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The Washington Post

They agree on a few things, but there's a lot that would keep Bernie and Donald's voters from teaming up.

The data suggest turnout is up across the board -- including in states that don't love Trump.

Our recent polling shows that economic anxiety and racial anxiety are independently driving support for Donald Trump.

Get more data

Washington Post polling archive

Dig into all the numbers in our polls, look at demographic groups and examine trends over time.

The economy is Americans' No. 1 issue. It plays second fiddle on Twitter.

Nonwhite voters and an older electorate bolster her support, including a huge lead among Hispanics.

Minorities, women, young voters and the college educated strongly back the Democrat.

Republicans are more divided on the front-runner, but views vary over a stop-Trump push.

Between Super Tuesday and March 15, the next two weeks will determine the clear frontrunners for presidential nominees.

El partido demócrata se ha visto beneficiado en las encuestas a segmentos de población específicos tanto en cuestiones de carácter general como en problemáticas más específicas.

The Democratic Party is favored by the targeted survey group overall and on specific issues.

A dive into where Rubio finished strongest.

In Iowa and New Hampshire, Bernie Sanders's demographic problems weren't all they're cracked up to be.

Entrance polls point to other factors than ideology.

Iowa caucus-goers older than that backed Clinton, while younger voters overwhelmingly chose Sanders.

But is relying on evangelicals and very conservative voters a long-term strategy?

Looking ahead to South Carolina, a new poll shows that Hillary Clinton's firewall is "still intact."

A look at early numbers.

A look at the early numbers.

Including a majority who are "very" anxious.

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