The Dec. 24 New York poll found New Yorkers, even diet drinkers, oppose fat tax; voters back millionaires tax 6-1.
The Dec. 23 New York poll found New York is semi-sweet on Caroline; Cuomo is favored by upstate voters.
The Dec. 17 Connecticut poll found voters back same-sex marriage; Rell approves holds as Dodd, Lieberman scores drop.
Success in 2008
The Quinnipiac University Poll proved to be an excellent predictor in the recent presidential election. The poll accurately predicted the margin of victory in several key states.
View the newspaper ad recognizing the success. (Adobe PDF)
Download the Polling Institute brochure. (Adobe PDF)
Timely and accurate pollsFrequently cited by journalists, public officials and researchers, the independent Quinnipiac University Poll regularly surveys residents in Connecticut, Florida, New York, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania and nationwide about political races, state and national elections, and issues of public concern, such as schools, taxes, transportation, municipal services and the environment.
Known for its exactness and thoroughness, the Quinnipiac poll was selected a "winner" by the New York Post for the most accurate prediction on the Schumer-D'Amato Senate race in 1998, and results are featured regularly in The New York Times, The Washington Post, USA Today, The Wall Street Journal and on national network news broadcasts.
Student interviewers use a computer-assisted telephone interviewing system to collect data from statewide and national residents. For a typical public opinion survey, a randomly selected sample of about 1,000 registered voters age 18 and over is interviewed over five or six days. The polls are conducted at the Polling Institute on West Woods Road, close to the main campus.
The Polling Institute can be contacted at 203-582-5201 or e-mailed at pollinginstitute@quinnipiac.edu.