yes, believe it or not, we're STILL talking about im๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ‘ment

1. The seven most recent polls they looked at measured opinion about last weekend (Those covering Jan 19 in the polling dates).  How many showed more support for removing Trump than opposition for removing Trump? 
48.1 percent of Americans support removal. That includes 83.9 percent of Democrats but only 8.4 percent of Republicans. Support among independents is almost exactly between the two, at 41.8 percent.

2. Which of these 7 polls found the most support for removing Trump? Which found the most opposition to removing Trump?

The FiveThirtyEight/Ipsos poll taken January 17-20 found the highest support of removal at 54%. The Gallup poll taken January 2-15 had the highest opposition to removal at 51%.

3. In FiveThirtyEight's polling average, what percentage of Democrats support removing Trump from office? What percentage of Republicans support removing Trump from office?

Democrats in support=54% and Republicans in opposition=42%.

4. What difference did the most recent Monmouth University poll find in the people who say they support removing Trump from office and those who support the House impeaching Trump?

Americans were evenly divided (49 percent to 48 percent) on whether to remove Trump from office, but they approved of the House’s decision to impeach by 7 points (53 percent to 46 percent).

5. Why does the author suggest that some Republicans may support removing Trump from office?

They may support his removal because they believe that Vice President Mike Pence would make a better president.

6. Why might the polls be misleading if they survey all adults as opposed to just likely voters?

The idea, after all, is to see how the country feels about removing Trump, and the country includes millions of nonvoters. The people who end up voting in elections tend to be a tad more Republican than the adult population.

7. How do men and women think differently about whether or not a woman candidate can win a presidential election?

89 percent of men said a woman could get elected while 9 percent disagreed, but women were less convinced, at 79 percent to 20 percent.

8. Which demographic group of people caused the Atlanta Journal Constitution to adjust its polling formulas? 

Underrepresented white voters without a college degree.

9. Related to issues we were discussing last week, how do Americans feel about the Supreme Court potentially overturning Roe v Wade?

Sixty-nine percent of Americans do not want Roe v. Wade to be overturned. 66 percent support requiring a 24-hour waiting period between meeting with a health care provider and actually getting an abortion. And 63 percent of Americans say they know someone

who has had an abortion.

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