American voters are divided — especially along party lines — on whether the U.S. Senate should vote this year on President Obama’s eventual nominee to succeed Antonin Scalia on the Supreme Court, according to results from a new national NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll.
Overall, 43 percent say the Senate should vote this year on a replacement, versus 42 percent who prefer to leave the position vacant and wait for a nomination by the new president; 15 percent have no opinion.
Among Democratic voters, 81 percent want the Senate to vote this year, while just 9 percent disagree. But those numbers are flipped among Republicans — 81 percent of them want to leave the position vacant, while 11 percent prefer to vote this year.
Independents are split – 43 percent this year, 42 percent next year.
The NBC/WSJ poll was conducted Feb. 14-16 of 800 registered voters, and the poll has an overall margin of error of plus-minus 3.5 percentage points.









