Trump has commanding leads in Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina:
Iowa:
New Hampshire:
South Carolina:
Poll dates, Nov. 15-19, 2015. Online and telephone.
11/22/15, "Poll: Trump retakes lead, Cruz surges in IA; Rubio second in NH," CBSnews.com, Anthony Salvanto, Jen De Pinto, Sarah Dutton, Fred Backus
"Donald Trump has returned to the lead in Iowa while Ted Cruz has now
surged past Ben Carson into second place. Carson has slipped from a
first-place tie into third.
While Iowa's Republicans generally
feel Trump is ready to be commander-in-chief, Cruz scores even better on
this measure, boosted by support from very conservative and Tea Party
Iowans who feel he is ready to assume the post. That's more than say so
about Trump, Carson, Rubio and Jeb Bush.
Since last month,
Ted Cruz has gained ground -- and Ben Carson has lost ground -- among
some key voting groups in Iowa: evangelicals, Tea Party supporters,
those who are very conservative and older voters. And while Trump still
leads among some of these groups, it's Cruz who is ahead among the very
conservative, and Trump leads Cruz by just two points among evangelical
voters.
Cruz's move has come directly at the expense of Carson, as nearly one-quarter of his voters switched.
In
New Hampshire, Donald Trump keeps his commanding lead, keeping up
support from conservatives, Republicans and the independents who say
they're coming into the GOP primary to vote for him. This month finds
Marco Rubio nearly doubling his support and pushing into second place --
albeit far back of Trump -- at 13 percent now, up from 7 percent,
enough to edge past Carson and Cruz in the nation's first primary.
In New Hampshire, even as he's moved up, Rubio draws mixed evaluations on whether he's ready to be commander-in-chief.
But he still bests Jeb Bush and Ben Carson on the measure; Bush is
narrowly viewed as not ready, and Carson is overwhelmingly seen as not
ready by New Hampshirites....
Importantly for Trump: Most of his voters believe he can do all the
things he says, much more so than Carson's voters believe about Carson.
Their voters were asked how confident they were in their ability to get
done what they say they want to. For Trump, 61% of his voters are
confident in New Hampshire, but also in Iowa and South Carolina,
patterns are very similar.
And when Trump backers are asked their
favorite thing about him, the top answer is that he says what others are
afraid to say - a key explainer of his support even as others find some of his statements controversial.
ISIS, the impact of Paris, and immigration
Handling
ISIS has become a litmus test for candidates: at least two-thirds of
Republicans in Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina all say a
candidate must agree with them on this topic in order to win their vote.
A sizable percentage of GOP primary voters in all three early states said their decision as to who to support was at least somewhat affected by the Paris attacks.
Republican primary voters are hawkish on confronting ISIS abroad.
Significant majorities of Republican primary voters in all three early
voting states favor sending U.S. troops to fight ISIS in the Middle
East.
Immigration and the GOP Race
Immigration policy
has become a deal-breaker in the Republican race: voters say a
candidate must agree with them on it in order to earn their vote. This
is markedly different from issues like same-sex marriage, on which
Republicans are willing to disagree with their candidate, and more
similar to handling ISIS. It also greatly outpaces matters of faith and
religion, including in Iowa, where Republicans are more willing to
compromise. 61% of Iowa GOP voters say their nominee must agree with
them on immigration, as do 63% in New Hampshire.
Large majorities
of Republican primary voters in Iowa, New Hampshire and South Carolina
express tough views toward illegal immigrants, including eight in ten
who view them as harm to national security. More than four in five say
that they have broken the law and should be penalized or deported.
These
voters also perceive negative economic consequences as a result of
illegal immigration: about three in four say illegal immigrants drive
down Americans' wages.
But Republicans' perceptions of illegal
immigrants in these states aren't entirely negative: majorities in each
state also view illegal immigrants as hard-working, and about half say
they fill jobs that Americans won't do. Many who voice these
descriptions simultaneously feel that illegal immigrants have also
broken the law or pose potential harm, suggesting that for many
Republicans, views on this are more nuanced than straight up-or-down
approval on candidates' proposals might suggest.
In Iowa, South
Carolina and New Hampshire, voters who support the Tea Party and those
who are more conservative express the most negative views of illegal
immigrants. About nine in ten voters in these groups see illegal
immigrants as driving down wages and threatening national security, and
think they should be penalized or deported.
In New Hampshire,
where independents typically play a large role in the primary,
independents are only slightly less likely than Republicans to view
illegal immigrants negatively."
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