The great Democratic divide elects Trump twice
Finally, 47 percent of Elites had graduated college, while 80 percent of the Working Class had not.
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Finally, 47 percent of Elites had graduated college, while 80 percent of the Working Class had not.
A noteworthy 47 percent of those who responded selected Vice President Harris, while only 38 percent identified former President Trump.
Yet Republicans lost them by 2 points (47-49). This was after winning them in 10 consecutive elections with a Democrat in the White House.
Rick Scott over Democratic challenger Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, 47 percent to 43 percent.
But Trump won them decisively by 17 points, 47-30 percent.
Polling analyst Nate Silver, in a New York Times op-ed last week, pointed out that Democratic Senate candidates in rough races are running better than Biden in 46 of the 47 quality surveys.
Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., on a 359-47 vote. It wasn’t all bonhomie in the House. Several measures raised partisan hackles on their way to passage and nearly certain Senate doom.
Less than half of Republicans and independents have a favorable view: Republicans are slightly negative at 42 percent favorable to 47 percent unfavorable, while independents are slightly positive at 46
In 2020, conservatives jumped to 47 percent, which helped Trump win the state.
In 2016, 18 percent of the electorate had an unfavorable view of both Trump and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton; Trump won those voters 47 percent to 30 percent.
In 2022, Republicans lost Independents by two points, 47 percent to 49 percent, the reason the expected red wave didn’t happen, despite a historic party identification advantage of plus-3 percentage points
The survey shows Trump is underwater by 13 percentage points on the likability scale with voters, and more (47 percent yes to 22 percent no) believe, as a New York judge ruled this week, he inflated the
They also favor the GOP on handling the economy by 14 points (51 percent to 37 percent), taxes by 7 percent (47 percent to 40 percent) and jobs by 6 percent (47 percent to 41 percent.)
Paradoxically for Biden, voters have more confidence in Trump to improve the country’s infrastructure (47 percent to Biden’s 45 percent).
Now 47 years old, the freshman from New York’s Hudson Valley won his first election at 18.
Forty-one percent of respondents to an Economist-YouGov survey conducted earlier this month approved of how Biden was running U.S. foreign policy, with 47 percent disapproving.
The website FiveThirtyEight has Pence’s personal favorable rating at 35 percent, while his unfavorable rating is 47 percent.
In the crucial March 15 primaries, Kasich won his state’s winner-take-all primary (47 percent to 36 percent for Trump), while Trump won winner-take-all Florida (46 percent to 27 percent for Rubio and 17
In 2020, because of the pandemic, the budget jumped 47 percent to $6.5 trillion, as both Democrats and Republicans supported the need for emergency funding.
They believe, by a margin of 47 percent to 39 percent, that gas prices are down over $1.50 from their peak.