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Poll: John Roberts more popular among liberals than conservatives

Inside Justice Roberts' health care decision
PAUL J. RICHARDS

CBS News Poll analysis by the CBS News Polling Unit: Sarah Dutton, Jennifer De Pinto, Fred Backus and Anthony Salvanto.

(CBS News) Most Americans are unfamiliar with Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts or have no opinion of him. However, in the wake of Roberts' decision to side with liberals on the court and uphold President Obama's health care law, a new CBS News/ New York Times poll shows that the conservative justice is more popular among liberals than conservatives.

Among Americans overall, 73 percent have no opinion or are undecided about Roberts, according to the poll, conducted July 11-16. Fourteen percent have a favorable view of him while 12 percent have an unfavorable view.

Among self-identified conservatives, just nine percent have a favorable view of Roberts, who was appointed to the high court by President George W. Bush. Twice as many, 18 percent, have an unfavorable view. Among liberals, 13 percent have a positive view of Roberts while 8 percent have an unfavorable view. Twenty percent of moderates approve of the chief justice.

Chart - Opinion of Chief Justice John Roberts
CBS

Overall views of the Supreme Court have declined slightly in the aftermath of the health care ruling. Among Americans overall, voters are now split, with 41 percent who approve of the court and 41 percent who disapprove. Another 18 percent have no opinion or don't know. In May of this year, 44 percent approved while 36 percent disapprove.

Among Republicans and conservatives, more now disapprove of the job the Supreme Court is doing (52 percent) than did so before the landmark ruling (35 percent). The views of Democrats and independents changed little.

The public is divided on the Supreme Court decision itself: 46 percent think the decision to uphold most of the law was a good thing, while 41 percent think it was bad.

While views on the decision may be mixed, more than half of Americans (53 percent) think the court's decision was based mostly on personal and political views, rather than legal analysis. Majorities of Republicans and independents hold this view, but Democrats are split.

Still, the court's ruling does not appear to have changed overall opinions of the health care law very much: more still disapprove than approve of the law. Overall, 50 percent of voters said they disapprove of the law, 36 percent approve.

As to what Congress should do about the health care law, a third of Americans say it should be kept as is or expanded, 27 percent think only the individual mandate should be repealed, while 34 percent would like Congress to repeal the entire law.

Chart - How Does the Supreme Court Decision on Health Care Affect Your Vote?
CBS

Politically, 55 percent of voters say the court's ruling will make no difference in their vote for president this November. Among those for whom it matters, 28 percent say the ruling makes them more likely to vote for Romney, while 13 percent say it makes them more likely to back Mr. Obama. The issue of the court's ruling on health care is more of a motivator for Romney supporters than it is for those who are backing the president.

When it comes to another policy debate - whether or not to extend President Bush's 2001 and 2003 tax cuts - the poll found that 49 percent of Americans agree with Mr. Obama that they should be extended for households earning less than $250,000. Another 27 percent would like to see the tax cuts extended for everyone, while 17 percent want them to expire for all. Americans' views were largely the same when CBS News asked this question in a November 2010 poll.

There are differences by party, with most Democrats and nearly half of independents supporting the president's proposal, while a plurality of Republicans want the tax cuts continued for everyone.

MORE FROM THE POLL:

Most say Romney policies favor the rich

Most say Obama policies contributed to downturn

Obama, Romney in dead heat in presidential race

VP choice matters to most voters

Read The Complete Poll


This poll was conducted by telephone from July 11-16, 2012 among 1,089 adults nationwide.

Phone numbers were dialed from samples of both standard land-line and cell phones. The error due to sampling for results based on the entire sample could be plus or minus three percentage points. The error for subgroups may be higher. This poll release conforms to the Standards of Disclosure of the National Council on Public Polls.

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