Poll: Americans 'Undecided' On Alito
Most Don't Know Whether Supreme Court Nominee Should Be Confirmed
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As confirmation hearings begin on Capitol Hill for judge Samuel Alito, most Americans polled say they haven't formed an opinion about him. (Getty Images/Joe Raedle)
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Seventy-seven percent of those surveyed said they are "undecided" or "haven't heard enough" to form an opinion about Alito, and 70 percent said they "can't say" whether Alito should be confirmed by the Senate.
Despite a lack of knowledge on Alito, many of those surveyed said they expect his Senate confirmation hearings to be highly partisan. Forty-nine percent of those polled said "No" when asked whether they thought Democrats and Republicans would work together to conduct Alito's confirmation hearings.
The majority of the public would like to see the Senate explore Alito’s views on issues that might confront the court, even though 69 percent said they feel personal views should have no place in any rulings the Supreme Court makes. Twenty-five percent of those surveyed said personal views do have a place in Supreme Court rulings.Read the data and analysis from new CBS News polls on these topics:
Judge Alito | Congress/Ethics | Cars | Bush/Wiretapping/Iraq
When it comes to opinions about the Supreme Court, Americans express more confidence than they have in five years.
OPINION OF SAMUEL ALITO
Favorable
Unfavorable
Undecided/haven’t heard enough
SHOULD ALITO BE CONFIRMED BY THE SENATE?
Yes
No
Can’t say
WILL REPUBLICANS AND DEMOCRATS WORK TOGETHER
TO CONDUCT HEARINGS?
Yes
No
SHOULD JUSTICE’S PERSONAL VIEWS ENTER INTO DECISIONS?
Yes
No
CONFIDENCE IN SUPREME COURT
Now
Great deal
Quite a lot
Some
Very little
In July of 2005, 14 percent said they had a "great deal" of confidence in the Supreme Court, and 22 percent said they had "quite a lot."
Other CBS News poll findings:
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