This City Councilman Turned a $50K Deal Into a Personal Payday. Now He's...
Meet the Conservative Outsider Who Wants to Bring Common Sense Back to His...
How This Small-Town Police Force Became a 'Criminal Organization'
Iranian Regime's Latest Move Shows How Desperate It Has Become
House Republicans Want to Know Why Ilhan Omar's Income Jumped by 140 Times...
If 'The Only Thing More Powerful Than Hate Is Love' Democrats Missed the...
Elites Did Their Part to Fight Global Warming by Flying Dozens of Private...
Historic: U.S. Marks Ninth Month With Zero Releases at the Border
Man Who Pushed Propaganda About a Young Gazan Boy Slaughtered By The IDF...
Harry Sisson Refuses to House Illegals in His Home, And Claims ICE Agent...
Critics Blast Katie Porter's Pre Super Bowl X Post As She Tries to...
Here Is the Real Reason Bad Bunny Is Anti-American
Federal Judge Blocks California Effort to Demask ICE Agents
Jasmine Crockett Might Be Running the Most Incompetent Campaign in History
WaPo Claims That Bad Bunny's Profane Performance Represented 'Wholesome Family Values'
OPINION

Majority of NY'ers Suppoert Wall St. Protest: Poll

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

ALBANY - Keep Occupying Wall Street, New York voters say in another poll.

A Siena College survey released today found 58 percent of state voters felt Occupy Wall Street protesters "represent the 99 percent of people that will no longer tolerate the greed and corruption of the remaining one percent" while 27 percent disagreed, saying the protesters are copying those in Egypt with the potential to cause riots.

Advertisement

A Quinnipiac University poll of New York City residents released yesterday also found strong support for the protesters.

President Obama, meantime, maintained his double-digit lead over his leading potential Republican challengers, including Herman Cain, in the Siena survey.

The Oct. 10-12 telephone poll of 800 registered voters around the state found that by 49-28 percent voters say they would join the Occupy Wall Street movement over the Tea Party movement if they had to join one.

Wall Street got a 24-67 percent unfavorable rating, including majorities of voters across the political and demographic spectrum.

By 49-38, respondents viewed Occupy Wall Street favorably; by 28-60, they viewed the Tea Party unfavorably.

Majorities of Republicans and conservatives viewed Occupy Wall Street unfavorably and the Tea Party favorably. Independents were evenly divided on the protesters, while a plurality of suburbanites held an unfavorable view of the movement.

Obama's 55-43 percent favorability rating was up slightly from 52-45 percent in Siena's September poll, but his 38-62 percent job performance rating was down from 40-61 percent last month. Additionally, 71-22 percent of voters think the nation is headed in the wrong direction - including African-Americans by 48-39.

The good news for the first-term Democrat is that African-Americans retain a strong favorable view of him - 89-7 percent, as do Latinos by 76-19.

Advertisement

And poll respondents viewed his potential 2012 GOP challengers unfavorably - Texas Gov. Rick Perry 18-53, down from 21-45 percent; former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney 34-45 percent, up from 30-46 percent; and businessman Cain 25-32 percent.

While Obama would only win re-election next year 48-45 percent over "someone else" in blue New York, he led Perry 58-31 percent (up from 56-33 percent last month), Romney 55-37 percent (down from 56-36 percent), and Cain 58-32 percent.

“The President’s ratings continue to be very strong with Democrats, very negative with Republicans, and virtually evenly divided among independents,” said poll spokesman Steven Greenberg, who noted that Obama led among independents anywhere from 13 and 21 points over the three potential 2012 challengers.

The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement