A new study by SurveyUSA puts support for a public option at a robust 77 percent, one percentage point higher than where it stood in June.I've seen this 43% number thrown around in the comments as well, which makes sense: if you eliminate the option part from the public option, people get annoyed with it.But the numbers tell another story, as well.
Earlier in the week, after pollsters for NBC dropped the word "choice" from their question on a public option, they found that only 43 percent of the public were in favor of "creating a public health care plan administered by the federal government that would compete directly with private health insurance companies."
Opponents of the president's agenda jumped on the findings as evidence that backing for the public option was dropping. Proponents responded by arguing that NBC's tinkering with the language of the question (which it had also done in its July survey) had contributed to the drop in favorability for a public plan.
In asking its question SurveyUSA used the same exact words that NBC/Wall Street Journal had used when conducting its June 2009 survey. That one that found 76 percent approval for the public option: "In any health care proposal, how important do you feel it is to give people a choice of both a public plan administered by the federal government and a private plan for their health insurance--extremely important, quite important, not that important, or not at all important?"In other words, the Town Hall Blitz mess hasn't really changed public opinion on the public option much at all, the majority of the country still overwhelmingly approves of the public option.To ensure that its respondent pool was composed of people from similar demographics and political mindsets, SurveyUSA asked respondents a question pulled directly from NBC's August survey. The results were nearly identical.
Read a description of the president's health care plan, 51 percent of Survey USA respondents said they "favored" the approach, while 43 percent opposed it. In the NBC poll, 53 percent of respondents said they favored the president's plan, 43 percent said they opposed it.
Explains why the Republicans are making mistakes all of a sudden.
[UPDATE 5:32 PM] Keep that 77% number in mind when you read Village centrist idiocy like this.
9 comments:
Meanwhile, support for Republicans in the generic congressional ballot keeps growing.
http://ow.ly/kLWK
RCP's average has the parties in a virtual tie with the Dems having a slight edge.
Rasmussen is not the only polling outfit that counts. Try again.
Rasmussen's poll is likely voters and was the most accurate in the last election.
Interestingly, both likely voter polls give Republicans a lead.
Rasmussen's eve-of-election polls usually are accurate.
It adds creibility to the much more dubious ones published at other times.
And Publius - why don't you get your own blog? It gets tired seeing you popping up constantly on the comments here, usually repeating the same old talking points, and sometimes being disrespectful to your host, who shows more patience than you deserve.
Publius = Servius, of course.
You know, the premise of his blog is that everyone to the right of him is stupid and every other post calls us all liars.
Besides, someone's got to shine the light of reason in the dark corners of the left wing internet.
"You know, the premise of his blog is that everyone to the right of him is stupid and every other post calls us all liars."
If you don't like it, there are a gazillion blogs out there, some of which might be more to your taste, and where you might even not bore the socks off the other visitors.
Or you could, of course, get off your ass and start your own. Hell, I'd come ad troll it, just to keep you company. (I suspect you'd need it.)
Or you could just get fact-based and quit lying. Just a suggestion.
Liar. See, didn't prove anything.
btw. I'm going on vacation next week so I won't be around as much.
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