The Mercury News

Poll: Voters upset with 2016 campaign

Before first debate, hopefuls criticized for lack of focus on issues

- By Laurie Kellman and Emily Swanson

WASHINGTON — Carol Jones knows what she wants to hear Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump discuss during their first televised debate: education and jobs. She’s far from sure which candidate will earn her vote on Election Day.

“All we see is the cat fighting,” says the Shirley, Arkansas, retired substitute teacher. At Monday’s debate, the 70-year-old says, “they need to talk about their programs ... but I don’t think they will.”

A majority of Americans, like Jones, say they’re frustrated, angry — or both — with the 2016 presidenti­al election, according to a new poll by the Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. Most Americans aren’t feeling proud or hopeful about the race, and half feel helpless, the results find. Majorities of Americans want more focus on issues that are important to them, starting with health care, Social Security, education, terrorism and homeland security.

Apathy isn’t the problem, the survey found. Eighty-six percent of Americans are paying at least some attention to the race.

The campaign is certainly hard to miss. Trump and Clinton are the two least popular presidenti­al candidates in history, and their ferocious battle is smashing precedents and dominating public discourse.

Trump has built his campaign in large part on attention-getting — and frequently untrue — accusation­s, such as that his opponent “is the devil” and President Barack Obama “founded” the Islamic State group. But he’s found success linking the nation’s immigratio­n woes to its national security concerns, the latter of which is rated by Americans as among the top issues facing the country.

Clinton is a former senator and secretary of state who is an avowed foreign and domestic policy wonk. She has tried to make the election, in part, a referendum on Trump’s fitness for office. Her recent stumble during an abrupt exit from this year’s 9/11 memorial ceremony, captured on video, added to the reality-show quality of the election. Her campaign disclosed that she’d been diagnosed with pneumonia.

Clinton and Trump have clear political and stylistic objectives during their first debate Monday, the first of three such showdowns certain to influence the race in its final six weeks. For both, it’s about rattling the other candidate — and not being baited into a less-than-presidenti­al performanc­e. Trump is looking to shore up his credibilit­y with moderate white voters, after more than a year of remarks that appeared intolerant or bigoted. Clinton is trying to appeal to young Americans, who are unenthusia­stic about her candidacy.

Issues? Jones suggests the candidates owe more on that front it to potential voters who don’t have access to the internet or the time she has to hunt down their policy positions.

“I went looking on the internet for (Clinton’s) position on free (college) education, and it was hard, but I finally found it,” says the lifelong Democrat, who isn’t sold on Clinton because she doesn’t trust her, or husband Bill, the former president and governor of Jones’ state. “They need to talk about their programs on this, this and that.”

The AP-NORC poll of 1,022 adults was conducted Sept. 15 to 18 using a sample drawn from NORC’s probabilit­y-based AmeriSpeak panel, which is designed to be representa­tive of the U.S. population.

 ?? FRANK ELTMAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People stand outside the David S. Mack Sports and Exhibition Complex on the campus of Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York, on Wednesday. It is the site of the first of three presidenti­al debates.
FRANK ELTMAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS People stand outside the David S. Mack Sports and Exhibition Complex on the campus of Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York, on Wednesday. It is the site of the first of three presidenti­al debates.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States