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October 21, 2005--Public perceptions of Harriet Miers
are a bit more pessimistic than they were last week but 64% of
Americans still believe she is likely to be confirmed and serve on
the United States Supreme Court.
A Rasmussen Reports survey found that 21% say confirmation is not very likely or not at all
likely.
Confirmation is expected even though
just 30% of Americans believe Miers should be confirmed. Thirty-four
percent (34%) take the opposite view say oppose confirmation. The
previous Rasmussen Reports survey
found 32% in favor of confirmation and 28% opposed.
Forty-eight percent (48%) of Republicans
say the President's nominee should be confirmed. That's down from
54% a week ago. Twenty percent (20%) of the GOP faithful oppose the
nomination, up from 17% a week ago.
Republicans supported the nomination of
Chief Justice
John Roberts by a 64% to 11% margin.
Among Democrats. 40% say Miers should
not be confirmed while 20% take the opposite view. Those numbers are
very similar to the Democrats' view of Roberts.
[More]
Thirty percent (30%) of Americans
have a favorable opinion of Miers while 35% have an unfavorable
opinion. Last week, those numbers were 28% favorable and 26%
unfavorable. Only time will tell if the nine point rise in
unfavorable opinions is a one-time shift or the beginning of a
larger trend.
Rasmussen Reports is an electronic publishing firm
specializing in the collection, publication, and distribution of
public opinion polling information.
Rasmussen Reports was the nation's most accurate
polling firm during the Presidential election and the only one to
project both Bush and Kerry's vote total within half a percentage
point of the actual outcome.
During Election 2004, RasmussenReports.com was
also the top-ranked public opinion research site on the web. We had
twice as many visitors as our nearest competitor and nearly as many
as all competitors combined.
Scott Rasmussen, president of Rasmussen
Reports, has been an independent pollster for more than a decade.
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The telephone survey of 600 Adults was conducted by Rasmussen Reports October 12-13,
2005. The margin of sampling error for the survey is +/- 4
percentage points with a 95% level of confidence. 37% of survey
respondents were Republican, 37% Democrat, and 26% unaffiliated (see Methodology)
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