Skip to content

Search Roll Call

Search the Roll Call archive by keyword, date, Congress, section, or tags.

138 results for "1"

Filters: 118th Congress polling Clear all

The great Democratic divide elects Trump twice

The 2016 survey found that Elites were 74 percent liberal and 1 percent conservative, while Working Class voters were 43 percent moderate and 24 percent conservative.

America may have a new third party: the Democrats

This advantage occurred despite Republicans slipping by 1 percentage point, going from 36 percent in 2020 to 35 percent in 2024, according to the unfinalized exit polls.

Not shying from the red label in a blue district

There’s been little public polling on the race, which is the case in most House races, but an Emerson College/Pix11/The Hill poll taken between Oct. 1 and 3of 630 likely voters found Lawler leading, 45

This is the Obama-Biden-Harris economic legacy

People who had a negative view of the economy voted for Trump by a 2-1 margin (62 percent to 31 percent). This was a key reason why Hillary Clinton lost in 2016.

Dean of California GOP faces a tight rematch

District boundaries In a district former President Donald Trump would have won by 1 percentage point in 2020, had the current boundaries been in place, the poll is a warning sign for Calvert, Grose said

Campaigns · 118th Congress

At the Races: Please bet responsibly

A statewide exit poll after the 2022 contest found Latino voters supported Democrats by a 2-to-1 margin, a result Democrats are seeking to replicate.

Hurricane relief funds stable for now, officials say

analyst Nate Silver’s latest polling average update, North Carolina and Georgia are the closest of any states in the race between Harris and former President Donald Trump, with Trump currently less than 1

Biden floats recess action on Helene supplemental

town last week, Congress passed a stopgap funding measure that includes a provision allowing the Federal Emergency Management Agency to tap into about $20 billion in disaster relief funds beginning Oct. 1,

To debate or not to debate, that is the question

In a new Winning the Issues survey (September 18–19), the electorate was asked how each candidate did in the debate on a scale of 1 (very poorly) to 5 (neutral) to 9 (very well).