Public Policy Polling conducted a survey of 814 Florida registered voters between Sep 11 and Sep 13, 2015. Respondents were contacted by either Landline, Internet or Opt-In and the interaction was automated. The results of this poll were released on Sep 15, 2015.
Results were provided for each of the 3 publicly acknowledged questions along with the order in which they were presented.
Question 4 | PreferenceView Matchup
(Democrats) Given the choices of Joe Biden,
Lincoln Chafee, Hillary Clinton, Lawrence
Lessig, Martin O’Malley, Bernie Sanders, and
Jim Webb who would you most like to see as
the Democratic candidate for President in
2016?
This question was presented to 368 registered voters from Florida who were contacted in some undisclosed fashion. The margin of sampling error is ± 5.1%.
The question wording was provided by Public Policy Polling.
Question 28 | PreferenceView Matchup
If the candidates for President next time were
Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican
Donald Trump, who would you vote for?
| Trump (R) | Clinton (D) | Not Sure | Total |
---|
All | 48% | 42% | 9% | 814 Registered |
Female | 41% | 47% | 12% | 53% |
Male | 56% | 37% | 6% | 47% |
Democrat | 17% | 79% | 4% | 42% |
Independent | 50% | 31% | 19% | 20% |
Republican | 82% | 8% | 10% | 38% |
This question was presented to 814 registered voters from Florida who were contacted in some undisclosed fashion. The margin of sampling error is ± 3.4%.
The question wording was provided by Public Policy Polling.
Question 30 | PreferenceView Matchup
If the candidates for President next time were
Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican
Donald Trump, who would you vote for?
| Trump (R) | Sanders (D) | Not Sure | Total |
---|
All | 47% | 41% | 13% | 814 Registered |
Female | 41% | 44% | 15% | 53% |
Male | 53% | 37% | 10% | 47% |
Democrat | 17% | 71% | 11% | 42% |
Independent | 43% | 40% | 17% | 20% |
Republican | 82% | 7% | 11% | 38% |
This question was presented to 814 registered voters from Florida who were contacted in some undisclosed fashion. The margin of sampling error is ± 3.4%.
The question wording was provided by Public Policy Polling.