Where are New Jersey voters getting their news from – and how much do they trust their sources? That was the focus of a new Rutgers-Eagleton poll released last week, which found that “misinformation” is a big concern in the Garden State.
According to Rutgers-Eagleton, 60 percent of registered voters who replied to the poll said the spread of false or misleading information among New Jerseyans is a “very big problem.”
Only about four percent thought the issue is “not a problem,” with other respondents falling somewhere in between.
“Across all demographic groups and, specifically, across the political aisle, New Jersey voters raise concerns about the spread of misinformation throughout the state,” said Ashley Koning, an assistant research professor and director of the Eagleton Center for Public Interest Polling at Rutgers University-New Brunswick.
“Three quarters or more across the board label it a ‘big problem’ on some level,” Koning pointed out.
“In an era of divisive politics, strong bipartisan agreement that misinformation is an issue is noteworthy,” Koning added.
WHERE ARE NJ RESIDENTS GETTING THEIR NEWS?
New Jersey voters are most likely to say they get news and information about their local community from search engines such as Google (77%), followed by friends or family (75%), and national news outlets (71%), pollsters reported.
About 65 percent said they get news from a local newspaper, whether online or in print.
Other findings from the Rutgers-Eagleton poll included:
WHO DO YOU TRUST?
Voters also were asked about their level of trust in the sources they specifically use to get accurate information about local issues in New Jersey.
Here’s what the poll found:
The poll was commissioned by the New Jersey Civic Information Consortium and conducted by the Eagleton Center for Public Interest Polling. Results are from a statewide poll of 859 registered voters in New Jersey from May 15 to May 19. The full registered voter sample has a margin of error of +/- 4.2 percentage points.
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