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Subject: "Democrats are fired up and maintain a strong 2018 lead" Previous topic | Next topic
j0510
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36. "Democrats are fired up and maintain a strong 2018 lead"
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https://www.cnn.com/2018/10/09/politics/cnn-poll-midterms/index.html

CNN poll: Democrats are fired up and maintain a strong 2018 lead
By Grace Sparks, CNN

Updated 12:05 PM ET, Tue October 9, 2018


Washington (CNN)Four weeks out from Election Day, Democrats remain well ahead of Republicans in a generic ballot matchup, with 54% of likely voters saying they support the Democrat in their district and 41% backing a Republican, according to a CNN poll conducted by SSRS.

This is the widest margin of support for Democrats in a midterm cycle since 2006, when at this point, the party held a whopping 21-point lead over Republicans among likely voters. That's also when Democrats seized control of the House from Republicans, making Nancy Pelosi speaker until 2011.

Women more likely to lean Democratic than men
If the elections for Congress were being held today, which party's candidate would you vote for in your Congressional district?
Likely voters
Men
Women
The Democratic Party's candidate 54% 45% 63%
The Republican Party's candidate 41% 50% 33%
Source: CNN poll, October 4-7, 2018, 739 likely voters, margin of sampling error ±4.4%.

Graphic: Joyce Tseng, CNN

This year, Democrats' enthusiasm about their congressional vote has increased and 62% now say they're extremely or very enthusiastic to vote, up seven points since September among Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents. Among Republicans and Republican leaning independents, enthusiasm has remained relatively steady, going from 50% in September to 52% in the most recent poll.

Democratic enthusiasm this year is more intense than it has been in previous midterm cycles, which typically engage voters less than presidential years. The 40% who call themselves "extremely enthusiastic" is the highest share to say so in a midterm election cycle since CNN first asked the question in 2009.

In fact, Democrats' enthusiasm today more closely resembles the 2008 presidential election. Just before President Barack Obama was elected, 45% of Democrats and Democratic-leaners said they were extremely enthusiastic about voting that November. In 2008, Democrats won eight seats in the Senate and 21 in the House, as well as a victory in the presidency.

Strong support for Democrats among women

Women's support for Democratic candidates remains extremely strong; 63% of women say they'll vote for the Democrat and only a third say they'll vote for the Republican. Men are more closely divided, but tilt in the opposite direction, with half backing the Republican and 45% behind the Democrat.

If women were to vote as the likely voter number suggests, it would be Democrats strongest performance in the House race in the history of modern exit polling (back to 1976). The previous record for women voting Democratic was in 1982, when Democrats got the nod of 58% of women voters.

Women are not significantly more enthusiastic to vote than men: 57% are extremely or very enthusiastic compared to 53% of men. This is, however, a shift from what we usually see in a midterm election year. In 2010 at this point, 46% of women voters were enthusiastic about voting in the midterm election vs. 54% of men. In 2014, a very low turnout year, 32% of men were enthusiastic compared to 28% of women.

Republicans are winning the expectations game

But for all the good signs in this poll for Democrats, they have not made gains in the expectations game. Half of Americans (50%) say they expect Republicans to remain in control of Congress after the elections, while just a third think Democrats will win control (34%), down from 40% who thought they'd take over Congress in an August survey.

On balance, more say the country would be better off if the Democrats take control of Congress (38%) than say it would be worse off (32%). But that gap has narrowed since September, when 40% thought the country would be better off under Democratic control and 28% said it would be worse off. About a quarter in both polls said it didn't make a difference.

Either way, Americans aren't much impressed by Congress as it is: Just 17% say they approve of the way Congress is handling its job, the worst rating (by one point) of Donald Trump's presidency.

When asked which party would handle important issues better, Democrats hold the edge on two of three critical campaign issues. Americans largely trust Democrats over Republicans on handling health care, 54% to 36%, and immigration, 49% to 42%. Republicans have the edge on the economy -- 48% favor them on that issue vs. 42% who prefer the Democrats.

Beyond the big three, Republicans have an advantage on national security (50% say Republicans would handle it better, compared to 39% who prefer Democrats). Democrats hold the advantage on handling issues of sexual misconduct (51% to 30%) and the investigation into Russian meddling in the US election (50% to 34%). On the federal budget and gun policy, Americans split between the two parties. On gun policy, that's a shift away from Democrats, who held a 48% to 40% advantage in a March CNN poll.

Both Democratic and Republican Party favorability ratings have stayed about the same since May. In the new poll, 46% have a positive view of the Democratic Party and 45% have a negative one. Republicans fare a little worse, with 40% holding a favorable view and 52% thinking of them unfavorably.

The CNN Poll was conducted by SSRS October 4 through 7 among a random national sample of 1,009 adults reached on landlines or cellphones by a live interviewer. Results for the full sample have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.8 percentage points.

  

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Nikki Haley considered for Trump's secretary of state [View all] , Binladen, Thu Nov-17-16 03:42 PM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
Don't know who Nikki Haley is, but she has a porn star name tho
Nov 17th 2016
1
I thought it but didnt say it, spelling and everything...
Nov 17th 2016
2
haha, definitely though this was a porn post til i read the rest of
Nov 17th 2016
4
Next Door Nikki
Oct 09th 2018
19
thank the Matrix Glenn McConnell ain't LT Gov no more
Nov 17th 2016
3
to the incredibly low bar in my head, she's a good choice
Nov 17th 2016
5
i was thinking the same thing
Nov 17th 2016
6
well she's only being considered, so it could still happen.
Nov 17th 2016
7
Yup.
Nov 17th 2016
9
Yeah. I can't think of anything absolutely awful about her
Nov 17th 2016
10
RE: Nikki Haley considered for Trump's secretary of state
Nov 17th 2016
8
Trump is bringing all the worst politicians into the federal government.
Nov 17th 2016
11
thats actually better than some of the alternatives
Nov 17th 2016
12
Axios reporting Nikki Haley resigning as UN Ambassador
Oct 09th 2018
13
Maybe she's moving into his cabinet? Sec of State? n/m
Oct 09th 2018
14
ya'll man's Ye doin the Birdman hand rub rn
Oct 09th 2018
15
the writing is on the wall..she prolly got that good mueller intel
Oct 09th 2018
16
After feeling hopeless (again) all weekend,
Oct 09th 2018
17
RE: After feeling hopeless (again) all weekend,
Oct 09th 2018
20
      Probably more likely. In which case we're fucked forever.
Oct 09th 2018
21
Watchdog Group Calls For Probe Of Nikki Haley Flights Funded By Business...
Oct 09th 2018
18
i think she just got pushed out by pompeo, bolton, etc.
Oct 09th 2018
22
lmao he called her a hidden genius as she's sitting right there
Oct 09th 2018
23
She still sucks and is nothing resembling a moderate
Oct 09th 2018
25
      moderate repub basically means not cartoonishly trumpian now.
Oct 09th 2018
27
sc repub congressman says shit is fishy
Oct 09th 2018
24
Mark Sanford: I understand which stories the public will find plausible
Oct 09th 2018
28
This is some way, far out speculation, but...
Oct 09th 2018
26
RE: This is some way, far out speculation, but...
Oct 09th 2018
29
^^^ That's much more plausible than my idea. n/m
Oct 09th 2018
30
Javanka to be appointed UN ambassador so they can go back to NYC
Oct 09th 2018
32
She said she isn’t running in 2020
Oct 09th 2018
31
She said she is not running in 2020. I interpret that as not running for...
Oct 09th 2018
35
      Why would she run for President when Trump is in the WH?
Oct 09th 2018
48
I hope there's a primary challenge, though I doubt it
Oct 09th 2018
34
What writing? What makes you think he'll lose in 2020?
Oct 09th 2018
33
     
           lol
Oct 09th 2018
37
           I appreciate it, but...
Oct 09th 2018
39
                ALLLLL of this.
Oct 09th 2018
41
                     Right...and "we" keep underestimating him, man
Oct 09th 2018
43
                     you fogot "they won't let him " but spot on
Oct 09th 2018
44
                     yeah that one...I'm sure I forgot a few others too
Oct 09th 2018
46
                     Haha very true. "Checks and balances !"
Oct 09th 2018
47
                     It's to make us feel better haha. Definitely that.
Oct 09th 2018
45
                     to some people the obama years were the trainwreck.
Oct 09th 2018
51
                     i dont know why people dont get that the repub party is all in on trump.
Oct 09th 2018
49
                          I think his approval rating among the GOP is as high as W's was
Oct 09th 2018
50
                          yup it is around the same.
Oct 09th 2018
52
                          which begs the question...what do we do?
Oct 09th 2018
53
                               we gotta attain power. in congress, in the states, etc.
Oct 09th 2018
56
                                    More questions...sorry
Oct 09th 2018
57
                     This: "He's experienced little to no failure...
Oct 09th 2018
54
                          Well that's not necessarily true.
Oct 09th 2018
55
Why Nikki Haley’s resignation is no surprise (WaPo swipe & link)
Oct 09th 2018
38
Ivanka BEEN wantin da UN Ambassador gig
Oct 09th 2018
40
interesting that 'young' repub stars are completely leaving government
Oct 09th 2018
42
Simple answer: Trump got laughed at at the UN, blamed Haley
Oct 09th 2018
58

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