Can We Trust the Polls?
If recent elections have taught us anything, it is that accurate polling and election forecasting is extremely difficult.
If recent elections have taught us anything, it is that accurate polling and election forecasting is extremely difficult.
Americans overwhelmingly believe proxy voting is a threat to democracy and want a return to rules requiring members of Congress vote in person.
The New York Times Nate Cohn analyzed recent polls by ABC and CBS and concluded that Republicans are gaining ground ahead of the midterm elections.
Poll results suggest “equal opportunity capitalism” could be a broad, inclusive platform upon which to build a positive governing agenda.
Nate Cohn wrote an interesting analysis in the New York Times suggesting that the same pro-Democrat polling bias we have seen in past elections may be in play again in key states this year.
Testing of 24 critical issue positions with specific language based on previously poll and focus group research reveals a 62% New American Majority that could be captured by the Republican Party, with an additional 13% persuadable to vote for Republicans. This would make 75% of the American electorate available to a New American Majority Coalition.
Contrary to recent Democratic legislative efforts, Americans support election integrity over increasing how easy it is to vote.
Historically, roughly 30% of Hispanics vote Republican in presidential elections, a number that increased slightly in 2020, surprising many.
In the For the People Act, Democrats in Congress voted against three effective reforms that are supported by more than 80 percent of voters.