Description
The mission of the non-partisan Paul Simon Public Policy Institute polling is to provide citizens, policy-makers, and academic researchers with objective information about trends and issues facing society.
The 2010 Simon Poll interviewed 1,000 registered voters across Illinois. For the entire sample, the statistical margin for error is plus or minus 3 percentage points at the 95 percent confidence level.. Poll conducted from September 30 to October 10, 2010. Areas covered:
General outlook, Illinois 2010 General Election, Governor’s Race, Legislative Redistricting, Illinois budget, Illinois political reform, Political tolerance, First Amendment knowledge, Mass media and the Press, the Tea Party, abortion, gay/lesbian military service and gay marriage. Demographic information is also included, covering age, race, gender, income, political party affiliation, political ideology, employment, household income, and religious activities. Respondents ZIP Codes and other geographic identifiers are included.
Date created
10-2010
Geographic coverage
Illinois, statewide
Keywords
Illinois Politics, Illinois Polling, Simon Poll, Election Polling, Illinois 2010 General Election, Governor’s Race, Legislative Redistricting, Illinois budget, Illinois political reform, Political tolerance, First Amendment, Mass media, Press, the Tea Party, abortion, military service, gay marriage, Tea Party
Simon Poll, 2010. SPSS dataset
SimonPoll.dataset.csv (273 kB)
Simon Poll, 2010. dataset csv
SimonPoll.Metadata.2010.csv (13 kB)
Simon Poll, 2010. Metadata, csv
Recommended Citation
Paul Simon Public Policy Institute, "The Simon Poll, 2010. Illinois Statewide" (2010). Paul Simon Public Policy Institute Statewide Polls. Paper 6.
https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/ppi_statepolls/6
Comments
Copyright Notice: The “Paul Simon Public Policy Institute Poll,” the “Simon Poll” and the “Southern Illinois Poll” are the copyrighted trademarks of the Board of Trustees of Southern Illinois University. Use and publication of these polls is encouraged – but only with credit to the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute at SIUC.