National Adults Which one of the following comes closest to your opinion about what Congress should do with the Affordable Care Act known as Obamacare: Change it so it Change it so it Repeal it Let it stand does more does less completely Unsure Row % Row % Row % Row % Row % National Adults 18% 46% 7% 26% 3% National Registered Voters 17% 48% 7% 26% 2% Party Identification^ 29% 62% 3% 5% 1% Democrat Republican 7% 23% 11% 57% 2% Independent 14% 54% 8% 21% 3% Strong Democrats 31% 65% 1% 3% 0% Soft Democrats 24% 64% 5% 5% 2% Just Independents 7% 51% 9% 24% 8% Soft Republicans 8% 35% 12% 43% 2% Strong Republicans 6% 15% 10% 67% 2% Very liberal-Liberal 23% 68% 4% 5% 1% Moderate 12% 57% 8% 21% 2% Conservative-Very conservative 15% 26% 10% 47% 2% 5% 20% 12% 59% 3% Before AHCA 18% 47% 7% 26% 2% After AHCA 19% 45% 8% 26% 3% Northeast 22% 55% 8% 13% 2% Midwest 16% 49% 8% 25% 3% South 17% 42% 6% 31% 4% West 18% 43% 8% 29% 2% Less than $50,000 22% 45% 6% 24% 3% $50,000 or more 14% 48% 9% 28% 1% Not college graduate 19% 44% 6% 27% 3% College graduate 17% 49% 9% 23% 2% White 14% 46% 7% 29% 3% African American 36% 58% 2% 3% 1% Latino 28% 42% 8% 21% 1% White - Not College Graduate 12% 44% 7% 33% 4% White - College Graduate 16% 49% 8% 25% 3% 18 to 29 26% 38% 12% 20% 3% 30 to 44 17% 46% 7% 29% 2% 45 to 59 15% 52% 7% 24% 2% 60 or older 15% 46% 5% 30% 3% Under 45 21% 42% 9% 25% 2% 45 or older 15% 49% 6% 27% 3% Men 14% 43% 10% 31% 3% Women 22% 49% 5% 22% 3% White Evangelical Christians 11% 33% 7% 46% 3% Interview Type Landline 18% 45% 5% 28% 4% Cell phone 18% 46% 9% 25% 2% Party Identification* Political Ideology^ Trump Supporters Interview Date Region Household Income Education Race Race and Education Age Age Gender McClatchy-Marist Poll National Adults. Interviews conducted March 22nd through March 27th, 2017, n=1062 MOE +/- 3.0 percentage points. ^National Registered Voters: n=906 MOE +/- 3.3 percentage points. Totals may not add to 100% due to rounding. *Soft Democrats include registered voters who identify as "not strong Democrats" or Democratic leaning independents. Soft Republicans include those registered voters who identify as "not strong Republicans" or Republican leaning independents. McClatchy-Marist Poll March 2017 35 National Adults Which one of the following comes closest to your opinion about what Congress should do with the Affordable Care Act known as Obamacare: Change it Change it so it does so it does Repeal it more less completely Unsure Let it stand Row % Row % Row % Row % Row % March 2017 18% 46% 7% 26% 3% February 2017 21% 39% 7% 29% 4% McClatchy-Marist Poll National Adults McClatchy-Marist Poll March 2017 36 Nature of the Sample National Adults National Registered Voters Col % Col % National Adults 100% National Registered Voters 85% 100% Democrat n/a 34% Republican n/a 29% Independent n/a 36% Other n/a 1% Strong Democrats n/a 21% Not strong Democrats n/a 13% Democratic leaning independents n/a 15% Just Independents n/a 9% Republican leaning independents n/a 12% Not strong Republicans n/a 11% Strong Republicans n/a 18% Other n/a 1% Very liberal n/a 8% Liberal n/a 21% Moderate n/a 34% Conservative n/a 30% Very conservative n/a 7% Men 49% 48% Women 51% 52% Under 45 47% 44% 45 or older 53% 56% 18 to 29 22% 18% 30 to 44 25% 26% 45 to 59 27% 28% 60 or older 26% 28% White 62% 64% African American 11% 10% Latino 14% 14% Other 12% 12% Northeast 18% 18% Midwest 21% 22% South 37% 36% West 24% 24% Less than $50,000 48% 46% $50,000 or more 52% 54% Not college graduate 58% 54% College graduate 42% 46% White - Not College Graduate 34% 34% White - College Graduate 29% 31% Non-White - Not College Graduate 24% 21% Non-White - College Graduate 14% 14% White Evangelical Christians 17% 17% Interview Type Landline 33% 35% Cell phone 67% 65% Party Identification Party Identification Political Ideology Gender Age Age Race Region Household Income Education Education by Race McClatchy-Marist Poll National Adults. Interviews conducted March 22nd through March 27th, 2017, n=1062 MOE +/- 3.0 percentage points. National Registered Voters: n=906 MOE +/- 3.3 percentage points. Totals may not add to 100% due to rounding. How the Survey was Conducted Nature of the Sample: McClatchy-Marist Poll of 1,062 National Adults This survey of 1,062 adults was conducted March 22nd through March 27th, 2017 by The Marist Poll, sponsored and funded in partnership with McClatchy. Adults 18 years of age and older residing in the contiguous United States were contacted on landline or mobile numbers and interviewed in English by telephone using live interviewers. Mobile telephone numbers were randomly selected based upon a list of telephone exchanges from throughout the nation from Survey Sampling International. The exchanges were selected to ensure that each region was represented in proportion to its population. Mobile phones are treated as individual devices. After validation of age, personal ownership, and non-business-use of the mobile phone, interviews are typically conducted with the person answering the phone. To increase coverage, this mobile sample was supplemented by respondents reached through random dialing of landline phone numbers from ASDE Survey Sampler, Inc. Within each landline household, a single respondent is selected through a random selection process to increase the representativeness of traditionally under-covered survey populations. The samples were then combined and balanced to reflect the 2013 American Community Survey 1-year estimates for age, gender, income, race, and region. Results are statistically significant within ±3.0 percentage points. There are 906 registered voters. The results for this subset are statistically significant within ±3.3 percentage points. The error margin was not adjusted for sample weights and increases for cross-tabulations.