FiveThirtyEight
Maggie Koerth

For a good example of how climate and trade aren’t disconnected issues, consider the way we’ve effective exported our pollution. Research suggests that as much as a quarter of all global greenhouse gas emissions have been exported from Western countries to developing ones.

Laura Bronner

Did you think that Biden-Sanders exchange about the rabid dog sounded familiar? We heard it before, almost verbatim, in the November debate:

Aaron Bycoffe

In the FiveThirtyEight/Ipsos poll conducted this week, 12 percent of people said the economy and jobs was the most important issue to them in the Democratic primary. Here’s who those respondents thought would be best at handling the issue. (See other results from the poll here.)

Who voters think is best on the economy and jobs

Among the 338 respondents who said the economy and jobs was the most important issue to them in an Ipsos/FiveThirtyEight poll

candidate Share of respondents
Joe Biden 41.6%
Bernie Sanders 21.5
Someone else 10.3
Pete Buttigieg 8.3
Elizabeth Warren 7.5
Tom Steyer 6.4
Amy Klobuchar 3.0

Data comes from polling done by Ipsos for FiveThirtyEight, using Ipsos’s KnowledgePanel, a probability-based online panel that is recruited to be representative of the U.S. population. The poll was conducted from Jan. 10 to Jan. 13 among a general population sample of adults, with 3,057 respondents who say they are likely to vote in their state’s Democratic primary or caucus. For the likely Democratic primary voter subset of respondents, the poll has a margin of error of +/- 1.9 percentage points.


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