.3 45.1 3.6 Support for Specific Potential Challenger (Voters Answering Yes to Above Only): Is there a potential candidate that you would support? Yes No Voters Supporting Challenge 25.8 74.2 Mentions: John Kasich (7); Marco Rubio (4); Rand Paul, Mike Pence, Mitt Romney, and Howard Schultz (2); Jeb Bush, Tucker Carlson, Ted Cruz, Jeff Flake, Mike Huckabee, Ron Paul, Bernie Sanders, Jeanne Shaheen, and Ben Shapiro (1). Impact of Trump on GOP Candidates (GOP Primary Voters Only): Do you believe that President Trump would help or hurt Republicans running for other offices below him on the ballot, or have no effect? Helps Hurts No Effect GOP Primary Voters 49.0 18.6 32.4 6

Should Trump Run for Re-election? (GOP Primary Voters Only): If you had the opportunity, would you encourage President Trump to run for re-election, or discourage him? Encourage Discourage No Opinion GOP Primary Voters 77.1 17.2 5.7 Trump Handling of Border Wall Funding Issue (GOP Primary Voters Only): Has the way in which President Trump has handled his dispute with Congress over funding for a border wall changed your opinion of his job performance for the better or the worse, or has it stayed the same? Better Worse Same GOP Primary Voters 40.1 8.6 51.3 Impression of Elected Officials: Respondents were asked their impression of Donald Trump, Chris Sununu, Jeanne Shaheen, Maggie Hassan, Chris Pappas, and Annie Kuster. Trump Feb 2019 Oct 2018 Apr 2018 Feb 2018 Favorable 41.0 40.6 39.8 35.8 Unfavorable 57.0 56.6 58.1 61.5 No Opinion 2.0 2.8 2.0 2.7 Sununu Favorable 64.2 54.1 62.3 58.6 Unfavorable 28.9 36.7 27.9 32.1 No Opinion 6.9 9.2 9.8 9.3 Shaheen Favorable 57.0 53.6 57.0 60.4 Unfavorable 36.6 39.5 38.3 34.6 No Opinion 6.4 6.9 4.7 5.0 Hassan Favorable 52.5 53.1 54.9 55.0 Unfavorable 38.4 40.6 38.4 37.4 No Opinion 9.1 6.2 6.7 7.7 Pappas Favorable 55.8 50.9 27.0 - Unfavorable 19.9 22.0 10.0 - No Opinion 24.3 27.1 33.1 - Kuster Favorable 45.7 51.6 44.7 41.0 Unfavorable 39.6 35.3 32.3 37.7 No Opinion 14.7 13.1 23.0 21.2 7

Job Performance of Elected Officials: Respondents were asked if they approve of the job performance of President Trump, Governor Sununu, Senators Shaheen and Hassan, Congressman Pappas and Congresswoman Kuster. Trump Feb 2019 Oct 2018 Apr 2018 Feb 2018 Approve 42.7 42.6 40.9 36.3 Disapprove 55.5 54.2 57.5 60.9 No Opinion 1.8 3.1 1.6 2.8 Sununu Approve 69.5 61.7 65.0 57.0 Disapprove 24.4 30.9 26.5 31.3 No Opinion 6.1 7.4 8.4 11.7 Shaheen Approve 59.5 54.6 58.4 56.7 Disapprove 33.7 38.3 34.7 34.4 No Opinion 6.8 7.1 7.0 9.0 Hassan Approve 54.8 54.2 56.5 53.3 Disapprove 35.5 38.7 35.8 36.8 No Opinion 9.7 7.1 7.7 9.9 Pappas Approve 48.7 - - - Disapprove 16.2 - - - No Opinion 35.1 - - - Kuster Approve 50.4 50.2 43.7 45.3 Disapprove 35.6 34.3 32.5 33.5 No Opinion 14.1 15.5 23.8 21.2 8