This Washington Post-ABC News poll by telephone April 6-10, 2016 among a random national sample of 1,010 adults, including users of both conventional and cellular phones. The results from the full survey have a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points. Sampling, data collection and tabulation by SSRS of Media, Pa. (Full methodological details appended at the end.) *= less than 0.5 percent 1. Overall, do you have a favorable or unfavorable impression of Donald Trump? Do you feel that way strongly or somewhat? ------- Favorable ------------ Unfavorable -----No NET Strongly Somewhat NET Somewhat Strongly opinion 4/10/16 31 14 17 67 14 53 2 3/6/16 30 15 14 67 11 56 3 1/10/16 35 17 18 62 14 48 3 11/8/15 38 16 23 59 13 46 3 9/20/15 35 14 21 60 19 41 5 8/30/15 37 16 21 59 16 43 4 7/12/15 33 14 19 61 16 45 6 5/31/15 16 7 9 71 16 55 13 12/18/11 40 12 29 48 21 27 12 1/16/00* 20 NA NA 70 NA NA 11 10/31/99* 18 NA NA 70 NA NA 12 *“Regardless of how you might vote, please tell me if you have a favorable or unfavorable impression of Donald Trump, or perhaps you don't know enough to say.” 2. Overall, do you have a favorable or unfavorable impression of Ted Cruz? Do you feel that way strongly or somewhat? 4/10/16 3/6/16 1/10/16 11/8/15 5/31/15 3/29/15 ------- Favorable ------NET Strongly Somewhat 36 10 26 35 12 23 42 12 30 34 9 25 25 7 18 25 8 17 ------ Unfavorable -----NET Somewhat Strongly 53 20 33 51 21 30 43 19 23 44 23 21 38 13 25 45 17 29 No opinion 11 14 16 23 37 30 3. Overall, do you have a favorable or unfavorable impression of John Kasich? Do you feel that way strongly or somewhat? 4/10/16 ------- Favorable ------NET Strongly Somewhat 39 11 28 ------ Unfavorable -----NET Somewhat Strongly 39 23 15 No opinion 22 *** END *** METHODOLOGICAL DETAILS This poll was jointly sponsored and funded by The Washington Post and ABC News. The poll is a random sample adults of the United States, including interviews in English and Spanish. This questionnaire was administered with the exact questions in the exact order as appears in this document. These questions were part of an “omnibus” survey in which other questions were asked before or after these question. A dual frame landline and cellular phone telephone sample was generated using Random Digit Dialing procedures. Interviewers called landlines cellular phone numbers, first requesting to speak with the youngest adult male or female at home. The final sample included 405 interviews completed on landlines and 605 interviews completed via cellular phones, including 372 interviews with adults in cell phone-only households. This survey uses statistical weighting procedures to account for differential chances of being selected due to landline and cellular phone access and household size. Weighting also corrects for deviations in the survey sample from known population characteristics, which helps correct for differential survey participation and random variation in samples. The overall adult sample is weighted using a raking procedure to match the demographic makeup of the population by sex, region, age, education, race/ethnicity, marital status, and population density according to Census estimates. The sample is also weighted to match phone estimates of the share of the population who are cell phoneonly, landline-only and mixed user populations according to the National Health Interview Survey. All error margins have been adjusted to account for the survey’s design effect, which is 1.42 for this survey. The design effect is a factor representing the survey’s deviation from a simple random sample, and takes into account decreases in precision due to sample design and weighting procedures. Surveys that do not incorporate a design effect overstate their precision. Contact polls@washpost.com for further information about how The Washington Post conducts polls. The Washington Post is a charter member of AAPOR’s Transparency Initiative, which recognizes organizations that disclose key methodological details on the research they produce.