POLITICAL FIGURES IN NEW JERSEY Who s Up, Who s Down, and Who s Nowhere

Similar documents
NEW JERSEY VOTERS DIVIDED OVER SAME-SEX MARRIAGE. A Rutgers-Eagleton Poll on same-sex marriage, conducted in June 2006, found the state s

RUTGERS-EAGLETON POLL: NEW JERSEY VOTERS SUPPORT GOV. CHRISTIE S CALL FOR GAY MARRIAGE REFERENDUM

Eagleton survey commissioned by NCADD-NJ shows state s broad concern over alcoholism, drug addiction issues

ALABAMA and OKLAHOMA: TRUMP LEADS IN BOTH CLINTON LEADS IN AL, SANDERS IN OK

NATIONAL: TRUMP WIDENS LEAD

Release #2343 Release Date: Saturday, July 10, 2010

IOWA: CRUZ TAKES CAUCUS LEAD

NATIONAL: HOUSE SPEAKERSHIP SHADOWS GOP 2016

Western New England University Polling Institute

THE FIELD POLL. By Mark DiCamillo, Director, The Field Poll

SIENA RESEARCH INSTITUTE SIENA COLLEGE, LOUDONVILLE, NY

MARYLAND: CLINTON LEADS SANDERS BY 25

NEW HAMPSHIRE: TRUMP LEADS, BUSH SECOND

NATIONAL: TRUMP WIDENS NATIONAL LEAD

THE FIELD POLL. By Mark DiCamillo, Director, The Field Poll

FINAL STATEWIDE BUSINESS LIABILITY SURVEY For the New Jersey Lawsuit Reform Alliance

PROPERTY TAX SOLUTIONS

City of Millville Board of Education Early Childhood Education Program

Awareness of New Jersey s Family Leave Insurance Program Is Low, Even As Public Support Remains High and Need Persists

Trump leads GOP field, with Rubio and Cruz next; Clinton leads Sanders among Virginia Democrats

NEW JERSEY S HEALTH COVERAGE PRIORITIES

THE FIELD POLL. By Mark DiCamillo and Mervin Field

IOWA: TRUMP TAKES CAUCUS LEAD

TEXAS: CRUZ, CLINTON LEAD PRIMARIES

CLINTON OR CUOMO THUMP GOP IN 2016 NEW YORK PRES RACE, QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY POLL FINDS; ADOPTED DAUGHTER RUNS BETTER THAN NATIVE SON

Political Parties and the Party System

MUHLENBERG COLLEGE /MORNING CALL Presidential Tracking Poll

The Republican Nomination Race: Romney, Cain Move to the Top September 28-October 2, 2011

FLORIDA: TRUMP WIDENS LEAD OVER RUBIO

THE FIELD POLL. By Mark DiCamillo, Director, The Field Poll

THE PAN ATLANTIC SMS GROUP 54 th OMNIBUS POLL The Benchmark of Maine Public Opinion

The Margin of Error for Differences in Polls

51 st OMNIBUS POLL. Spring The Benchmark of Maine Public Opinion

NATIONAL: SENATE SHOULD CONSIDER SCOTUS PICK

THE FIELD POLL. By Mark DiCamillo, Director, The Field Poll

NEW JERSEY: OBAMA RATINGS UP

MICHIGAN: TRUMP, CLINTON IN FRONT

NEW JERSEY: PUBLIC REACTS TO BRIDGEGATE CHARGES

NEW JERSEY VOTERS TELL GOV. CHRISTIE 2-1 TO COME HOME, QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY POLL FINDS; GOV. IN DISTANT FOURTH PLACE IN GOP PRESIDENTIAL RACE

THE FIELD POLL. By Mark DiCamillo, Director, The Field Poll

State Constitutional Reform and Related Issues

SIENA RESEARCH INSTITUTE SIENA COLLEGE, LOUDONVILLE, NY

THE FIELD POLL. By Mark DiCamillo, Director, The Field Poll

IOWA: CARSON, TRUMP TIE FOR LEAD

The Public on Requiring Individuals to Have Health Insurance

What Americans Say About the Nation s Medical Schools and Teaching Hospitals

VIRGINIA: TRUMP, CLINTON LEAD PRIMARIES

THE FIELD POLL. By Mark DiCamillo, Director, The Field Poll

OHIO: KASICH, TRUMP IN GOP SQUEAKER; CLINTON LEADS IN DEM RACE

SOUTH CAROLINA: TRUMP LEADS, CARSON 2 nd

Marist College Institute for Public Opinion Poughkeepsie, NY Phone Fax

THE FIELD POLL. By Mark DiCamillo, Director, The Field Poll

Maryland s leader in public opinion polling Maryland Poll

THE FIELD POLL. By Mark DiCamillo, Director, The Field Poll

Release #2349 Release Date: Tuesday, July 20, 2010

CHRISTIE, CLINTON TIED IN 2016 WHITE HOUSE RACE, QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY NATIONAL POLL FINDS; DEMS LOSE 9-POINT EDGE TO TIE GOP IN 2014 HOUSE RACES

American Attitudes Toward Arabs and Muslims

behavior research center s

Marist College Institute for Public Opinion Poughkeepsie, NY Phone Fax

Latino Decisions Poll of Non-Voters November 2014

How the Survey was Conducted Nature of the Sample: NBC News/Marist New Hampshire Poll of 1,037 Adults

CARSON IS TOP DOC IN COLORADO REPUBLICAN RACE, QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY POLL FINDS; ALL TOP GOP CANDIDATES LEAD CLINTON BY DOUBLE-DIGITS

Release #2301 Release Date and Time: 6:00 a.m., Tuesday, March 10, 2009

ANGELO J. GENOVA PARTNER

America s Voice/LD State Battleground Survey, April 2016

(212) FOR RELEASE: MAY

THE CNN / WMUR NH PRIMARY POLL THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

Clinton Leads Sanders by 29%

In battleground Virginia, Clinton beating all Republicans in 2016 presidential matchups; GOP voters divided, with Bush up, Christie down

Mind on Statistics. Chapter 10

Release #2443 Release Date: Thursday, February 28, 2013

THE FIELD POLL. By Mark DiCamillo and Mervin Field

Post-Debate Overnight Poll Finds Trump Still Leading Pack; Carly Fiorina Winner of Debates

CHAPTER 9 CONVERSATIONS WITH CONSULTANTS

A Declaration. Independents GREG ORMAN EXCERPT #2 GREENLEAF BOOK GROUP PRESS.

America s Voice/LD State Battleground Survey, April 2016

Before the Conventions: Insights into Trump and Clinton Voters July 8-12, 2016

Voting and Political Demography in 1996

Statewide Colorado Poll Consumer Issue: Car Insurance Mandating Medical Payments Coverage

Mark Warner has high approval ratings, leads Ed Gillespie by 20 points; Bob McDonnell s approval ratings drop after federal indictment

US Public: Keep Las Vegas in Las Vegas

Washington Post-Kaiser-Harvard Massachusetts special election poll

The Senate Race between Incumbent Republican Senator Kelly Ayotte and Democratic Challenger Maggie Hassan continues to show a tight race.

Trump Still on Top - Cruz Rises in Michigan (Trump 42% - Cruz 19% - Rubio 15% - Kasich 14%)

NATIONAL: GOP ALL OVER THE 2016 MAP

FINDINGS OF THE CALIFORNIA SENATE BASELINE SURVEY

Trump Continues Big Michigan Lead (Trump 39% - Rubio 19% - Cruz 14% - Kasich 12%)

NEW HAMPSHIRE: TRUMP, SANDERS HOLD LEADS

paulsimoninstitute.org FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE March 20, 2015 John Jackson David Yepsen

EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE: Monday, February 29 at 6:00 a.m.

National Conference on Public Employee Retirement Systems Findings from a Survey of 505 Small Business Owners in California

New Jersey State Legislature: A Demographic Profile

TRUMP IS TOPS AS CLINTON DROPS IN CONNECTICUT PRIMARIES, QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY POLL FINDS; BIDEN IS TOP VOTE-GETTER IN GENERAL ELECTION

THE PRESIDENT, CONGRESS AND DISSATISFACTION WITH GOVERNMENT February 5-10 th, 2010

EQUAL PAY FOR WOMEN HAS MOST SUPPORT IN NEW YORK, QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY POLL FINDS; VOTERS BACK MINIMUM WAGE 5-1, SPLIT ON GAS DRILLING

Crete-Monee Middle School U.S. Constitution Test Study Guide Answers

Iowa State Poll. Page 1

EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE: Wednesday, May 4 at 6:00 a.m.

November 2015 Winthrop Poll of SC Democratic Presidential Primary Likely Voters

TRUMP TOPS REPUBLICAN PACK BY WIDE MARGIN, QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY NATIONAL POLL FINDS; BUT DEMS TRUMP TRUMP IN GENERAL ELECTION

Transcription:

January 29, 2004 (Release 145-5) CONTACT: CLIFF ZUKIN OR PATRICK MURRAY (732) 932-9384 A story based on the survey findings presented in this release and background memo appears in the Thursday, January 29, 2004 Star-Ledger. We ask users to properly attribute this copyrighted information to The Star-Ledger/Eagleton-Rutgers Poll. POLITICAL FIGURES IN NEW JERSEY Who s Up, Who s Down, and Who s Nowhere New Jersey s two U.S. Senators, Democrats Jon Corzine and Frank Lautenberg are the most positively viewed of New Jersey s political figures. Former U.S. Senator Robert Torricelli has taken over from former Governor Jim Florio as the least well regarded. And former Governor Christie Whitman and current Governor James E. McGreevey are somewhere in the middle. This is a summary of findings of the latest Star-Ledger/Eagleton-Rutgers Poll conducted between January 7 and 13 with a scientifically selected sample of 904 New Jersey residents. The poll also tested U.S. Attorney Chris Christie, Senate President Richard Codey and Assembly Speaker Albio Sires, finding that none register a significant impact on citizens of the state. The survey has a sampling error of ± 3.9 percent. Jon Corzine 46% 15% Frank Lautenberg 42% 35% 23% Christie Whitman James McGreevey 47% 36% 16% 21% 37% 43% Favorable No Opinion Unfavorable Jim Florio 27% 33% Robert Torricelli 19% 41% 0% 20% 60% 80% 100% The Star-Ledger/Eagleton-Rutgers Poll Eagleton Institute of Politics 185 Ryders Lane, New Brunswick, New Jersey 08901 Director: Cliff Zukin x247 Associate Director: Patrick Murray x243 Graduate Research Assistants: Robert Suls Allison Kopicki Mike Schubert x289 Phone: 732-932-9384 - Website: http://slerp.rutgers.edu - Fax: 732-932-1551

Favorable opinions of Senator Jon Corzine outnumber negative ones by a margin of three-to-one--46 percent favorable to only 15 percent unfavorable, with the remainder expressing no opinion. Corzine, the former co-chairman of Wall Street investment firm Goldman Sachs, has risen to become a major player in the national Democratic party midway through his first term in office. He is now Chair of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. Frank Lautenberg is also highly regarded, with 42 percent favorable and 23 percent unfavorable. Another 35 percent express no opinion. Lautenberg had served three terms in the Senate before retiring in 2000, only to be drafted by state Democratic leaders to replace Torricelli on the ticket in 2002 after Torricelli became embroiled in a fund-raising scandal. Mainly as a result of that scandal, Torricelli has the highest negatives of any of the politicians tested by the Rutgers-based poll. Just one-in-five has positive regard for Torricelli while twice as many offer negative assessments of him. More Garden State residents also view former Governor Jim Florio unfavorably () than offer favorable assessments of him (27%). Former two-term Governor Christie Whitman has the highest positive rating of anyone tested (47%), but also has a significant negative rating at 37 percent unfavorable. Just 16 percent offer no opinion of Whitman, the lowest of all nine figures asked about. Statewide, assessments about current Governor McGreevey tilt negative, with 43 percent holding an unfavorable view of him and 36 percent holding a favorable one. 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 30% 20% 10% 0% 79% 11% 10% Albio Sires 76% 73% 16% 15% 11% 9% Richard Codey Chris Christie Favorable No Opinion Unfavorable 2

Despite holding leadership positions during the last session of the state legislature, very few New Jerseyans are able to offer any assessment of Assembly Speaker Sires or Senate President Codey. Eight out of ten New Jerseyans hold no opinion of Sires--just 11 percent have a favorable opinion of the Hudson county democrat and 10 percent an unfavorable opinion of him. The marks for Democrat Codey of Essex County are similar: 16 percent favorable, 11 percent unfavorable and 73 percent no opinion. Finally, three-quarters have no opinion of Christie, who has been in the news recently for prosecuting highly visible political corruption cases in New Jersey. Just 15 percent have a favorable opinion of Christie, who has been mentioned as a possible Republican candidate for Governor in 2005, but just nine percent have an unfavorable opinion of him. Poll director Cliff Zukin commented, Local TV news is the primary information source for most people, and in New Jersey that means mainly New York and Philadelphia stations. These pay little to no attention to what goes on in New Jersey government and politics, which is one of the reasons that knowledge is so low and so few are able to offer opinions. 3

BACKGROUND MEMO RELEASE (EP145-5) January 29, 2004 The latest Star-Ledger/Eagleton-Rutgers Poll was conducted by telephone from January 7 to 13 with a scientifically selected random sample of 904 New Jersey adults. Some of the figures in this release are based upon a sub-sample of 823 registered voters. All surveys are subject to sampling error, which is the expected probable difference between interviewing everyone in a population versus a scientific sampling drawn from that population. The sampling error is + 3.9 percent, at a 95 percent confidence interval. Thus if 50 percent of New Jersey adult residents were found to say that things in New Jersey are going in the right direction, one would be 95 percent sure that the true figure would be between 46.1 and 53.9 percent (50 + 3.9) had all New Jersey adult residents been interviewed, rather than just a sample. Sampling error increases as the sample size decreases, so statements based on various population subgroups, such as separate figures reported for Democrats, Independents or Republicans, are subject to more error than are statements based on the total sample. The sampling error for registered voters is ± 4.2 percent. Sampling error does not take into account other sources of variation inherent in public opinion studies, such as non-response, question wording or context effects. The verbatim wording of all questions asked is reproduced in this background memo. The sample has been stratified based on county and the data have been weighted on age and education to insure an accurate proportional representation of the state. A split sample approach was used, in which half the respondents were asked their opinions of certain public figures, and half the sample were asked about the remaining public figures. The questions referred to in this release are as follows: I m going to read you the names of some political figures in New Jersey and would like you to tell me if your opinion of each is favorable or unfavorable. If you don t have an opinion, just say so. First, how about [NAME] favorable or unfavorable? [NF] GOVERNOR JAMES McGREEVEY: 36% 43% 21% 100% (904) Registered Voters 38% 47% 15% 100% (823) Party Affiliation --Democrat 52 26 22 100 (289) --Independent 35 44 21 100 (295) --Republican 21 64 15 100 (214) U.S. SENATOR JON CORZINE: 46% 15% 101% (904) Registered Voters 50% 17% 33% 100% (823) Party Affiliation --Democrat 58 7 35 100 (289) --Independent 51 13 35 99 (295) --Republican 31 27 42 100 (214) --March 2002 37 17 46 100 (803) --April 2001 27 15 58 101 (802) 4

U.S. SENATOR FRANK LAUTENBERG: 42% 23% 35% 100% (904) Registered Voters 48% 25% 28% 101% (823) Party Affiliation --Democrat 54 11 35 100 (289) --Independent 44 26 30 100 (295) --Republican 33 35 32 100 (214) --November 1994 42 29 29 100 (801) [Asked of half the sample] NEW JERSEY SENATE PRESIDENT RICHARD CODEY: 16% 11% 73% 100% (452) Registered Voters 14% 11% 74% 99% (413) NEW JERSEY SENATE ASSEMBLY SPEAKER ALBIO SIRES: 11% 10% 79% 100% (452) Registered Voters 8% 11% 81% 100% (413) U.S. ATTORNEY CHRIS CHRISTIE: 15% 9% 76% 100% (452) Registered Voters 16% 10% 74% 100% (410) FORMER U.S. SENATOR ROBERT TORRICELLI: 19% 41% 100% (452) Registered Voters 22% 49% 30% 101% (410) --March 2002 29 22 49 100 (803) --April 2001 24 14 61 99 (802) 5

FORMER GOVERNOR CHRISTIE WHITMAN: 47% 37% 16% 100% (452) Registered Voters 43% 45% 13% 101% (413) --January 2001 51 29 20 100 (803) --March 2000 51 27 22 100 (800) FORMER GOVERNOR JIM FLORIO: 27% 33% 100% (452) Registered Voters 29% 43% 28% 100% (410) 6