Perhaps the overwhelming popularity of the Iran Deal will convince Carper and Coons to vote for it.
A LA Jewish Journal survey finds that 48% of Jewish Americans support the Iran nuclear deal negotiated between the United States, Germany, the UK, France, Russia, China and Iran. 28% oppose it and 25% hadn’t heard enough to form an opinion.
In another poll released yesterday, the PPP finds strong support for the Iran nuclear deal. Among the key findings:
-Only 38% of voters are opposed to the Iran deal, compared to 54% who are supportive of it. Democratic voters (75/17) are far more united in their favor for the agreement than Republicans (36/54) are in their opposition to it. Voters within every gender, race, and age group are in support of it, reflecting the broad based mandate for the deal.
-Similarly 54% of voters want their members of Congress to vote to allow the agreement to move forward, compared to just 39% who would like to see it blocked. […]
-There are basically no potential repercussions politically for members of Congress who do vote in support of the agreement. 60% of Americans say that if their members vote for it, they will be either more likely to vote for them in the future or it won’t make a difference either way in their future voting.
I can tell you that if Senator Carper or Senator Coons votes against it, then they better either be retiring or they don’t mind being defeated the next time they face the voters. That is because “79% of Democrats said they’d be more likely to support their members in the future or it wouldn’t make a difference.”
It all depends on how the questions are asked.
http://www.vox.com/2015/7/27/9049839/iran-deal-polls
There’s 20 some million ignorant fools parroting what they hear on talk radio.
It’s not Fox, gentlemen:
http://www.cnn.com/2015/07/28/politics/obama-approval-iran-economy/
Do we legislate by polls for rubes
We should figure a way to get to Democratic voters and warn them them about these guys voting with Republicans. I volunteer to work on any organized effort