The results of questions on pages 12-14 (all labeled CUR25), which asked the respondents if they trusted the Democratic Party, the Republican Party, both equally, or neither on various issues. All but two were tied within the margin of error (±3.4) between Democratic Party, Republican Party, and Neither. The two that weren't were the topics that one party has the stereotype of being the best at; protecting the country (21 for Democratic Party, 32 for Republican Party) and healthcare (34 for Democratic Party, 24 for Republican Party).
In regard to healthcare, the results of question HC15 on page 21 were also interesting. The question was "Would you favor or oppose replacing the current private health insurance system in the United States with a single government-run and taxpayer-funded plan like Medicare for All American that would cover medical, dental, vision, and long-term care services?". 39% supported (combined strongly support and somewhat support), 26% neither support nor oppose, and 33% opposed (combined strongly oppose and somewhat oppose). Since the margin of error is 3.4%, we can be confident that more respondents said they totally supported a single payer system than opposed, though clearly a majority did not totally support
The demographic questions provide some insight into how representative the poll is (e.g. 43% of respondents said they considered themselves Democrats while 37% said Republican).
thinkstoomuch wrote:Both Biochem and PeterZ's comments struck me when I read this poll from the AP. Americans don't trust either political party. Strangely enough.
http://ap-gfkpoll.com/main/wp-content/u ... health.pdf
29 pages light on words though.
Reading the poll questions and answers are informative. More proving the American public is very irrational when you look at how the numbers from generalities to specifics.
Note the only reason I looked at this poll is because of how badly it was against the Affordable Care Act on Real Clear Politics. Expected to see right wingnut answers. Which it seems it isn't.
Also note that 48 percent of the respondents don't have a landline which seems to be skewing a lot of polling data this silly election season.
Yep I am even more confused now.
T2M