Many Voters Expect Violence After Election
Less than two weeks before Election Day, roughly half of voters expect violence when it’s over – no matter who wins the White House.
Less than two weeks before Election Day, roughly half of voters expect violence when it’s over – no matter who wins the White House.
A majority of voters suspect that the expansion of mail-in voting has made it easier to cheat in elections.
When asked to identify America’s biggest enemy, most voters don’t name a foreign country, and more than four-in-10 think we could be facing a civil war in the near future.
A majority of voters say it’s gotten harder to find political news they can trust, and a third now trust independent online sources the most.
By nearly a 2-to-1 margin, voters say a candidate’s competence matters more than caring when it comes to this year’s presidential election.
A majority of voters say they won’t wait until Election Day to vote, and one-in-five plan to vote before this week is over.
Half of voters think the news media favor Democrats, and nearly as many agree with former President Donald Trump’s harshest condemnation of the media.
By a 16-point margin, most voters answer “no” to a question famously asked by Ronald Reagan in 1980: “Are you better off than you were four years ago?”
Most voters want the Federal Emergency Management Agency to concentrate on helping Americans, but most Democrats think it’s fine for FEMA funds to be spent helping immigrants.
After Democrat Tim Walz and Republican J.D. Vance met in their only televised debate, the GOP vice presidential candidate gets higher marks from voters.
A majority of voters want stricter gun control laws in America, including a ban on so-called “assault weapons.”
As Election Day nears, voters trust Republicans more than Democrats on the issues of government corruption and energy policy.
Regardless of who they plan to vote for in November, slightly more voters expect former President Donald Trump to win, despite greater confidence among supporters of Vice President Kamala Harris.
Many voters believe the biggest job for the next president is protecting democracy, but they’re deeply divided over where the threat is coming from.
The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone and online survey finds that 23% of Likely U.S. Voters believe protecting democracy is the most important issue for the next president to solve. The issue ranks behind illegal immigration and rising prices (both viewed as more important by 29% of voters) but ahead of abortion rights (17%). (To see survey question wording, click here.)
For the first time, a majority of voters say they’ll cast their ballot before Election Day this year.
She’s the most popular singer on the planet, but will Taylor Swift’s endorsement of Kamala Harris make a difference in the presidential election?
Voters overwhelmingly believe proof of citizenship should be required for voting in American elections, after Congress recently avoided a government shutdown over the issue.
When it comes to the issue of immigration policy, former President Donald Trump has a clear advantage over Vice President Kamala Harris.
In the wake of a second assassination attempt against former President Donald Trump, nearly two-thirds of voters expect another attempt between now and November 5.
Nearly half of voters say Vice President Kamala Harris won this month’s televised debate with former President Donald Trump, and most approve of Trump’s decision not to debate Harris again.