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N.C. Voters: Country On Wrong Track
By Bryan Warner
Published: Mar. 3, 2011
RALEIGH - More than six in 10 North Carolina voters say the country is on the wrong track, according to a poll exploring attitudes on money, courts and politics, commissioned by the Justice at Stake Campaign and the N.C. Center for Voter Education.
Hypothetical 2012 match ups
U.S. president
Barack Obama: 47 percent
Sarah Palin: 45 percent
undecided: 8 percent
Barack Obama: 43 percent
Mitt Romney: 49 percent
undecided: 8 percent
N.C. governor
Pat McCrory: 51 percent
Bev Perdue: 38 percent
undecided: 11 percent
2012 Republican presidential nominee*
Not certain at this time: 28 percent
Sarah Palin: 19 percent
Mike Huckabee: 15 percent
Mitt Romney: 13 percent
Newt Gingrich: 10 percent
Herman Cain: 4 percent
Tim Pawlenty: 4 percent
Some other candidate: 3 percent
Haley Barbour: 2 percent
Mitch Daniels: 2 percent
Poll of 600 registered N.C. voters, conducted Feb. 8-10 by 20/20 Insight Polling. Margin of error 4 percent.
*Asked of 229 likely 2012 Republican primary voters. Margin of error 6.5 percent.
That feeling is especially prevalent among Republicans and independents, with 88 percent and 62 percent, respectively, saying the country is moving in the wrong direction. Just 35 percent of Democratic voters believe the country is on the wrong track.
Voters are evenly split on their feelings about the outcome of the 2010 legislative and congressional elections, with 46 percent satisfied with the results and 46 percent dissatisfied.
Not surprisingly, party affiliation greatly influences voter attitudes about last year’s election outcomes, with 82 percent of Democrats not satisfied and 83 percent of Republicans satisfied with November’s results. Among independent voters, 44 percent are satisfied and 42 percent are dissatisfied.
Looking ahead to potential 2012 match ups, the poll finds that voters favor Democratic President Barack Obama over Republican Sarah Palin, 47-45 percent. Republican Mitt Romney fares better, leading Obama 49-43 percent.
In a hypothetical gubernatorial rematch from 2008, Republican Pat McCrory leads Democratic Gov. Bev Perdue 51-38 percent. Among the key demographic of independent voters, McCrory leads 47-30 percent.
Likely Republican presidential primary voters are yet to throw their support behind a clear favorite, with 19 percent supporting Palin, 15 percent supporting Mike Huckabee and 13 percent supporting Romney. Twenty-eight percent say they are unsure of which candidate will get their vote.
These questions were part of a poll examining voter attitudes about the influence of political money on North Carolina’s courts. Released last week, those results found that 94 percent of state voters believe campaign contributions have some sway on a judge’s decision, including 43 percent who say campaign donations can greatly affect a ruling.
The poll also shows that when it comes to North Carolina’s first-in-the-nation system of public financing for judicial elections, 49 percent of voters say they would be less likely to support a legislative candidate who wants to eliminate the program. Only 20 percent of voters say they would be more likely to favor a candidate who sought to end the program.
Conducted Feb. 8-10 by 20/20 Insight Polling, the statewide poll of 600 registered North Carolina voters has a margin of error of plus or minus 4 percent. Questions asked of 229 likely 2012 Republican primary voters have a margin of error of plus or minus 6.5 percent.


