RECENT ARTICLES
Californians broadly trust state government on coronavirus, mistrust Trump, poll finds
Copyright © 2022, The San Diego Union-Tribune | | AdvertisementAdvertisement California voters give broad approval to Gov. Gavin Newsom amid the coronavirus crisis, and despite widely felt economic pain, large majorities want to go slow on ending stay-at-home orders, a new statewide poll finds.The poll from the UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies documents the hardship caused by the pandemic and the economic disruption surrounding it. The poll found 16% of California voters already reporting that they were unemployed when the survey was taken, April 16-20.Nearly 4 in 10 expect...…Copyright © 2022, The San Diego Union-Tribune | | AdvertisementAdvertisement California voters give broad approval to Gov. Gavin Newsom amid the coronavirus crisis, and despite widely felt economic pain, large majorities want to go slow on ending stay-at-home orders, a new statewide poll finds.The poll from the UC Berkeley Institute of Governmental Studies documents the hardship caused by the pandemic and the economic disruption surrounding it. The poll found 16% of California voters already reporting that they were unemployed when the survey was taken, April 16-20.Nearly 4 in 10 expect...WW…
Essential Politics: Trump is now the underdog
Copyright © 2022, Los Angeles Times | | | | Advertisement If the presidential election were held in May, President Trump would lose.Election day isn’t until November, of course, and anyone doubting that the outcome can shift in 5½ months need only think about how much has changed in the past 2½.But that doesn’t make the current status of the campaign irrelevant. It’s one thing to say that the incumbent can catch up — he certainly can — it’s another to ignore the increasingly strong evidence that Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee, has a clear lead. Get our Essential Politics...…Copyright © 2022, Los Angeles Times | | | | Advertisement If the presidential election were held in May, President Trump would lose.Election day isn’t until November, of course, and anyone doubting that the outcome can shift in 5½ months need only think about how much has changed in the past 2½.But that doesn’t make the current status of the campaign irrelevant. It’s one thing to say that the incumbent can catch up — he certainly can — it’s another to ignore the increasingly strong evidence that Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee, has a clear lead. Get our Essential Politics...WW…
- Total 2 items
- 1