I'm curious how that answer breaks down according to what people want to happen. Even though it isn't the same I expect we would see huge overlap between this question and right track / wrong track questions.
It's not hard to imagine a young woman answering that she's worse off than four years ago, because four years ago she still had a c…
I'm curious how that answer breaks down according to what people want to happen. Even though it isn't the same I expect we would see huge overlap between this question and right track / wrong track questions.
It's not hard to imagine a young woman answering that she's worse off than four years ago, because four years ago she still had a court protected right to abortion. Someone answering that way isn't going to vote republican. An investment banker could answer that they're better off than four years ago because the stock market is doing a lot better, but that doesn't mean they're in our camp either.
How much is this question being changed by hardening partisanship? How much of the answer is a result of that partisanship? Democratic voters are consistently more willing to be critical of democratic administrations than republicans of republican administrations, for better or worse.
It's not an encouraging result but I find it so hard to make sense of the data available today that I don't really know what to make of it.
I'm curious how that answer breaks down according to what people want to happen. Even though it isn't the same I expect we would see huge overlap between this question and right track / wrong track questions.
It's not hard to imagine a young woman answering that she's worse off than four years ago, because four years ago she still had a court protected right to abortion. Someone answering that way isn't going to vote republican. An investment banker could answer that they're better off than four years ago because the stock market is doing a lot better, but that doesn't mean they're in our camp either.
How much is this question being changed by hardening partisanship? How much of the answer is a result of that partisanship? Democratic voters are consistently more willing to be critical of democratic administrations than republicans of republican administrations, for better or worse.
It's not an encouraging result but I find it so hard to make sense of the data available today that I don't really know what to make of it.
That's exactly the point. And there are some so called leftists who point out that "Roe v Wade got overturned under Biden."