July 15, 2010
Would be first recent nominee to win approval with less than majority public support
Typically, support for nominees does not change much after their hearings. Instead, Gallup usually finds increases in the percentage of Americans opposed and decreases in the percentage with no opinion. The percentage without an opinion on the Kagan nomination was the same before and after her hearings, which may indicate these were not widely followed by the average American.
The Senate Judiciary Committee will vote on Kagan's nomination next week, with the full Senate voting later this summer. Kagan is expected to be confirmed, given the Senate's large Democratic majority.Article continues @Gallup.com
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I'm totally against her, but even if you're totally for her, I have way more respect for your 44% than the shameful 22%. I couldn't be a pollster..."You don't have an opinion?" "Let me help you decide." "Are you for freedom of speech?" ...
2 comments:
In this "vwonderfool und glooorious" New Dark Age, where NOBODY reads the fucking bill they're signing, are you that surprised?
Ted - I guess people don't realize that the Supreme Court is incredibly important. I don't even know how a person can have no opinion, like you say, I shouldn't be surprised.
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