Although Donald Trump is leading the Republican horserace, a majority of American voters believe his comments on the campaign trail are insulting; six in 10 say he’s harming the Republican Party’s image; and nearly two-thirds have a negative opinion of him – making Trump the most unpopular figure in the poll.
What’s more, just half of Republican primary voters – 53 percent – say they’d be satisfied with Trump as the party’s presidential nominee.
That’s compared with 72 percent of Republicans who said this about Mitt Romney in March 2012, and 78 percent of Democratic primary voters who currently say this about Hillary Clinton.
“It may be fair to say that the GOP seems to be in disarray with the very real prospect that Donald Trump may be its nominee,” said Democratic pollster Fred Yang of Hart Research Associates, who conducted this survey with Republican pollster Bill McInturff of Public Opinion Strategies.
The poll – conducted March 3-6 – comes as Trump earned victories Tuesday night in Michigan and Mississippi and remains the frontrunner for the Republican presidential nomination.
But it also shows how politically radioactive Trump is, especially outside the universe of GOP primary voters.
Sixty-one percent of all voters say Trump represents something that is harmful to the Republican Party, versus 27 percent who believe he represents something positive for the GOP.
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Republican primary voters are split on this question: 45 percent say positive, 43 percent say harmful.
And half of all voters – including 33 percent of Republicans – say Trump’s comments are frequently insulting, and that he has the wrong approach to many issues. Twenty-one percent (including 34 percent of Republicans) answered that while his language is problematic, he is raising important issues. And 18 percent of all voters (and 26 percent of Republicans) said that Trump has the right approach and is telling it like it is.
Asked what kind of change a Trump presidency would bring, just 27 percent said it would bring the right kind of change, and 52 percent said it would bring the wrong kind of change; 18 percent said it wouldn’t bring much change either way.
(By contrast, 25 percent said a Hillary Clinton presidency would bring the right kind of change, 29 percent the wrong kind of change and 45 percent no change either way.)









