Your feedback ensures we stay focused on the facts that matter to you most—take our survey

Pliny's Point on May 18, 2017

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search

By Ballotpedia Staff

May 18, 2017: An average of 36 percent think the U.S. is headed in the right direction, while a majority of 57 percent think the country is on the wrong track, according to recent polls. This is a two point drop from Tuesday, largely due to new polls by Reuters / Ipsos and Economist / YouGov, which both showed a decline from numbers published by the same surveys the previous week. Reuters / Ipsos showed a two point drop, from 30 to 28 perecent, while the Economist / YouGov poll showed a five percent drop, from 35 to 30 percent.[1]

SourceDate rangeSample size% who think the U.S. is headed in the right directionMargin of error (+/-)
Politico/Morning Consult[2]5/9 - 5/111,731 registered voters44%2%
Rasmussen Reports[3]5/7 - 5/112,500 likely voters37% 2%
Economist/YouGov[4]5/13 - 5/161,298 registered voters30%3.2%
Reuters/Ipsos[5]5/12 - 5/161,868 adults28% 2.6%
IBD/TIPP[6]4/28 - 5/4904 adults43%3.3%
CBS News[7]4/21 - 4/241,214 adults36%3%


Methodology

For Ballotpedia's presidential approval, congressional approval, and direction of the country polling results, we take an average of the most recent polls on one or more of these topics conducted by 12 sources. Polls may be included in the average for up to 30 days, though this timeline may be adjusted to account for major news events as we attempt to balance the need for a larger sample of results with the need to remove outdated information. For a full description of our methodology and polling explanations, see: Ballotpedia's Polling Indexes.

What's in a name?

Pliny the Elder, a scholar from the Roman Empire, is most well known for writing the encyclopedic work Naturalis Historia, or “Natural History.” His extremely thorough work covered everything from botany to technology. Naturalis Historia, one of the largest Roman works that still exists from the first century A.D., became an example for future encyclopedic works through its formatting, references, and comprehensiveness.

Today, Ballotpedia works to preserve and expand knowledge, just like Pliny did hundreds of years ago. One of the features of Ballotpedia, the encyclopedia of American politics, was a daily statistic called Pliny’s Point. Each day, between January 20, 2017 and September 1, 2017, readers learned where Americans stood on the direction of the country, or their approval of elected officials.


Click here for more Pliny's Point articles.

See also

Ballotpedia daily polling averages:

Stay in the know:

Footnotes