42% of all registered voters say southern border is a crisis. 44 percent of all registered voters support building a wall on Southwestern border, Morning Consult/Politico poll
1/8/19, “Plurality of [Registered] Voters Think There’s a Crisis at the Border,” Morning Consult/Politico poll
Conducted Jan. 4-6, 2019, 1989 registered voters, online poll
……………………
Added:
Jan. 10, 2019, “More Americans Now Say Congress Should Do What Trump Wants, Poll Finds,” by
“More American [Likely] voters want Congress to follow President Donald Trump’s lead this year compared to last year, according to a survey released on Jan. 9 by Rasmussen, one of the most accurate pollsters in predicting the outcome of the 2016 election.
In a survey gauging the views of likely U.S. voters about the year ahead, 41 percent said that Congress should do more of what Trump wants. That is a 12 percent increase compared to the same time last year, according to Rasmussen.
Meanwhile, the number of [likely voting] Americans who want Trump to do more of what Congress wants has decreased by 8 percent from last year to 48 percent. Twelve percent of the respondents were undecided….
Trump and congressional Democrats are in a standoff about funding for a border security package. The impasse has resulted in a partial government shutdown, which has lasted for almost three weeks.
Many Americans [registered voters] believe there is a crisis on the Southwest border, according to a survey published by Morning Consult [Morning Consult/Politico poll] on Jan. 8.
The vast majority, regardless of party affiliation, said there is either a crisis or a problem on the border.
Americans [registered voters in Morning Consult/Politico poll] are still split on whether a border wall is a good idea. While 44 percent support building a wall on the Southwestern border, 47 percent oppose the idea....
Republicans continue to point out that the impasse is over a border security package, which includes funds for wall construction alongside funding for more border patrol agents, immigration judges, and a screening technology for ports of entry....
Prior to the midterm elections in November, 52 percent of [likely] voters surveyed by Rasmussen said that it would be better for the country if Congress worked with Trump, rather than oppose him.
Trump’s request for border security funding has overwhelming support among Republicans in Congress. But in order to pass the Senate, the spending bill requires the votes of at least seven Democrats.
On Jan. 9, congressional Democrat leaders refused to negotiate a deal.
“Just left a meeting with Chuck and Nancy, a total waste of time,” Trump wrote on Twitter, referring to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.).
“I asked what is going to happen in 30 days if I quickly open things up, are you going to approve Border Security, which includes a Wall or Steel Barrier? Nancy said, NO. I said bye-bye, nothing else works!”
Trump visited the southwest border on Jan. 10.” Image above from Morning Consult/Politico
………………………………
Added: Rasmussen, Jan. 6-7, 2019 poll among 1000 Likely Voters, automated phone and online: 12% increase in view that Congress should follow Trump’s lead in 2019 (up from Jan. 2017). 8% fewer think Trump should follow Congress (than in Jan. 2017).
1/9/19, “More [Likely] Voters Now Think Congress Should Follow Trump’s Lead,” Rasmussen Reports
“As they look to the year ahead…41% say that Congress should do more of what Trump wants, up from 29% in January 2017. Slightly more (48%) say that the president should do what Congress wants, down from 56% in the prior survey. Twelve percent (12%) are undecided.
Prior to midterm elections, 52% of voters said it would be better for the country if Congress works with Trump most of the time. Thirty-eight percent (38%) thought it’d be better if Congress opposes the president most of the time.
The survey of 1,000 Likely U.S. Voters was conducted on January 6-7, 2019 by Rasmussen Reports. The margin of sampling error is +/- 3 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence. Field work for all Rasmussen Reports surveys is conducted by Pulse Opinion Research, LLC. See methodology.
A November [2018] survey found that an overwhelming majority (68%) say it is more important for the new Democratic majority in the House of Representatives to focus on policy areas where it can work with the president and his fellow Republicans.
Fifty-three percent (53%) of Democrats think the new Congress will be better than the one that has served for the past two years, but 52% of Republicans think it will be worse. Among voters not affiliated with either political party, 23% say the new Congress will be better, 39% say it will be worse and 27% say it will be about the same….
Voters are overwhelmingly aware that there’s a partial shutdown of the federal government, but so far at least it isn’t bothering them.
Nancy Pelosi is the most powerful Democrat in Washington, D.C., but voters prefer that Trump lead the way.
Half of voters believe the president is setting the agenda in Washington, D.C., these days.”…
1/8/19, “Plurality of [Registered] Voters Think There’s a Crisis at the Border,” Morning Consult/Politico poll
Conducted Jan. 4-6, 2019, 1989 registered voters, online poll
……………………
Added:
Jan. 10, 2019, “More Americans Now Say Congress Should Do What Trump Wants, Poll Finds,” by
“More American [Likely] voters want Congress to follow President Donald Trump’s lead this year compared to last year, according to a survey released on Jan. 9 by Rasmussen, one of the most accurate pollsters in predicting the outcome of the 2016 election.
In a survey gauging the views of likely U.S. voters about the year ahead, 41 percent said that Congress should do more of what Trump wants. That is a 12 percent increase compared to the same time last year, according to Rasmussen.
Meanwhile, the number of [likely voting] Americans who want Trump to do more of what Congress wants has decreased by 8 percent from last year to 48 percent. Twelve percent of the respondents were undecided….
Trump and congressional Democrats are in a standoff about funding for a border security package. The impasse has resulted in a partial government shutdown, which has lasted for almost three weeks.
Many Americans [registered voters] believe there is a crisis on the Southwest border, according to a survey published by Morning Consult [Morning Consult/Politico poll] on Jan. 8.
The vast majority, regardless of party affiliation, said there is either a crisis or a problem on the border.
Americans [registered voters in Morning Consult/Politico poll] are still split on whether a border wall is a good idea. While 44 percent support building a wall on the Southwestern border, 47 percent oppose the idea....
Republicans continue to point out that the impasse is over a border security package, which includes funds for wall construction alongside funding for more border patrol agents, immigration judges, and a screening technology for ports of entry....
Prior to the midterm elections in November, 52 percent of [likely] voters surveyed by Rasmussen said that it would be better for the country if Congress worked with Trump, rather than oppose him.
Trump’s request for border security funding has overwhelming support among Republicans in Congress. But in order to pass the Senate, the spending bill requires the votes of at least seven Democrats.
On Jan. 9, congressional Democrat leaders refused to negotiate a deal.
“Just left a meeting with Chuck and Nancy, a total waste of time,” Trump wrote on Twitter, referring to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.).
“I asked what is going to happen in 30 days if I quickly open things up, are you going to approve Border Security, which includes a Wall or Steel Barrier? Nancy said, NO. I said bye-bye, nothing else works!”
Trump visited the southwest border on Jan. 10.” Image above from Morning Consult/Politico
………………………………
Added: Rasmussen, Jan. 6-7, 2019 poll among 1000 Likely Voters, automated phone and online: 12% increase in view that Congress should follow Trump’s lead in 2019 (up from Jan. 2017). 8% fewer think Trump should follow Congress (than in Jan. 2017).
1/9/19, “More [Likely] Voters Now Think Congress Should Follow Trump’s Lead,” Rasmussen Reports
“As they look to the year ahead…41% say that Congress should do more of what Trump wants, up from 29% in January 2017. Slightly more (48%) say that the president should do what Congress wants, down from 56% in the prior survey. Twelve percent (12%) are undecided.
Prior to midterm elections, 52% of voters said it would be better for the country if Congress works with Trump most of the time. Thirty-eight percent (38%) thought it’d be better if Congress opposes the president most of the time.
The survey of 1,000 Likely U.S. Voters was conducted on January 6-7, 2019 by Rasmussen Reports. The margin of sampling error is +/- 3 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence. Field work for all Rasmussen Reports surveys is conducted by Pulse Opinion Research, LLC. See methodology.
A November [2018] survey found that an overwhelming majority (68%) say it is more important for the new Democratic majority in the House of Representatives to focus on policy areas where it can work with the president and his fellow Republicans.
Fifty-three percent (53%) of Democrats think the new Congress will be better than the one that has served for the past two years, but 52% of Republicans think it will be worse. Among voters not affiliated with either political party, 23% say the new Congress will be better, 39% say it will be worse and 27% say it will be about the same….
Voters are overwhelmingly aware that there’s a partial shutdown of the federal government, but so far at least it isn’t bothering them.
Nancy Pelosi is the most powerful Democrat in Washington, D.C., but voters prefer that Trump lead the way.
Half of voters believe the president is setting the agenda in Washington, D.C., these days.”…
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