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#YouGov
princessanneftw · 1 year
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the-empress-7 · 2 months
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theiconicmeghanmarkle · 11 months
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7 out of 10 Brits believe Prince Harry's and senior royals phones were hacked and that the newspapers knew that the hacking was going on.
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There seems to be no stopping the zombie fans of Donald Trump. Rather than seeing the former president’s multiple criminal indictments, including new charges filed in Georgia last week, as a reason not to support his 2024 run, nearly 3 in 4 Trump voters say showing support during his legal fights is a reason to support him.
According to a CBS News/Yougov poll released Sunday, Trump not only holds a commanding lead over the field of his Republican rivals, he now holds his largest lead yet since CBS/YouGov started polling on the 2024 race. Trump has the support of 62% of likely Republican primary voters, while his nearest opponent, Ron DeSantis, trails him with a measly 16%. That’s a 7 point drop in DeSantis support among those voters just since June.
Likely GOP primary voters also weighed in on Trump’s latest indictment, with 77% saying they believe the indictment is politically motivated. Trump and 18 others were charged in Georgia last week with felony crimes related to his attempts to overturn the state’s 2020 election results.
The poll also questioned likely Republican primary voters about the events of Jan. 6 and Trump’s attempts to overturn the election. Among MAGA supporters, 41% said that then-Vice President Mike Pence did “the wrong thing” that day by counting states’ votes (aka not letting Trump subvert democracy). Only 21% said Pence did “the right thing,” while 38% said they were not sure.
Despite Trump’s countless lies, 71% of Trump voters believe he is a source of “true” information, beating even their own friends and family, who ranked second with 63%.
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cyan-eyed-princet · 3 months
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ericmicael · 10 months
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"YouGov" took 3 polls about Disney with the American public: the most popular Disney princess counting Frozen, the most loved princess movies and whether they would approve of introducing a lesbian princess or a gay prince.
I've seen these same questionnaires a while ago, I think they were done in the UK, but the answers weren't very different even though there was no Raya yet.
About the last one, which will probably be the most talked about and interests me particularly the most. Really, as I said, it is not a big surprise that there is more rejection than acceptance, the "Frozen" franchise itself, which has one of its central themes as accepting differences and even has officially lgbt characters, the fandom is very full of intolerant people (a bit similar to "X-Men"), so no surprise.
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Bosses at YouGov suppressed publication of a poll during the 2017 election campaign because it was "too positive about Labour", a former manager at the pollster has claimed.
Chris Curtis said a poll conducted after a key leadership debate showed Jeremy Corbyn had won "by a country mile" but that the pollster banned its release while under pressure from its Tory MP founder.
YouGov denies Mr Curtis's characterisation of events and says the poll was in fact pulled because it had "a skewed sample" – but Labour figures branded the claims "shocking" and said they raised questions about "the health of our democracy".
In a post on social media on Wednesday Mr Curtis, who is now head of political polling at competitor Opinium said: "We did a fantastic debate poll in the hours following the debate that Corbyn took part in.
"The results were stark – Corbyn won by a country mile, and one in four Tory voters thought he was best.
"But despite having written the story and designed the charts, we were banned from releasing the story because it was too positive about Labour."
Mr Curtis said YouGov bosses had "panicked at the backlash" to earlier research correctly predicting a hung parliament – against all expectations.
He said Nadhim Zahawi, a Conservative MP who co-founded the company in the year 2000, telephoned YouGov's chief executive and "said he would call for his resignation if he was wrong".
[...]
Responding to YouGov in follow-up comments, Mr Curtis said he believed the poll in question was conducted in “exactly the same way as we ran this other debate poll, which nobody had any problem with us publishing”.
And he added: “The most important finding of the poll, the one I wanted to focus on and thought was most important, was that a good chunk of Tory voters thought Corbyn had won. This is rare in a debate poll where results normally fall down party lines.”
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jerseydeanne · 1 year
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mycatcalledluna · 10 months
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This came out of nowhere, some of the yougov questions are so random
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gamerzylo · 9 months
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tweetingukpolitics · 2 years
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the-empress-7 · 2 years
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Let’s talk about polls baby
Have ya’ll seen the latest YouGov poll that came out....hidden towards the back of the general popularity numbers are some very interesting questions. Before I offer up my thoughts, I’d love to hear from those of you who like reviewing data like this. What do you think it means for the BRF and why do you think they polled the questions that they did?
https://docs.cdn.yougov.com/0c0i1fywde/InternalResults_Royals_220317_W.pdf
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callmenumberone · 2 years
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No option to say 'Fuck branded content' I notice.
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planetofsnarfs · 24 days
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😏
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Nearly two-thirds — 62% — of Americans in a new poll said that former President Trump should not be allowed to serve as President again if he is convicted of a “serious” crime.
The Yahoo News-YouGov poll found that a slightly smaller majority — 52% — said they believe that Trump has committed a serious crime at some point in his life.
The former president is facing a litany of investigations, including the Manhattan district attorney’s probe into an alleged hush money payment he made to adult film star Stormy Daniels ahead of the 2016 election and the Justice Department’s dual investigations into his handling of classified documents and role in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.
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Just over half — 52% — also said that they considered falsifying business records to conceal hush money payments to a porn star to be a serious crime. Trump was charged with 34 felony counts of falsifying business records in the Manhattan criminal probe in early April. He pleaded not guilty.
Some 66% also said that conspiring to overturn the results of a presidential election was a serious crime, while 63% and 64% each said the same of attempting to obstruct the certification of the election and of inciting or aiding an insurrection against the federal government.
Further, 63% said they considered taking highly classified documents from the White House and obstructing efforts to retrieve them to be a serious crime.
Trump’s lawyers were spotted meeting with federal prosecutors on the classified documents case Monday, after CNN reported last week that the prosecution had obtained a recording of the former president discussing a classified document that remained in his possession in July 2021.
He reportedly appeared to acknowledge that the document was still classified on the recording, telling two authors that he couldn’t show them the document because they lacked security clearances.
However, despite his legal woes, a large portion Americans in the poll said that the various investigations into Trump don’t affect their opinion of the former president. Among respondents, 43% said they have the same opinion of him as before, while 34% said they feel more negative about Trump and 13% said they feel more positive.
Trump remains the leading candidate for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination amid a growing field of opponents. He sits more than 30 points ahead of his closest competitor, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, according to a recent polling average from FiveThirtyEight.
The Yahoo News poll was conducted May 25-30 with 1,520 U.S. adults and had a margin of error of 2.7 percentage points.
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brightwhiteheat · 3 months
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