Daily Press

PROGRESSIV­E FRUSTRATIO­N

New poll: Dems show more angst than Republican­s

- By Emily Swanson and Hannah Fingerhut Associated Press

A year away from the 2020 election, a new poll shows Democrats are more anxious and frustrated.

WASHINGTON — A year out from the 2020 general election, there already is significan­t interest in the presidenti­al campaign. But a poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research also finds a growing share of Americans feeling anxious and frustrated compared with early in the summer.

Republican­s and Democrats are about equally likely to say they have been paying close attention, but the poll finds feelings of anxiety and frustratio­n more concentrat­ed among Democrats.

A look at how Americans are feeling about the campaign with one year to go until the 2020 general election:

Similar interest, uneven anxiety

The poll finds widespread interest in the campaign, including among 82% of Democrats and 74% of Republican­s. Overall, 73% of Americans say they’re interested, up slightly from 66% in June.

Democrats are more likely than Republican­s to say they feel anxious, 67% to 45%, and frustrated, 64% to 49%. But the poll finds that levels of frustratio­n and anxiety have increased among people from both parties since June.

Democrats who describe themselves as liberal are slightly more likely than moderates and conservati­ves to say they’re interested, 88% to 79%, but also significan­tly more likely to say they’re anxious, 80% to 60%.

How Democrats see their candidates

Democrats have largely positive views of all their front-running candidates.

Overall, similar proportion­s say they have a favorable view of the top three Democratic candidates — 72% for Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, 68% for former Vice President Joe Biden and 65% for Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren. About 2 in 10 have negative opinions of each.

Warren is still less well known among Democrats. Slightly more say they don’t know enough about Warren to have an opinion than say that about Biden or Sanders, 16% versus 9% and 8%, respective­ly.

Despite high ratings for all three front-runners, there are signs of ideologica­l division.

Biden scores slightly higher among Democrats who describe themselves as moderate and conservati­ve than among those who say they’re liberal, 72% to 62%.

The pattern is the opposite for Warren, with 76% of liberal Democrats and 58% of moderate and conservati­ve ones viewing her favorably, and for Sanders, with positive ratings from 79% of liberal Democrats and 68% of moderate and conservati­ve ones.

California Sen. Kamala Harris and Pete Buttigieg, the mayor of South Bend, Indiana, are even less wellknown than the other top candidates. Views of both are more positive than negative within the party, but even among Democrats, 25% say they don’t know enough about Harris and 40% say the same of Buttigieg.

How the public sees the Democrats

While the general election may be a year away, Americans are already closely divided on the Democratic primary contest’s front-runners.

Biden sees favorable ratings from 44% of Americans, and unfavorabl­e ones from 42%. Views are slightly more favorable than unfavorabl­e for Sanders, 47% to 41%.

About as many have a favorable opinion of Warren as an unfavorabl­e one, 38% to 37%, with about onequarter still saying they don’t know enough about her to have an opinion.

Opinions on Harris and Buttigieg are also closely divided, but large proportion­s of Americans have no opinion of each.

Views of whoever becomes the nominee could change as November 2020 nears. Hillary Clinton started out with largely positive ratings from Americans after her tenure as secretary of state, but negative opinions increased over the course of the 2016 campaign.

How the public sees the president

More than half of Americans, 55%, say they have an unfavorabl­e opinion of President Donald Trump, while 40% say they have a favorable opinion. Eight in 10 Republican­s have a favorable opinion, while nearly 9 in 10 Democrats have an unfavorabl­e one.

Among Republican­s, those who describe themselves as liberals and moderates are much more likely to have an unfavorabl­e opinion than those who describe themselves as conservati­ves, 30% to 10%.

The AP-NORC poll of 1,075 adults was conducted Oct. 24-28 using a sample drawn from NORC’s probabilit­y-based AmeriSpeak Panel, which is designed to be representa­tive of the U.S. population. The margin of sampling error for all respondent­s is plus or minus 4.1 percentage points.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The West Wing of the White House is seen in this photo. A new poll shows 73% of all Americans with interest in the 2020 presidenti­al campaign.
ALEX BRANDON/ASSOCIATED PRESS The West Wing of the White House is seen in this photo. A new poll shows 73% of all Americans with interest in the 2020 presidenti­al campaign.

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