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Poll shows Americans split on banning election-outcome betting
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A POLITICO survey conducted by Public First found that 44% of U.S. adults said betting on election outcomes should be illegal, reflecting public unease about political prediction markets as they expand beyond elections into wagers tied to government actions.
A new Politico poll conducted by Public First in early May finds Americans remain broadly pessimistic about the economy, with a majority describing the cost of living as the worst they can remember and nearly half continuing to blame President Donald Trump for current conditions.
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A Politico survey conducted by Public First in mid-April found notable differences among Trump voters on Israel and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government, with self-identified MAGA supporters expressing more approving views than Trump voters who do not identify with the MAGA label.
A new poll reveals that American women are more inclined than men to view political assassinations as justifiable amid rising political violence. Conducted by the Network Contagion Research Institute, the survey highlights surprising gender differences in attitudes toward violence against figures like Donald Trump and Zohran Mamdani. The findings come as the United States grapples with recent high-profile incidents, including the killings of Charlie Kirk and UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson.
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Early Phoronix coverage highlights anticipated improvements to IO_uring's IOPOLL polling in Linux 7.0, building on prior kernel refinements for superior asynchronous I/O performance in high-throughput applications.
A new POLITICO/Public First survey reports that Trump supporters would accept about a $65 monthly tax increase to support a bill endorsed by President Donald Trump, while 2024 Harris voters would forgo roughly $33 in monthly tax savings to oppose him.
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A new Politico poll finds no consensus among Democratic voters on who leads their party: roughly a third answered "don’t know" or "nobody," while Kamala Harris was the top named individual at about 16 percent. Republicans, by contrast, overwhelmingly point to Donald Trump.