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Voters Now Trust Republicans More On 10 Key Issues
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Shadow
August 26, 2010, 1:08pm Report to Moderator
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Trust on Issues
Voters Now Trust Republicans More On All 10 Key Issues
Thursday, August 26, 2010
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Voters now trust Republicans more than Democrats on all 10 of the important issues regularly tracked by Rasmussen Reports.

The GOP has consistently been trusted on most issues for months now, but in July they held the lead on only nine of the key issues.

Republicans lead Democrats 47% to 39% on the economy, which remains the most important issue to voters. Those numbers are nearly identical to those found in June. Republicans have held the advantage on the economy since May of last year.

But for the first time in months, Republicans now hold a slight edge on the issues of government ethics and corruption, 40% to 38%. Voters have been mostly undecided for the past several months on which party to trust more on this issue, but Democrats have held small leads since February. Still, more than one-in-five voters (22%) are still not sure which party to trust more on ethics issues.

Government ethics and corruption have been second only to the economy in terms of importance to voters over the past year.

(Want a free daily e-mail update? If it's in the news, it's in our polls).  Rasmussen Reports updates are also available on Twitter or Facebook.  

Two surveys of 1,000 Likely U.S. Voters each were conducted August 19-20 and August 23-24, 2010 by Rasmussen Reports. The margin of sampling error is +/- 3 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence. Field work for all Rasmussen Reports surveys is conducted by Pulse Opinion Research, LLC. See methodology.

Republicans hold a 52% to 36% lead over Democrats on the issue of taxes. It's the only issue this month on which the GOP earns the trust of the majority of voters. In June, more than 50% of voters nationwide trusted Republicans more on the issues of national security, taxes and health care.

Voters trust the GOP over Democrats by a 49% to 37% margin on national security and the War on Terror but give the GOP just a 43% to 40% edge on the war in Iraq. Republicans are trusted more by 43% to handle the war in Afghanistan, compared to 36% for Democrats.

On the issue of immigration, Republicans are trusted more by a 44% to 35% margin. That gap has narrowed slightly from June, when the GOP led 47% to 32% on the issue. It was the party’s largest advantage since January.

Despite a judge’s ruling putting key provisions of Arizona’s new immigration law on hold, most U.S. voters still favor passage of such a law in their own state.

An overwhelming majority of voters think all those who vote in this country should be required to present photo identification before they cast their ballots.

On health care, voters now trust Republicans slightly more - by a 48% to 40% margin. In June, the GOP held a 51% to 40% edge on this issue. Fifty-six percent (56%) of voters continue to favor repeal of the national health care bill, with 46% who Strongly Favor it.

The parties remain close on the issue of education, with the GOP holding a statistically insignificant 41% to 40% edge. Both parties have held very modest leads on this issue for the past several months.

When it comes to the issue of Social Security, voters again give the Republicans the edge, this time by a 44% to 38% margin.

Republicans hold a nine-point lead over Democrats on the Generic Congressional Ballot for the week ending Sunday, August 22, 2010. They've led on the ballot since last summer.

Incumbent members of Congress don’t exactly get a vote of confidence from their constituents. Just 27% of voters think their representative in Congress is the best possible person for the job, down six points from November of last year. Only 37% believe their local congressional representative deserves reelection, compared to 42% who felt that way way last fall.
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Tommy
August 26, 2010, 4:22pm Report to Moderator

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Scott Rasmussen was a paid consultant for the 2004 George W. Bush campaign.

That crap is about as credible as FOX.


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Shadow
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.

Ipsos/Reuters Poll conducted by Ipsos Public Affairs. Aug. 19-22, 2010. N=950 registered voters nationwide. MoE ± 3. Note: 6/10 & earlier: Ipsos/McClatchy Poll.

.

"I know it is a long way off, but thinking about the elections in 2010, if the election for U.S. Congress were held today, would you vote for the Democratic candidate or the Republican candidate in your district where you live?" If candidate from another party, don't plan to vote, or unsure: "If you had to choose, would you lean more towards the Democratic candidate or the Republican candidate?"

.

Democratic
candidate      Republican
candidate      Candidate
from another
party (vol.)      Don't plan
to vote (vol.)      Unsure
%     %     %     %     %
8/19-22/10

45      46      1      2      6
7/22-25/10

44      46      2      2      6
6/10-13/10

42      43      1      3      11
5/6-9/10

45      42      2      2      8
4/1-5/10

45      46      1      2      6
2/26-28/10

47      43      1      2      6
10/29 - 11/1/09

46      45      2      2      5
.

Excludes leaners:

8/27-31/09 Adults

42      34      5      7      12


Gallup Poll. Weekly tracking of registered voters nationwide. Interviews conducted as part of Gallup Daily tracking.

.

"Now, turning to this year's congressional elections -- If the elections for Congress were being held today, which party's candidate would you vote for in your congressional district: the Democratic Party's candidate or the Republican Party's candidate?" If other/unsure/refused: "As of today, do you lean more toward the Democratic Party's candidate or the Republican Party's candidate?" Options rotated

.

Democratic
candidate      Republican
candidate               
%     %               
8/16-22/10

44      47               
8/9-15/10

43      50               
8/2-8/10

43      49               
7/26 - 8/1/10

43      48               
7/19-25/10

48      44               
7/12-18/10

49      43               
7/5-11/10

47      46               
6/28 - 7/4/10

44      46               
6/21-27/10

46      45               
6/14-20/10

46      46               
6/7-13/10

44      49               
5/31 - 6/6/10

46      46               
5/24-30/10

43      49               
5/17-23/10

47      46               
5/10-16/10

45      46               
5/3-8/10

46      46               
4/26 - 5/2/10

45      45               
4/19-25/10

45      45               
4/12-18/10

43      46               
4/5-11/10

44      48               
3/29 - 4/4/10

46      46               
3/22-28/10

44      47               
3/15-21/10

47      45               
3/8-14/10

47      44               
3/1-7/10

47      44               


Time Poll conducted by Abt SRBI. Aug. 16-17, 2010. N=912 registered voters nationwide, including 827 likely voters.
LV = likely voters. RV = registered voters.

.

"There will be an election for U.S. Congress in November. If you had to decide today, would you vote for the Democratic candidate in your district or the Republican candidate?" If unsure: "Are you leaning more toward the Democratic Party candidate or more toward the Republican Party candidate?" Options rotated

.

Democratic
candidate      Republican
candidate      Tea Party
(vol.)      Other (vol.)      Unsure
%     %     %     %     %
8/16-17/10 LV

40      47      1      3      10
8/16-17/10 RV

40      45      1      4      10
.

7/12-13/10 RV

47      43      1      3      6


AP-GfK Poll conducted by GfK Roper Public Affairs & Media. Aug. 11-16, 2010. Nationwide.

.

"If the election for U.S. House of Representatives were held today, would you vote for the Democratic or Republican candidate in your congressional district?" If unsure: "Do you lean more towards the Democratic or Republican candidate in your district?" Options rotated. N=890 registered voters.

.

Democratic
candidate      Republican
candidate      Other
candidate (vol.)      Unsure      None (vol.)
%     %     %     %     %
8/11-16/10

45      49      1      4      1
.

"Would you like to see your own member of Congress get reelected in November, or would you like to see someone else win the election?" N=1,007 adults, MoE ± 4.5

.

Own
member      Someone
else      Don't care
(vol.)      Unsure      Refused
%     %     %     %     %
8/11-16/10

41      45      5      8      1
6/9-14/10

37      55      4      4      1
5/7-11/10

36      53      6      5      -
4/7-12/10

43      51      3      3      -
3/3-8/10

40      49      7      4      1
1/12-17/10

43      47      4      6      -
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