FiveThirtyEight
Laura Bronner

“We need to treat our allies better than we treat the dictators” is a memorable line from Warren.

Geoffrey Skelley

Every time a candidate throws “and I’ll stop gerrymandering” into an answer about voting and elections, as Klobuchar did, it grossly simplifies a complicated issue. What is gerrymandering, exactly? As FiveThirtyEight has found, there are many ways of defining it. But I guess it sounds good.

Aaron Bycoffe

In the FiveThirtyEight/Ipsos poll conducted this week, just 2.4 percent of respondents listed foreign affairs as their top issue in the Democratic primary. (See other results from the poll here.)
Which issue matters most to voters?

Share of respondents who named each issue as the most important one in determining who they would vote for, in a FiveThirtyEight/Ipsos poll

Issue Share of respondents
Health care 20.4%
Wealth and income inequality 13.8
The economy and jobs 12.4
Climate change 10.5
Something else 7.7
Racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia and other types of discrimination 7.6
Social Security 5.5
Gun policy 5.2
Education 4.7
Immigration 4.6
The Supreme Court 2.8
Taxes 2.5
Foreign affairs 2.4

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 Dec. 13 to Dec. 18 among a general population sample of adults, with 3,543 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 +/- 1.8 percentage points.


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