From Ballotpedia <[email protected]>
Subject 58 percent of voters believe America’s best days are still to come
Date September 25, 2020 12:03 PM
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SEPTEMBER 25, 2020: Fifty-eight percent (58%) of voters nationwide believe that America's best days are still to come. A Scott Rasmussen national survey found that 22% are more pessimistic, believing that those days have come and gone.[1] ([link removed])

Fifty-eight percent (58%) of white voters believe our best days are still in the future. So do 58% of Hispanic voters and 54% of black voters.[1] ([link removed])

In fact, with just a single exception, a majority of every measured demographic group shares this upbeat assessment. The one exception is independent voters. However, even among these voters, 49% are optimistic while just 24% believe the nation's best days were in the past.[1] ([link removed])

This optimism about the future provides an interesting contrast with other data from the same survey. Forty-nine percent (49%) of voters believe they are better off than four years ago, but just 35% believe the country is better off.[1] ([link removed])

Click here to view the Number of the Day online→ ([link removed])
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Each weekday, Scott Rasmussen’s Number of the Day ([link removed])  explores interesting and newsworthy topics at the intersection of culture, politics, and technology. Columns published on Ballotpedia reflect the views of the author.
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_Scott Rasmussen is an editor-at-large for Ballotpedia, the Encyclopedia of American Politics. He is a senior fellow for the study of self-governance at the King’s College in New York. His most recent book, ** Politics Has Failed: America Will Not ([link removed])
** , ([link removed])
was published by the Sutherland Institute in August 2018._
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