Scott Brown is within 5 points of defeating Jeanne Shaheen in New Hampshire's Senate race according to a new poll. The poll finds that the political environment favors Republicans with 65% saying the country is on the wrong track and only 36% approving of President Obama's job performance. Additionally, midterm election demographics typically benefit Republicans as turnout among key Democratic constituencies like women, young voters, and Democrats declines from presidential years. As a result of these factors, Scott Brown has a respectable chance to defeat Jeanne Shaheen despite currently trailing her by 5 points in the poll.
The results of an Indy Politics poll of this year’s upcoming City-County Council races indicates control of the body could be up for grabs. However, candidates have a long way to go to educate voters about who’s even on the ballot in their district.
ОПРОС: КТО ПОБЕДИТ ТРАМПА НА СЛЕДУЮЩИХ ВЫБОРАХmResearcher
Если президент США Дональд Трамп будет баллотироваться на второй президентский срок, он столкнется с серьезной конкуренцией со стороны американских политиков и лидеров общественного мнения
The results of an Indy Politics poll of this year’s upcoming City-County Council races indicates control of the body could be up for grabs. However, candidates have a long way to go to educate voters about who’s even on the ballot in their district.
ОПРОС: КТО ПОБЕДИТ ТРАМПА НА СЛЕДУЮЩИХ ВЫБОРАХmResearcher
Если президент США Дональд Трамп будет баллотироваться на второй президентский срок, он столкнется с серьезной конкуренцией со стороны американских политиков и лидеров общественного мнения
Colorado Unaffiliated Women Voter Post Election Survey Summary 121714Magellan Strategies
This document is a summary of a post-election landline and cell phone survey of 500 unaffiliated women voters in Colorado that voted in the 2014 general election. The interviews were conducted on November 17th and 18th, and the survey has a margin of error of +/- 4.38% at the 95 percent confidence interval. This group of women voters contributed 14% of the total vote, or 286,283 votes of the 2,080,071 total votes cast in the 2014 election.
The survey used Magellan Strategies Colorado segmentation data to draw the sample, which only surveyed female unaffiliated voters that voted in the 2014 general election. The three unaffiliated segments used were Lean Republican Unaffiliated, True Middle and Lean Democrat Unaffiliated. Among all unaffiliated women who voted in the 2014 general election, 17% were Lean Republican Unaffiliated, 48% were True Middle and 35% were Lean Democrat Unaffiliated.
Most observers of Colorado politics would confirm that unaffiliated women voters are an important voting block that can decide most elections in the Centennial state. These women voters are less partisan and more likely to consider candidates of both parties. This survey attempts to understand how these women viewed: the 2014 candidates for the United States Senate and Governor, the dominance of women’s issues, the Republican and Democrat parties, and their support for Hillary Clinton in 2016.
Less than 48 hours after Indiana Governor Mike Pence gave his endorsement to Lt. Governor Eric Holcomb to replace him on the ballot, Congresswoman Susan Brooks is releasing a poll showing she has the best chance at defeating Democrat John Gregg in the fall.
As South Bend Mayor and Presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg tries to win over voters in Iowa and New Hampshire, a poll of likely voters here in Marion County, a Democratic stronghold, shows nearly 60 percent of them either view him unfavorably or have no opinion of him.
On Election Day of 2014, Republicans won a big victory. And it really was a “Wave” victory, bigger than 2010 in a lot of important ways despite the fact that you'd never know it listening to the mainstream media.
Just because it was more or less expected doesn't make it less of a major thrashing than 2010 was.
One of the reasons it was so big and so important is that the GOP didn't win the same way everywhere. In 2010 the pattern was pretty consistent across the country.
In 2014 Republicans again won big, but it's a little more complicated how. And that's important as we look toward 2016 and beyond.
Obama thinks the election wasn't about him. Some political scientists are already trying to make hand-waving arguments that Republicans didn't win groups that exit polls show they won.
So, what should Republicans take from the 2014 Election? Here are five important lessons:
1) Obama's policies were on the ballot, as he said. But to dismiss 2014 as only about Obama is both to diminish the massive size of the Republican victory and to miss the important lessons of the election. This was a complete rejection of Democrats and liberal policies.
2) The return of working class whites (aka, Reagan Democrats, Angry White Males, Tea Party Voters) to the polls proves that 2010 was not a fluke and teaches Republicans an important lesson for 2016:
The GOP must have a nominee, and candidates up and down the ballot, who can connect with this populist voting block.
3) Despite their vaunted turnout technology, Democrats didn't fully get the Obama coalition to the polls. This raises real questions about the replicability of African American turnout without Obama at the top of the ticket.
Where Democrats did get other parts of their coalition out, the messaging required likely cost them more votes elsewhere than it earned them in turnout (e.g., Udall in Colorado).
4) The GOP has messages and candidates who can win in a diverse array of states. The message of a David Perdue in Georgia, a Greg Abbott in Texas, and a Larry Hogan in Maryland shared some basic similarities. But they were also each somewhat unique to the candidate and situation.
5) Outside of African Americans (persuading whom is going to be the work of many campaigns) 2014 proved that Republicans can win Asians nationally and can come very close to splitting Hispanics in a race with the right message and campaign.
The myth of Republicans as the white party is just that: a myth. Toward that point, the GOP must continue a robust campaign toward all demographic groups.
Magellan Strategies Montana US Senate Survey Release April 10, 2014Magellan Strategies
Magellan Strategies survey of 2,490 likely Montana general election voters. The survey includes a voter mood question, US Senate ballot test of Steve Daines, John Walsh, and Roger Roots, and a Congressional generic ballot test.
Indy Politics Mason Strategies October 2019 Poll (Mayor's Race)Abdul-Hakim Shabazz
With just under two weeks to go before Election Day, a new poll by Indy Politics and Mason Strategies shows incumbent Mayor Democrat Joe Hogsett enjoying a comfortable lead over Republican challenger Jim Merritt in the Indianapolis Mayor's race.
Colorado Unaffiliated Women Voter Post Election Survey Summary 121714Magellan Strategies
This document is a summary of a post-election landline and cell phone survey of 500 unaffiliated women voters in Colorado that voted in the 2014 general election. The interviews were conducted on November 17th and 18th, and the survey has a margin of error of +/- 4.38% at the 95 percent confidence interval. This group of women voters contributed 14% of the total vote, or 286,283 votes of the 2,080,071 total votes cast in the 2014 election.
The survey used Magellan Strategies Colorado segmentation data to draw the sample, which only surveyed female unaffiliated voters that voted in the 2014 general election. The three unaffiliated segments used were Lean Republican Unaffiliated, True Middle and Lean Democrat Unaffiliated. Among all unaffiliated women who voted in the 2014 general election, 17% were Lean Republican Unaffiliated, 48% were True Middle and 35% were Lean Democrat Unaffiliated.
Most observers of Colorado politics would confirm that unaffiliated women voters are an important voting block that can decide most elections in the Centennial state. These women voters are less partisan and more likely to consider candidates of both parties. This survey attempts to understand how these women viewed: the 2014 candidates for the United States Senate and Governor, the dominance of women’s issues, the Republican and Democrat parties, and their support for Hillary Clinton in 2016.
Less than 48 hours after Indiana Governor Mike Pence gave his endorsement to Lt. Governor Eric Holcomb to replace him on the ballot, Congresswoman Susan Brooks is releasing a poll showing she has the best chance at defeating Democrat John Gregg in the fall.
As South Bend Mayor and Presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg tries to win over voters in Iowa and New Hampshire, a poll of likely voters here in Marion County, a Democratic stronghold, shows nearly 60 percent of them either view him unfavorably or have no opinion of him.
On Election Day of 2014, Republicans won a big victory. And it really was a “Wave” victory, bigger than 2010 in a lot of important ways despite the fact that you'd never know it listening to the mainstream media.
Just because it was more or less expected doesn't make it less of a major thrashing than 2010 was.
One of the reasons it was so big and so important is that the GOP didn't win the same way everywhere. In 2010 the pattern was pretty consistent across the country.
In 2014 Republicans again won big, but it's a little more complicated how. And that's important as we look toward 2016 and beyond.
Obama thinks the election wasn't about him. Some political scientists are already trying to make hand-waving arguments that Republicans didn't win groups that exit polls show they won.
So, what should Republicans take from the 2014 Election? Here are five important lessons:
1) Obama's policies were on the ballot, as he said. But to dismiss 2014 as only about Obama is both to diminish the massive size of the Republican victory and to miss the important lessons of the election. This was a complete rejection of Democrats and liberal policies.
2) The return of working class whites (aka, Reagan Democrats, Angry White Males, Tea Party Voters) to the polls proves that 2010 was not a fluke and teaches Republicans an important lesson for 2016:
The GOP must have a nominee, and candidates up and down the ballot, who can connect with this populist voting block.
3) Despite their vaunted turnout technology, Democrats didn't fully get the Obama coalition to the polls. This raises real questions about the replicability of African American turnout without Obama at the top of the ticket.
Where Democrats did get other parts of their coalition out, the messaging required likely cost them more votes elsewhere than it earned them in turnout (e.g., Udall in Colorado).
4) The GOP has messages and candidates who can win in a diverse array of states. The message of a David Perdue in Georgia, a Greg Abbott in Texas, and a Larry Hogan in Maryland shared some basic similarities. But they were also each somewhat unique to the candidate and situation.
5) Outside of African Americans (persuading whom is going to be the work of many campaigns) 2014 proved that Republicans can win Asians nationally and can come very close to splitting Hispanics in a race with the right message and campaign.
The myth of Republicans as the white party is just that: a myth. Toward that point, the GOP must continue a robust campaign toward all demographic groups.
Magellan Strategies Montana US Senate Survey Release April 10, 2014Magellan Strategies
Magellan Strategies survey of 2,490 likely Montana general election voters. The survey includes a voter mood question, US Senate ballot test of Steve Daines, John Walsh, and Roger Roots, and a Congressional generic ballot test.
Indy Politics Mason Strategies October 2019 Poll (Mayor's Race)Abdul-Hakim Shabazz
With just under two weeks to go before Election Day, a new poll by Indy Politics and Mason Strategies shows incumbent Mayor Democrat Joe Hogsett enjoying a comfortable lead over Republican challenger Jim Merritt in the Indianapolis Mayor's race.
The recent controversy surrounding Indiana Attorney General Curtis Hill may not have had much impact on what Hoosiers think of the job he is doing.
As part of our Indy Politics scientific poll of 600 likely voters, conducted last week by Mason Strategies LLC, we asked about Hill’s favorable and unfavorable ratings.
Grantmakers for Southern Progress - Moving the South Forwards: A Post-Electio...Neighborhood Funders Group
http://www.nfg.org/gsp_postelection_webinar_recap
On December 16, 2016, NFG's Grantmakers for Southern Progress working group, along with the Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation and Funders for LGBTQ Issues' Out in the South Initiative, co-hosted a conference call for funders to explore the impact of the 2016 election results in Southern communities.
With less than a week to go before their first public debate, Indianapolis Mayor Joe Hogsett is enjoying a comfortable lead over his main challenger, Republican Jim Merritt.
Almost half of Marion County voters think the county’s public education system is on the wrong track in a new survey for Indy Politics conducted by Mason Strategies.
A look at how Ragnar Research Partners was able to be so successful in the 2018 cycle, as well as the best opinion research practices heading into 2019 & beyond. This includes proper representation of cell phone-only households, weighting partisanship in every race based on previous Presidential Election results, and a rigorous, systematic, and fanatic devotion to the construction of proper stratification and sample frames.
Magellan Strategies BR today released the survey results today of an automated survey of 1,618 likely New Hampshire voters. The survey was conducted July 16-17. The margin of error for a survey of this size is 2.43%. The survey was commissioned by Citizens for a Strong New Hampshire. Aided by a dismal political environment, Scott Brown is within 5 points of defeating Jeanne Shaheen.
Similar to New Hampshire US Senate Survey Toplines 072114 (20)
This memorandum is a summary of an automated survey of 869 likely voters in Maine. The survey was fielded October 23rd and 24th and has a margin of error of +/- 3.32% at the 95% confidence level.
The survey finds Republican Governor Paul LePage and Democrat Mike Michaud in a statistical tie with one week to go before Election Day. Among all voters, Paul LePage has 42.3% support; Mike Michaud has 41.6%, and independent candidate Eliot Cutler has 13.2% support. Among all male voters Paul LePage leads Mike Michaud by 3 points, 43% to 40% respectively, and among all female voters Mike Michaud leads by 1 point, 43% to 42% respectively. Independent Eliot Cutler’s strongest base of support is among married men and independent voters, with 16%.
The image ratings of both Paul LePage and Mike Michaud are very similar. Among all voters, 47% have a favorable opinion of Mike Michaud and 46% have an unfavorable opinion of him. For Paul LePage 48% of voters have a favorable opinion of him and 47% have an unfavorable opinion of him. The following table shows the ballot test by voter subgroup.
Sutherland Institute Utah Medicare Expansion Survey Summary 091514Magellan Strategies
The survey finds that Utah registered voters are reluctant to favor any of the four Medicaid expansion proposals currently being considered by Governor Herbert and the state legislature. Of the four Medicaid expansion proposals that were tested in the survey, no individual proposal received 50% support among respondents. After explaining the details of each proposal in a stand-alone question format, on average 30% of respondents were unsure if they favored or opposed the proposals. Of the four proposals, the “Do Not Expand Medicaid Right Now” proposal had the highest percentage of voters favoring a proposal with 45% and the lowest percentage opposing a proposal at 26%.
The Healthy Utah Proposal was favored by 32% of respondents, opposed by 40% of respondents, and 28% were unsure or did not have an opinion of the proposal. The Traditional Medicaid Expansion and Partial Medicaid Expansion proposals were the least favored proposals by voters, with only 21% and 19% favoring them respectively. A near majority of 49% and 48% of voters oppose the Traditional and Partial Medicaid Expansion proposals, respectively.
After respondents were informed about the details of each proposal and then asked to choose which one they believed was the best proposal that should be implemented, a plurality of 31% chose the “Do Not Expand Medicaid Right Now” proposal. Seventeen percent chose the Healthy Utah Proposal, 15% chose the Traditional Medicaid Expansion Proposal, and 10% chose the Partial Medicaid Expansion Proposal. One in five respondents, or 20%, were unsure or did not know which proposal was the best and should be implemented, and 7% did not like any of the proposals.
National Mining Association Kentucky EPA Regulation Survey Summary 091014Magellan Strategies
Survey of likely 2014 Kentucky general election voters, measuring voter opinion of the Obama Administration's proposed emission regulation and the United States Senate election between Mitch McConnell and Alison Lundergan Grimes.
Magellan Strategies BR today released the survey results today of an automated survey of 1,618 likely New Hampshire voters. The survey was conducted July 16-17. The margin of error for a survey of this size is 2.43%. The survey was commissioned by Citizens for a Strong New Hampshire. Aided by a dismal political environment, Scott Brown is within 5 points of defeating Jeanne Shaheen.
Magellan Strategies 2012 Internal Survey Research Summary Memorandum 120612Magellan Strategies
This memorandum is a full review of Magellan Strategies surveys from the 2012 election cycle. The memorandum goes into detail about the challenges of survey research for the cycle, and how well Magellan Strategies research held up to the final outcome.
Survey of likely 2014 likely voters in Arkansas, Colorado, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Montana and North Carolina measuring opinion of the proposed EPA carbon emissions regulations.
This presentation explains a predictive data modeling project that segmented Colorado's 3.5 million voters into 11 groups. The segmentation enables campaign decision makers the ability to understand and target voters beyond data that is is available on a Colorado voter file.
600n survey of likely 2014 Louisiana general election voters. The survey looks at the US Senate race between Mary Landrieu, Bill Cassidy, Rob Maness, and Paul Hollis. Other public policy issues covered in the survey include labor union dues, common core standards, education issues, expansion of Medicaid, impact of the Affordable Healthcare Act, and issues relating to businesses being sued having a right to a trial by jury.
In a May 9, 2024 paper, Juri Opitz from the University of Zurich, along with Shira Wein and Nathan Schneider form Georgetown University, discussed the importance of linguistic expertise in natural language processing (NLP) in an era dominated by large language models (LLMs).
The authors explained that while machine translation (MT) previously relied heavily on linguists, the landscape has shifted. “Linguistics is no longer front and center in the way we build NLP systems,” they said. With the emergence of LLMs, which can generate fluent text without the need for specialized modules to handle grammar or semantic coherence, the need for linguistic expertise in NLP is being questioned.
01062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
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31052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
हम आग्रह करते हैं कि जो भी सत्ता में आए, वह संविधान का पालन करे, उसकी रक्षा करे और उसे बनाए रखे।" प्रस्ताव में कुल तीन प्रमुख हस्तक्षेप और उनके तंत्र भी प्रस्तुत किए गए। पहला हस्तक्षेप स्वतंत्र मीडिया को प्रोत्साहित करके, वास्तविकता पर आधारित काउंटर नैरेटिव का निर्माण करके और सत्तारूढ़ सरकार द्वारा नियोजित मनोवैज्ञानिक हेरफेर की रणनीति का मुकाबला करके लोगों द्वारा निर्धारित कथा को बनाए रखना और उस पर कार्यकरना था।
‘वोटर्स विल मस्ट प्रीवेल’ (मतदाताओं को जीतना होगा) अभियान द्वारा जारी हेल्पलाइन नंबर, 4 जून को सुबह 7 बजे से दोपहर 12 बजे तक मतगणना प्रक्रिया में कहीं भी किसी भी तरह के उल्लंघन की रिपोर्ट करने के लिए खुला रहेगा।
role of women and girls in various terror groupssadiakorobi2
Women have three distinct types of involvement: direct involvement in terrorist acts; enabling of others to commit such acts; and facilitating the disengagement of others from violent or extremist groups.
03062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
1.
July
23,
2014
FOR
IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
CONTACT:
JOHN
DIEZ,
225-‐485-‐0405,
jdiez@magellanbr.com
Aided
by
a
dismal
political
environment,
Scott
Brown
is
within
5
points
of
defeating
Jeanne
Shaheen.
Baton
Rouge,
LA
–
Magellan
Strategies
BR
released
the
survey
results
today
of
an
automated
survey
of
1,618
likely
New
Hampshire
voters.
The
survey
was
conducted
July
16-‐17.
The
margin
of
error
for
a
survey
of
this
size
is
2.43%.
The
survey
was
commissioned
by
Citizens
for
a
Strong
New
Hampshire.
Summary
Findings
Consistent
with
other
surveys,
the
overall
political
environment
in
New
Hampshire
favors
Republicans.
• Only
35%
of
likely
voters
think
things
in
the
country
are
headed
in
the
right
direction,
while
65%
think
things
are
on
the
wrong
track.
• President
Obama’s
job
approval
is
an
abysmal
36%,
while
a
strong
majority
(56%)
disapproves
of
the
job
he
is
doing.
A
traditional
demographic
shift
in
previous
mid-‐term
elections
benefits
Republican
candidates.
• In
the
past
two
presidential
elections,
female
voters
have
enjoyed
a
6
point
advantage
over
men
relative
to
total
composition
of
the
electorate.
During
the
past
two
mid-‐term
elections,
the
female
advantage
has
been
only
2
points.
• Young
voters
(18-‐34)
represented
28%
and
22%
of
the
electorate
in
2012
and
2008,
respectively.
However,
during
the
past
two
mid-‐terms,
young
voters
have
fluctuated
between
10%
and
14%.
• Mid-‐term
elections
have
also
historically
produced
a
Republican
advantage
relative
to
party
composition
of
the
electorate.
During
the
last
two
presidential
elections,
the
Republican
advantage
over
Democrats
on
average
was
only
3.8
points.
However,
during
the
last
two
mid-‐terms,
the
Republican
advantage
averaged
8.3
points.
2. Magellan
ID#:
NHSTW-‐0714-‐A
Page
2
of
6
Field
Dates:
7/16/14
-‐
7/17/14,
MOE
+/-‐2.43%,
1,618n
Magellan
Strategies
|
12491
Plantation
Creek
Drive
|
Geismar,
LA
70734
225-‐622-‐6249
|
MagellanStrategies.com
As
a
result
of
an
abysmal
political
environment
and
mid-‐term
election
demographics,
Scott
Brown
is
in
a
respectable
position
to
defeat
Jeanne
Shaheen.
• Currently,
Scott
Brown
is
only
down
by
5
points
(41%
Scott
Brown/46%
Jeanne
Shaheen)
with
13%
undecided.
• Among
undecided
voters,
President
Obama’s
job
approval
is
only
10%
while
72%
disapprove.
• Among
undecided
voters,
only
14%
think
things
in
the
country
are
going
in
the
right
direction
while
86%
think
things
are
on
the
wrong
track.
• Lastly,
Brown
still
has
room
to
grow
among
undecided
voters.
Fifty-‐three
percent
of
undecided
voters
have
yet
to
form
an
opinion
of
him.
Survey
Methodology:
The
survey
results
have
been
weighted
to
better
reflect
the
likely
demographic
characteristics
of
previous
mid-‐term
elections.
Based
on
an
analysis
of
the
last
four
election
cycles,
mid-‐term
election
year
demographics
tend
to
be
more
favorable
to
Republican
candidates.
While
presidential
election
year
demographics
are
generally
more
favorable
to
Democratic
candidates.
+4
+11
+3
SURVEY
2012
GEN
2010
GEN
2008
GEN
2006
GEN
35%
31%
39%
32%
38%
30%
27%
28%
29%
32%
36%
42%
34%
39%
30%
PARTY
REGISTRATION
GOP
DEM
IND
+6
GOP
Advantage
3. Magellan
ID#:
NHSTW-‐0714-‐A
Page
3
of
6
Field
Dates:
7/16/14
-‐
7/17/14,
MOE
+/-‐2.43%,
1,618n
Magellan
Strategies
|
12491
Plantation
Creek
Drive
|
Geismar,
LA
70734
225-‐622-‐6249
|
MagellanStrategies.com
SURVEY
2012
GEN
2010
GEN
2008
GEN
2006
GEN
13%
28%
14%
22%
10%
14%
12%
14%
18%
18%
25%
20%
24%
24%
27%
24%
19%
24%
19%
23%
23%
20%
24%
17%
21%
AGE
18-‐34
35-‐44
45-‐54
55-‐64
65+
SURVEY
2012
GEN
2010
GEN
2008
GEN
2006
GEN
51%
53%
51%
53%
51%
49%
47%
49%
47%
49%
GENDER
FEMALE
MALE
Female
Advantage
+6
+2
+6
+2
Age
18-‐34
28%
14%
22%
10%
4. Magellan
ID#:
NHSTW-‐0714-‐A
Page
4
of
6
Field
Dates:
7/16/14
-‐
7/17/14,
MOE
+/-‐2.43%,
1,618n
Magellan
Strategies
|
12491
Plantation
Creek
Drive
|
Geismar,
LA
70734
225-‐622-‐6249
|
MagellanStrategies.com
MAGELLAN
ID#:NHSTW-‐0714-‐A
Sample
Size=1,618n;+/-‐2.43%
Field
Date:
07/16-‐17/14
Hello,
this
is
________________
calling
on
behalf
of
Citizens
for
a
Strong
New
Hampshire.
We’re
conducting
a
quick
survey
with
people
in
NEW
HAMPSHIRE
this
evening
and
would
like
to
ask
you
a
few
questions
on
a
confidential
basis.
Q
1.
How
likely
are
you
to
vote
in
the
up-‐coming
elections
for
Governor
and
US
Senate?
EXTREMELY
LIKELY
TO
VOTE
85.9%
VERY
LIKELY
TO
VOTE
9.2%
SOMEWHAT
LIKELY
TO
VOTE
5.0%
Q
2.
Would
you
say
things
in
country
are
going
in
the
right
direction
or
have
they
gotten
off
on
the
wrong
track?
RIGHT
DIRECTION
35.1%
WRONG
TRACK
64.9%
Q
3.
If
the
election
for
US
Senate
were
being
held
today,
and
all
you
knew
about
the
two
candidates
was
that
one
was
a
Republican
and
the
other
was
a
Democrat,
for
whom
would
you
vote?
REPUBLICAN
CANDIDATE
42.1%
DEMOCRATIC
CANDIDATE
36.3%
UNDECIDED
21.6%
Thinking
now
about
people
active
in
government…
Q
4.
Do
you
have
a
favorable
or
unfavorable
opinion
of
Scott
Brown?
FAVORABLE
34.5%
UNFAVORABLE
43.0%
HEARD
OF
BUT
NO
OPINION
20.0%
NEVER
HEARD
OF
2.5%
5. Magellan
ID#:
NHSTW-‐0714-‐A
Page
5
of
6
Field
Dates:
7/16/14
-‐
7/17/14,
MOE
+/-‐2.43%,
1,618n
Magellan
Strategies
|
12491
Plantation
Creek
Drive
|
Geismar,
LA
70734
225-‐622-‐6249
|
MagellanStrategies.com
Thinking
now
about
people
active
in
government…
Q
5.
Do
you
have
a
favorable
or
unfavorable
opinion
of
Jeanne
Shaheen?
FAVORABLE
46.9%
UNFAVORABLE
43.0%
HEARD
OF
BUT
NO
OPINION
9.0%
NEVER
HEARD
OF
1.1%
Q
6.
And
do
you
approve
or
disapprove
of
the
job
that
Barack
Obama
is
doing
as
President?
APPROVE
36.1%
DISAPPROVE
56.2%
UNDECIDED
7.6%
Thinking
now
about
the
2014
election
for
US
Senate...
Q
7-‐9.
If
the
election
was
being
held
today,
for
whom
would
you
vote
if
the
candidates
were
Scott
Brown,
Republican,
or
Jeanne
Shaheen,
Democrat?
SCOTT
BROWN
41.1%
JEANNE
SHAHEEN
46.0%
UNDECIDED
12.9%
DEFINITELY
BROWN
25.9%
PROBABLY
BROWN
15.2%
PROBABLY
SHAHEEN
10.5%
DEFINITELY
SHAHEEN
35.5%
Q
10.
These
last
few
questions
are
for
statistical
purposes
only.
Are
you
a
male
or
female?
MALE
49.0%
FEMALE
51.0%
6. Magellan
ID#:
NHSTW-‐0714-‐A
Page
6
of
6
Field
Dates:
7/16/14
-‐
7/17/14,
MOE
+/-‐2.43%,
1,618n
Magellan
Strategies
|
12491
Plantation
Creek
Drive
|
Geismar,
LA
70734
225-‐622-‐6249
|
MagellanStrategies.com
Q
11-‐13.Regardless
of
how
you
feel
today,
with
which
party
are
you
registered
to
vote?
REPUBLICAN
34.6%
DEMOCRAT
29.9%
INDEPENDENT
OR
OTHER
35.5%
STR
REPUBLICAN
23.7%
NSS
REPUBLICAN
10.9%
NSS
DEMOCRATIC
9.8%
STR
DEMOCRAT
20.1%
Q
14.
Which
of
the
following
age
group
applies
to
you?
18-‐34
13.0%
35-‐44
14.4%
45-‐54
25.1%
55-‐64
24.3%
65
PLUS
23.2%