Recent Tweets

Advertisement

MD: Public Policy Polling

12 Questions | 1 point | April 15-17, 20160 Comments

Public Policy Polling conducted a survey of 879 Maryland registered voters between Apr 15 and Apr 17, 2016. Respondents were contacted by either Landline, Internet or Opt-In and the interaction was automated. The results of this poll were released on Apr 19, 2016.

Results were provided for each of the 3 publicly acknowledged questions along with the order in which they were presented.

Question 5 | PreferenceView Matchup

The Democratic candidates for President are Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders. If the election was today, who would you vote for?

Clinton (D)Sanders (D)UndecidedTotal
All58%33%9%492
Likely
Female55%34%10%57%
Male61%32%7%43%
Blacks70%25%5%39%
Whites50%41%10%51%

This question was presented to 492 likely voters from Maryland who were contacted in some undisclosed fashion. The margin of sampling error is ± 5.7%.

The question wording was provided by Public Policy Polling.

Question 11 | PreferenceView Matchup

Generic: If the candidates for President this fall were Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump, who would you vote for?

Clinton (D)Trump (R)Not SureTotal
All61%28%11%879
Registered
Female65%24%12%53%
Male57%33%10%47%
Democrat85%8%7%55%
Independent49%28%23%18%
Republican20%69%11%27%

This question was presented to 879 registered voters from Maryland who were contacted in some undisclosed fashion. The margin of sampling error is ± 3.3%.

The question wording was not made public by Public Policy Polling; instead, a generic question has been editorially submitted.

Question 12 | PreferenceView Matchup

If the candidates for President next time were Democrat Bernie Sanders and Republican Donald Trump, who would you vote for?

Sanders (D)Trump (R)Not SureTotal
All60%29%11%879
Registered
Female64%23%13%53%
Male55%35%9%47%
Democrat82%10%8%55%
Independent57%26%17%18%
Republican17%70%13%27%

This question was presented to 879 registered voters from Maryland who were contacted in some undisclosed fashion. The margin of sampling error is ± 3.3%.

The question wording was provided by Public Policy Polling.

Sources
1

Retrieved on April 21, 2016 at 10:53:16 PM CT | Revision: 1

2

Retrieved on April 21, 2016 at 10:53:16 PM CT | Revision: 1

Showing 0 Comments | Sorted By old

You must Login or Register to contribute.

Authentication Required...

Create an Account

Entering an email will eventually grant you the ability to create articles; this feature is coming soon. You may also verify your account later.