the most recent one is to the right
- 60% of likely voters believe the Patriot Act ought to be modified
- 73% favor restoring voting rights to ex-nonviolent offenders
- 70% oppose racial profiling by police
- 58% say miliarization of police has gone too far
- 57% of Americans consider Snowden a whistleblower, not a traitor
- 71%,77% oppose mandatory minimums for non-violent offenses
- 52% are concerned about goverment spying on Americans
- Corporations
- Eight in ten Americans oppose the Supreme Court ruling in Citizens United
- Drugs
- 51, 50, 53% support pot legalization but only 1% of the Senate
- 86, 78% support medical marijuana
- 82% Say U.S. Not Winning War on Drugs
- Ecology
- 78 percent back federal action to limit emissions from businesses, including 60 percent of Republicans
- 72% support strengthened protection against air and water pollution
- 67% want increased fuel efficiency for cars and trucks
- 65% want expanded alternative energy development
- 67% support emission restrictions on coal fired plants
- 62, 67% want carbon pollution cut even if it costs more.
- 93% of Americans want GMO foods labelled
- 57% believe humans cause climate change
- 70% say global warming should be a priority for the nation’s leaders
- Economy
- 67% believe economy is unfair to middle class
- 60% of voters said they are more likely to support a candidate who supports fair pay for women, a higher minimum wage, paid family and medical leave and paid sick days.
- 80-51-73% support increase in minimum wage
- 63% support a $15 minimum wage
- 55% favor extension of unemployment benefits
- 59% say wealth should be more fairly distributed
- Overwhelming support for federal spending to help economy
- 64 percent believe job creation should be the top priority. Only 33 percent said deficit reduction
- 55% want too big to fail banks to fail
- Education
- 53% think school shouldn't open until after Labor Day
- 68 percent of the public school
parents think
standardized tests are not helpful.
58% reject using student test scores to evaluate teachers. - 81% want government to invest more in higher education
- Sixty-one percent of parents said they were opposed to closing low-performing schools and reassigning students to a different school...
- More than three out of every four parents said they were opposed to reducing compensation for teachers or cutting resources for the classroom while increasing spending on charter schools.
- 58 percent said they did not approve of officials lengthening the school day,
- 56 percent are opposed to giving tax dollars to families to pay for private school tuition
- A majority of parents surveyed said that too much learning in the classroom has been sacrificed in order to accommodate state tests during the school year. A majority of parents reported that their children have been anxious about those tests.
- A majority of likely voters among Democrats (75%), Independents (64%) and Republicans (54%) see the wave of spending by Super PACs this election cycle as “wrong and leads to our elected officials representing the views of wealthy donors.”
- An overwhelming majority of U.S. consumers think that before genetically engineered food is sold, it should be labeled accordingly (92 percent of consumers) and meet long-term safety standards set by the government (92 percent).
- 59 percent support an agreement in which the United States and its negotiating partners lift major economic sanctions in exchange for restrictions on Iran’s nuclear program. Thirty-one percent oppose a deal. Another poll had support at 68%
- 61% think we give too much aid to Israel
- 56% of Americans support an interim deal with Iran that would ease some economic sanctions on that country in exchange for concessions on Iran's nuclear program,
- Only 14 percent of Americans say the U.S. has “any responsibility” to get involved in Ukraine, and only 18 percent think the U.S. “has any responsibility to protect Ukraine if Russia were to invade."
- Gallup says that Israel’s actions in Gaza were unjustified in the eyes of the young, people of color, women, and Democrats, and overwhelmingly in some of those categories 51-25% disapproval among the young. 47-35 percent among Democrats, 44-33 among women, 49-25 among nonwhites.
- 56% favor normal relations with Cuba
- Sixty-eight percent support ending the trade embargo with Cuba
- 66% think the Afghan war wasn't worth it
- 59% support Supreme Court ruling on gay marriage
- 61, 50, 60% support gay marriages
- 54% say businesses do not have the right to refuse services based on the business' religious beliefs
- 69% of Americans say that same sex couples should be allowed to adopt children. This is up from 29% in 1992
- 54, 55% favor law prohibiting workplace discrimination against LGBT people
Internet
- 81% - including 85% of Republicans - support net neutrality
- 75% of Americans support paid vacations
- 55% of Americans think Snowden did the right thing. 80% of his supporters think he exposed constitutional violations:
- 56% don't approve of spying on allies
- Americans overwhelmingly opposed to NSA spying on them
- Politics
- 85% want fundamental changes in campaign financing. Nearly 80 percent favored limiting the amount of money an individual can donate to a campaign
- Would ban Super PACS
- 50% support federal funding of campaigns
- Population
- 59% are concerned that there won't be enough food and resources to accommodate a growing world population
- Public works
- 72% support more funding for public works
- Social Security
- 87% of Americans want Social Security spending increased or held steady
- Oppose cutting SS annual increase
- Taxes
- 80% favor ending offshore tax havens
- Trade
- War
- Believe it's OK to cut defense spending
- 81% disapprove of the job that Congress is doing
- 60% of voters say they are more likely to support a candidate who supports fair pay for women, a higher minimum wage, paid family and medical leave and paid sick days.
2 comments:
The above stats provide more evidence that we don't have a functioning democracy, corroborating the Princeton study. People can get access to the news and voice their opinion, but that doesn't translate into official responses or an electoral mandate. The public can only be heard on changes that a campaign mega-donor may share. That the electorate could formulate an electoral response to the coup (as with Lincoln's first election, or FDR's)is outside acceptable thought. That would require a movement that shows that an electoral response is possible. Neither party will openly admit that Congress can abrogate CU by up or down vote without need of a pretended amendment. Until that confession is obtained and CU is abrogated by Congress, the electorate is not sovereign. Those who argue for the amendment accept the Court's victory in the War Ending Separation of Powers and hope to nicely offer an argument regarding elections. Kafka's The Trial is not likely high on Sanders' reading list.
This is a great compilation. Did you put this together, Sam?
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