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Arkansas
Related: About this forumUNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS RELEASES POLL INFORMATION ON UPCOMING ELECTIONS
Big news! The University of Arkansas came out with their annual poll during the political season and it has some shocking information including Arkansans are more concerned about healthcare and think climate change poses an imminent risk.
Author: THV11 Digital
Published: 11/01/18
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (University of Arkansas) - The 20th annual Arkansas Poll finds that a growing number of Arkansans think climate change poses an imminent risk.
They are also more concerned about healthcare than in the past, and they believe the state and country have more work to do to achieve gender and racial equity.
The poll also included questions about the upcoming election and current political issues. The Arkansas Poll, designed and analyzed by Janine Parry, professor of political science at the University of Arkansas, is one of the oldest public state polls in the country. It has consistently come within two points of actual election outcomes.
Over the past two decades, the poll has tracked public opinion in Arkansas through 17,000 phone interviews. This year, the poll is based on phone interviews with 1200 randomly selected participants statewide. Sixty-one percent of all calls were conducted over cell phones. For more information about the results, protocols and historic outcomes, go to the full 2018 Arkansas Poll Summary Report.
Its a credit to Arkansas that this annual effort to measure and share what the public wants from policymakers has hit this milestone, Parry said. Based on our election prediction record, its clear Arkansans are honest about their preferences. But interviewers at our national call center observe that the Arkansans they spoke to were also just plain nice. Thats an important intangible thats kept the project rolling for two decades.
CLIMATE CHANGE AND HEALTH CARE
For the past four years, the Arkansas poll asked: Do you think global warming, or climate change, will pose a serious threat to you or your way of life in your lifetime?
This year, the number of people who answered yes increased by more than 50 percent, from 30 percent to 47 percent. Forty-four percent of respondents answered no, a decrease of 17 points from last year.
In response to a question about issues facing people in Arkansas today, respondents cited health care as the most important, followed by drugs, education and the economy. This is a shift from the past two years when respondents cited the economy as the most important issue.
FOCUS ON DIVERSITY
When asked if they thought the increasing number of people of different races, ethnic groups and nationalities in Arkansas made the state better or worse, 45 percent of Arkansas respondents said better, 45 percent said no difference and 7 percent said worse.
When asked about the effects of a growing emphasis on diversity in the workplace, 40 percent said it helped, 43 percent said it made no difference and 10 percent said it hurt. When asked about racial equity, 75 percent of respondents said the country had more to do in that area, and 70 percent said the state had more to do.
On the question of gender equity, 70 percent thought the country needed to do more, while 67 percent thought the state needed to do more.
Snip. Alot more at link
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.thv11.com/amp/article%3fsection=news&subsection=politics&headline=university-of-arkansas-releases-poll-information-on-upcoming-elections&contentId=91-610233631
https://fulbright.uark.edu/departments/political-science/partners/arkansas-poll.php
Author: THV11 Digital
Published: 11/01/18
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (University of Arkansas) - The 20th annual Arkansas Poll finds that a growing number of Arkansans think climate change poses an imminent risk.
They are also more concerned about healthcare than in the past, and they believe the state and country have more work to do to achieve gender and racial equity.
The poll also included questions about the upcoming election and current political issues. The Arkansas Poll, designed and analyzed by Janine Parry, professor of political science at the University of Arkansas, is one of the oldest public state polls in the country. It has consistently come within two points of actual election outcomes.
Over the past two decades, the poll has tracked public opinion in Arkansas through 17,000 phone interviews. This year, the poll is based on phone interviews with 1200 randomly selected participants statewide. Sixty-one percent of all calls were conducted over cell phones. For more information about the results, protocols and historic outcomes, go to the full 2018 Arkansas Poll Summary Report.
Its a credit to Arkansas that this annual effort to measure and share what the public wants from policymakers has hit this milestone, Parry said. Based on our election prediction record, its clear Arkansans are honest about their preferences. But interviewers at our national call center observe that the Arkansans they spoke to were also just plain nice. Thats an important intangible thats kept the project rolling for two decades.
CLIMATE CHANGE AND HEALTH CARE
For the past four years, the Arkansas poll asked: Do you think global warming, or climate change, will pose a serious threat to you or your way of life in your lifetime?
This year, the number of people who answered yes increased by more than 50 percent, from 30 percent to 47 percent. Forty-four percent of respondents answered no, a decrease of 17 points from last year.
In response to a question about issues facing people in Arkansas today, respondents cited health care as the most important, followed by drugs, education and the economy. This is a shift from the past two years when respondents cited the economy as the most important issue.
FOCUS ON DIVERSITY
When asked if they thought the increasing number of people of different races, ethnic groups and nationalities in Arkansas made the state better or worse, 45 percent of Arkansas respondents said better, 45 percent said no difference and 7 percent said worse.
When asked about the effects of a growing emphasis on diversity in the workplace, 40 percent said it helped, 43 percent said it made no difference and 10 percent said it hurt. When asked about racial equity, 75 percent of respondents said the country had more to do in that area, and 70 percent said the state had more to do.
On the question of gender equity, 70 percent thought the country needed to do more, while 67 percent thought the state needed to do more.
Snip. Alot more at link
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.thv11.com/amp/article%3fsection=news&subsection=politics&headline=university-of-arkansas-releases-poll-information-on-upcoming-elections&contentId=91-610233631
https://fulbright.uark.edu/departments/political-science/partners/arkansas-poll.php
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UNIVERSITY OF ARKANSAS RELEASES POLL INFORMATION ON UPCOMING ELECTIONS (Original Post)
backtoblue
Nov 2018
OP
sinkingfeeling
(53,027 posts)1. Thanks. I still find the survey depressing.