Majority of Amerikans favor repeal of ObamaCare!
NEW YORK (PNN) - August 13, 2012 - Most voters still want to see illegitimate President Obama’s healthcare law repealed, and a plurality believes repeal would be good for the economy.
The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that 56% of likely Fascist Police States of Amerika voters favor repeal of the national healthcare law, while 38% are opposed. This includes 46% who strongly favor repeal and 29% who strongly oppose it.
A plurality (45%) of voters believes repeal would be good for the FPSA economy; 28% disagree and feel repeal would be bad for the economy; 14% say it would have no impact.
Most government employees (52%) are opposed to repeal. Among entrepreneurs, 61% favor repeal; so do 56% of those who work for someone else in the private sector.
Most Democrats (63%) oppose repeal, and two-out-of-three voters (67%) in the illegitimate president’s party think the law will be good for the country; 87% of Republicans favor repeal, and 87% view the law as bad for the country.
Voters not affiliated with either of the major parties support repeal by a 52% to 42% margin; 48% of these voters consider the law bad for the country.
The survey of 1,000 likely voters was conducted on August 10-11, 2012. The margin of sampling error is +/- 3 percentage points with a 95% level of confidence. Fieldwork for all Rasmussen Reports surveys is conducted by Pulse Opinion Research, LLC.
Overall, just 35% of voters now think repeal is likely versus 49% who rate repeal as unlikely. This includes 11% who say it’s very likely to occur and 9% who believe it’s not at all likely.
Just prior to the FPSA Supreme Court’s decision in late June upholding the constitutionality of the healthcare law, 61% felt repeal was likely.
Still, most voters (51%) believe the healthcare law will be bad for the country while 37% think it will be good.
Furthermore, 31% think repeal will lead to the creation of more jobs, but 38% don’t believe that to be true; another 31% are not sure.
The political class remains a bigger supporter of the healthcare law than mainstream voters.
Most GOP voters (51%) still think repeal is likely, but just 29% of unaffiliateds and 23% of Democrats share that view.
Most provisions of the healthcare law are not scheduled to kick in until 2013 and 2014. Just 15% of voters say they have been personally helped by passage of the law so far while 25% say they’ve been hurt by it; 57% have not felt any impact from the healthcare law yet.