Polls by “select pollsters” are shown with a diamond. These pollsters have backgrounds that tend to mean they are more reliable. Also, polls that were conducted by or for partisan organizations are labeled, as they often release only results that are favorable to their cause.
A suburban Philadelphia bakery’s cookie “poll” that started during the 2008 presidential campaign as a joke between the owners and their customers has grown into much more.
New polling from the Utah Debate Commission found that Republican candidates for U.S. House and Senate carry double-digit leads over their Democratic opponents. The commission based finalized debate lineups on the results of the poll.
Polls by “select pollsters” are shown with a diamond. These pollsters have backgrounds that tend to mean they are more reliable. Also, polls that were conducted by or for partisan organizations are labeled, as they often release only results that are favorable to their cause.
The shop's poll has only been wrong once in the past 40 years in predicting the results of the presidential race.
A record gap has opened up between Democrats and Republicans over their faith in the accuracy of the vote count in the presidential election, a new Gallup poll shows. The survey, conducted from
Vice President Harris narrowly leads former President Trump in the battleground state of Pennsylvania, according to a new poll released by Monmouth University Wednesday. Data showed that 40 percent of voters in the Keystone State said they will definitely vote for Harris,
Half of likely voters said they are highly confident that votes will be counted accurately in November, and nearly a third more said they were moderately confident.
An Ohio bakery has correctly predicted the outcome of every election except one sine 1984 by conducting a cookie poll. The bakery sells cookies with each of the candidates face on a cookie then counts each sell as a vote to predict who will win the upcoming election.
Tracking the Polls. The state of the race, according to the latest polling data.
A new AARP poll published exclusively by The News & Observer shows that economic issues are driving voters, and looks at the races for president, governor and attorney general.