Vast Majority of Erie County Residents Support Governor Cuomo’s and County Executive Poloncarz’s Handling of the COVID-19 Crisis

Erie County voters overwhelmingly approve of the job Governor Andrew Cuomo and County Executive Mark Poloncarz are doing to respond to the Coronavirus/COVID-19 pandemic, while they disapprove of President Donald J. Trump’s handling of the pandemic, according to a new poll of 1,279 likely  Erie County 2020 general election voters released today.

Sixty-seven percent of Erie County residents approve of Governor Andrew Cuomo’s handling of the Coronavirus pandemic, with fifty-three percent (53%) rating his performance as excellent and fourteen percent (14%) as good, while thirty-three percent (33%) disapprove, with thirteen percent (13%) rating his performance as fair and twenty percent (20%) poor.

Sixty-nine percent of voters give County Executive Mark Poloncarz very high marks in responding to the pandemic, with thirty-four percent (34%) rating his performance as excellent and thirty-five percent (35%) as good, while thirty-one percent (31%) disapprove, with twenty-two percent (22%) rating his performance as fair and only nine percent (9%) poor.

Conversely, a vast majority of Erie County voters disapprove of the job President Donald J. Trump has done handling the Coronavirus/COVID-19 outbreak.  Only thirty-six percent (36%) of Erie County residents approve of President Trump’s handling of the Coronavirus pandemic, with twenty-eight percent (28%) rating his performance as excellent and eight percent (8%) as good, while sixty-four percent (64%) disapprove, with four percent (4%) rating his performance as fair and sixty percent (60%) – more than half of likely 2020 Erie County general election voters – as poor.

Additionally, Former Vice-President Joe Biden leads President Donald Trump among likely 2020 general election voters in a presidential head to head matchup by a wide margin: fifty-eight percent (58%) to thirty-four percent (34%), with eight percent (8%) favoring someone else.

Erie County Executive Mark Poloncarz stated, “The results of this poll confirm what I have been hearing throughout the community: the vast majority of Erie County residents support the actions Governor Cuomo and I have taken in response to the Coronavirus pandemic. The COVID-19 outbreak is unprecedented in our lifetimes, and the people of Erie County understand the severity of the situation.”

“While there might be a very vocal minority that objects to our actions, the vast majority of Erie County residents approve of our response and the actions we have taken to protect the lives of Erie County residents. I thank the people of Erie County for their support, and I know, by working together, we will persevere through this crisis,” added Poloncarz.

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‘Frazzled’ Trump looks to be  ‘fraying a bit at the edges’ after days in court: expert



Reacting to an angry rant delivered by Donald Trump when he showed up for court on Friday morning, CNN Senior Legal Analyst Elie Honig noted the former president looked "frazzled," which could be a clue to prosecutors that they are getting to him after only three days in court.

Speaking with host Kate Bolduan after the former president had already been admitted into the courtroom, where he will tried on 34 felony counts in the Stormy Daniels hush money trial, Honig noted that Trump seemed agitated as he addressed the press and listed off a series of grievances.

"Elie, from just watching how Donald Trump was in speaking to reporters before he went in, he was — he was definitely at least projecting that he was angry and frustrated, if he wasn't actually angry and frustrated," CNN's Bolduan prompted her colleague. "If you're a prosecutor and you're watching him act the way he did this morning, what do you think? Do you already think you are winning?"

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"So he definitely looked frazzled," the legal analyst replied and then added, "I think that's a good word we can use for this."

"If he's frazzled now, just wait until week three because I think what Donald Trump is learning is that it is enormously stressful to be on trial," he continued. "I've never even had, of course, the experience of being the defendant, I've just done it as a lawyer."

"It's incredibly stressful," he elaborated. "It's long days, it's excruciating. It can be boring. We saw him nodding off during jury selection and it will get to him.

"And I think, if I'm the prosecutor — I'm not so into the head games in the psychology of it all — but I do think I would see someone who's perhaps fraying a bit at the edges and, who knows, that may lead to poor strategic decisions by Donald Trump or other behavior that could be self-destructive."

Watch below or at the link.

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