By a 4-to-1 margin, Americans say that domestic issues like the economy, health care, Medicare and Social Security are more important in deciding their vote for Congress than issues like the Ebola virus and the fight against ISIS, according to the new NBC News/Wall Street Journal national poll.
Seventy-seven percent of all voters pick the combined domestic issues, while just 19 percent say subjects like the Ebola virus, ISIS and Russia’s actions in Ukraine are more important in deciding their vote.
“It’s not ISIS, it’s not Ebola,” says Democratic pollster Peter Hart, who conducted the survey with Republican pollster Bill McInturff. “It’s come back to the basics.”
Strikingly, however, those who are energized about international issues are voting for Republicans.
The minority of likely voters who say Ebola, ISIS, and Russia are more important to their vote prefer a Republican-controlled Congress by more than 30 points, 63 percent to 29 percent.
By comparison, the majority focusing more on domestic issues prefer a Democratic-controlled Congress, 52 percent to 40 percent.
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Fewer than one-in-five voters are emphasizing Ebola and ISIS, McInturff says, but they are consolidating a core part of the Republican base.
Overall, the individual issues that are most important to voters are job creation and economic growth (23 percent of registered voters pick that as their top issue), breaking Washington’s gridlock (another 23 percent), the deficit (12 percent), health care (9 percent) and Social Security and Medicare (another 9 percent)
Just 7 percent pick the military action against ISIS as their top issue, and only 2 percent point to the Ebola outbreak.
President Barack Obama’s approval rating stands at 42 percent among voters, which is unchanged from last month’s NBC/WSJ poll. But most voters – Democrats and Republicans alike – say the president isn’t that big of factor in determining their vote.
Among those preferring a Republican-controlled Congress, 45 percent say their vote is a positive vote for Republicans in Congress, another 25 percent say it’s to protest the Obama administration and 19 percent say it’s to protest Democrats in Congress.
Among those preferring a Democratic-controlled Congress, 41 percent say their decision at the ballot box is a positive vote for congressional Democrats, 27 percent say it’s to protest Republicans and another say 26 it’s a positive vote for the Obama administration.
The popularity (or unpopularity) contest









