Voters dislike both major candidates but more than 4 in 10 Democrats say the president should be replaced as the party’s presidential nominee.
Biden and Trump clash in historic presidential debate
President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump clashed in a historic presidential debate. Here are five takeaways.
President Joe Biden’s core support has been shaken by his stumbling performance in last week’s debate, an exclusive USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll finds, fueling a furor over whether he should continue his candidacy.
More than four in ten Democrats, 41%, said the Democratic Party should replace Biden as its presidential nominee. That included 37% of those who say they plan to vote for him.
The survey found broad discontent with both major-party candidates, but Republican Donald Trump’s base remains solid despite criticism of his truthfulness in the debate. Only 14% of Republicans and 12% of Trump supporters said the GOP should replace him on its ticket.
The poll of 1,000 registered voters, taken by landline and cell phone Friday through Sunday, has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.
No debate: Donald Trump won
The survey left no doubt which candidate “won” the CNN debate in Atlanta Thursday night.
By nearly 5 to 1, 50% to 11%, those surveyed said Trump won over Biden. Only 28% of Biden supporters said their candidate won, compared with 86% of Trump supporters who said their candidate won.
The issue for Democratic leaders and strategists now is whether scoring the debate will affect how people vote, and whether the debate’s impact fades or intensifies in the weeks ahead.
The Biden campaign has been trying to tamp down a political firestorm over the meandering performance by the 81-year-old president, who sometimes seemed to lose his train of thought. Aides argue that the fundamentals of a close campaign haven’t changed and that he already has begun to address concerns about his age and energy in appearances at a rally and fundraisers since the debate.
The poll findings make it clear those concerns are significant.
When asked an open-ended question about why they thought one candidate or the other had prevailed, most cited either the strength or the weakness of their mental acuity.
Those with concerns about Biden used words like “confused” and “incoherent.” They overwhelmingly said Trump won.
Others used words like “coherent/articulate” and “cognizant/present” as the reason they were supporting the 78-year-old former president.
Among those who said Biden won, the top reasons cited focused not on his performance but on his character, saying he was “truthful/honest” and that Trump had “lied” in his responses.
Independent fact-checkers after the debate identified some Biden misstatements but many more falsehoods by Trump.
Viewership was high: 46% of those surveyed said they watched the entire 90 minutes of the debate, and another 30% said they watched some of it. Republicans were somewhat more likely than Democrats or independents to have watched.
A desire for different candidates
Most Americans polled said they would like to have different choices on the ballot for both parties.
Overall, those surveyed by 54% to 37% say Biden should be replaced as the nominee. Nearly as many said that of Trump, by 51% to 46%.
But the partisan make-up of that dissatisfaction is different, underscoring the divisions among Democrats and the unity of Republicans.
Republicans by 84% to 14% want Trump to remain the GOP’s nominee. What’s more, 59% of Republicans said the debate made them more likely to support him.In contrast, a bare majority of Democrats want Biden to remain as their nominee, 51% to 41%. Among Democrats, just 24% said the debate made them more likely to support him. Nine percent said it made them more likely to back a third-party candidate.
And independents?
Sixty-four percent want Biden replaced on the ballot, 63% want Trump replaced.
When asked about the impact of the debate, 26% of independents said it made them more likely to support Trump, 9% Biden, and 17% said it made them more likely to vote for a third-party candidate.
Another 8% said it made them less likely to vote at all.
Source link : https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/elections/2024/07/01/biden-democratic-support-shaken-debate-poll/74263208007/
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Publish date : 2024-07-01 09:32:19
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