Pennsylvania
Related: About this forumPoll: Pennsylvania Democrats surging with double-digit leads
BY TAL AXELROD - 08/30/18 01:21 PM EDT
Sen. Bob Casey Jr. (D-Pa.) holds a comfortable 13-point lead among registered voters in the survey over Rep. Lou Barletta (R-Pa.), 47 to 34 percent. Nineteen percent of voters remain undecided.
Casey, a two-term senator, has a 41 percent approval rating, according to the poll. Barletta, meanwhile, is hurt by low name-recognition, with 53 percent of voters not knowing enough about him to give an opinion.
Pollsters also found that Gov. Tom Wolf (D-Pa.) holds a 17-point lead over state Sen. Scott Wagner (R), 52 to 35 percent. Twelve percent of voters remain undecided in that race.
Wolf, who is running for his second term, has a 46 percent approval rating in the new survey. He too is aided by his opponents low name recognition, with 42 percent of registered voters not knowing enough about Wagner to give an opinion.
Both Democrats are also buoyed by President Trumps low approval rating in the state, which stands at about 38 percent in the poll.
http://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/404396-poll-pennsylvania-democrats-surging-with-double-digit-leads
beachbum bob
(10,437 posts)FakeNoose
(35,512 posts)They deserve to be re-elected. Good luck to all the Democratic candidates!
rtracey
(2,062 posts)GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......GO GO GO GO GO .......OK I'LL STOP
DeminPennswoods
(16,243 posts)Nearly half (54%) of the states registered voters say they are very interested in the 2018 elections. Voter interest is related to both political party and political ideology. At the moment, more Democrats (60%) than Republicans (53%) or independents (33%) say they are very interested. More self-described liberals (62%) than conservatives (53%) or moderates (51%) say they are very interested. The outcomes of the 2018 mid-terms will be driven by differences in voter turnout among partisans, but likely voter models based on administrative data and self-described interest produce different results. For example, two in five (43%) voters in the sample have voted in the past three general elections; this produces similar proportions of Republicans (47%) and Democrats (44%) being likely to vote if past voting is an indicator of interest
and turnout. But more Democrats (59%) than Republicans (47%) qualify as likely voters when self-descr
ibed interest and intention to vote is used to measure turnout.
There's also a very good historical comparison chart of election indicators on page 11 of the pdf.
DeminPennswoods
(16,243 posts)TPM has a story quoting Politico that the GOP is looking at pulling funding from Comstock (Va), Rothfus and Blum (IA) based on polling and other factors.