New Poll: Millennials Would Rather Have Meteor Strike Than Vote for Trump or Clinton

GoLocalProv Political Team

New Poll: Millennials Would Rather Have Meteor Strike Than Vote for Trump or Clinton

Donald Trump
A quarter of Americans ages 18 to 35 would prefer to see a meteor hit the earth than see either Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump elected as President, according to the new UMass Lowell/Odyssey Millennials poll released today. 

See the Poll Results Here

“We do not take our respondents at their word that they are earnestly interested in seeing the world end, but we do take their willingness to rank two constitutional crises and a giant meteor ahead of these two candidates with startling frequency as a sign of displeasure and disaffection with the candidates and the 2016 election,” said Prof. Joshua Dyck, co-director of UMass Lowell’s Center for Public Opinion, who wrote and analyzed the independent, nonpartisan poll.

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The poll was conducted from October 10 to October 13 and asked millennials about their attitudes and opinions on the upcoming election, from some irreverent options to the candidates to serious issues like race relations, immigration and legalization. 

Poll Results 

The poll asked millennials to choose their preference between Clinton as president, Trump as president, a random lottery to choose the president from all U.S. citizens, Barack Obama appointing himself to a life term as president or a giant meteor hitting Earth and extinguishing all human life. 

Over a Clinton or Trump presidency, 39 percent of those surveyed said they preferred Obama serve a life term; 26 percent prefer a random lottery to choose the next president and 23 percent (nearly 1 in 4) prefer a giant meteor strike.

Millennials who are likely voters prefer Democrat Hillary Clinton to Republican Donald Trump in a head-to-head race for president, 66 percent to 22 percent with 12 percent undecided. When third-party candidates are included, Clinton gets 61 percent of likely voters’ support, Trump stays at 22 percent, Libertarian Gary Johnson gets 9 percent, Jill Stein of the Green Party gets 5 percent and only 3 percent are undecided.

More Questions

Bernie Sanders
Millennials were also asked how they would vote if Bernie Sanders was the Democratic candidate instead of Hillary Clinton. 

In a head-to-head matchup between Trump and Sanders, 67 percent of millennials would choose Sanders compared to 23 percent for Trump and ten percent were undecided. 

Respondents were also asked who they would vote for if it was Republican vice presidential candidate Mike Pence, instead of Trump, facing Clinton for the presidency. The poll found Clinton leads Pence among likely voters 63 percent to 21 percent, a margin that is almost identical to her lead over Trump.

The Study 

Results of the UMass Lowell/Odyssey Millennials Poll are based on response from a random sample of 1,247 American adults  ages 18 through 35, including 966 registered voters and 680 likely voters, gathered via an online survey from October 10 to October 13. 

The final results are weighted to correct known demographic discrepancies based on age, gender, race, education and region. 

The margin of error is plus or minus 3.2 percent for all respondents, plus or minus 3.6 percent for registered voters and plus or minus 4.3 percent for likely voters.


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