A recent poll of New Jersey voters showed bipartisan results, which in this day and age is a political miracle. The opinion poll questioned the view people in the state have or Sen. Bobby "Bag-o-Gold" Menendez (D-NJ).
The senator and his lovely wife Nadine, were recently charged by the Department of Justice in a bribery scheme and in which he faces allegations of acting as a foreign agent for Egypt. The poll showed that over half of the voters on both sides of the aisle want him to resign his seat.
Specifically, most residents, about 80%, were either very familiar or somewhat familiar with the charges while 1 in 5 had little to no knowledge of the case because there's always that percentage of people who don't know who fought in the Civil War or when the War of 1812 was fought so why would anyone expect them to know about Menendez's corruption?
Seventy-one percent of voters want him to resign and only 8% support his continuation in office because their cats told them not to fire the guy.
Specifically, most residents, about 80%, were either very familiar or somewhat familiar with the charges while 1 in 5 had little to no knowledge of the case because there's always that percentage of people who don't know who fought in the Civil War or when the War of 1812 was fought so why would anyone expect them to know about Menendez's corruption?
Seventy-one percent of voters want him to resign and only 8% support his continuation in office because their cats told them not to fire the guy.
Democrats and Republicans, at 78% and 79%, respectively, believe he should step down, the poll found.
The poll was conducted by t from Oct. 9-18. It polled 630 New Jersey adult residents and utilized a combination of text invitations and phone calls, with 92% of interviews conducted on cellphones and 8% on landlines.
The data was weighted based on U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2021 data for New Jersey, considering variables like age, race, education level and sex, (whatever that is) and it had a margin of error of +/- 3.9 percentage points, which statistically is rather tight and a decent indicator of validity.
Menendez faces an additional charge of acting as a foreign agent and accepting hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes aimed to benefit the Egyptian government through his "power and influence as a Senator," according to the superseding indictment filed by a grand jury in Manhattan this month.
The poll was conducted by t from Oct. 9-18. It polled 630 New Jersey adult residents and utilized a combination of text invitations and phone calls, with 92% of interviews conducted on cellphones and 8% on landlines.
The data was weighted based on U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2021 data for New Jersey, considering variables like age, race, education level and sex, (whatever that is) and it had a margin of error of +/- 3.9 percentage points, which statistically is rather tight and a decent indicator of validity.
Menendez faces an additional charge of acting as a foreign agent and accepting hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes aimed to benefit the Egyptian government through his "power and influence as a Senator," according to the superseding indictment filed by a grand jury in Manhattan this month.
A superseding indictment is used when new evidence or charges arise after an initial indictment has been issued. The grand jury issues this document and it expands on a previous indictment in criminal cases.
Menendez denied the new charges and insisted he has always been "loyal to only one country – the United States of America," and one bank account, which is under his name.
Menendez, along with Nadine, his lovely second wife since 2020, and three New Jersey businessmen – Wael Hana, Jose Uribe and Fred Daibes – were first charged in the federal bribery scheme on Sept. 23rd of this year.
"Among other actions, MENENDEZ provided sensitive U.S. Government information and took other steps that secretly aided the Government of Egypt," the indictment states.
"It was a part and an object of the conspiracy that ROBERT MENENDEZ, the defendant, and others known and unknown, being a public official, directly and indirectly, would and did corruptly demand, seek, receive, accept, and agree to receive and accept something of value personally and for another person and entity, in return for being influenced in the performance of an official act and for being induced to do an act and omit to do an act in violation of his official duty," the indictment reads.
So most people don't want him to remain in office but he refuses to not live off the taxpayer's money.
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