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The two parties also showed differing priorities for the next two years. Highlighting the country's split over Obama's health care overhaul, almost 8 in 10 Republican voters want to repeal the measure. A roughly equal share of Democrats want to expand it or leave it in place. Almost 6 in 10 Democratic voters want Congress to focus first on spending to create jobs, making it easily their first priority. Tops for GOP voters: Nearly half want to cut the budget deficit. Nearly two-thirds of Republican voters want to continue Bush-era tax cuts for everyone, including couples earning more than $250,000 yearly. Only about 1 in 8 Democrats favored that. More than three-quarters of them would rather let tax cuts expire for the rich but renew them for everyone else, or let them all lapse. ___ Where did Tuesday's votes come from? The two parties went about that differently, too. More than a third of GOP votes came from the South, the most Republican-friendly region of the country by far. Democrats' votes came in near equal proportions from the East, Midwest, South and West. Republican voters were divided 50-50 by gender. Women accounted for 56 percent of Democrats' votes. ___ The results are from a survey that Edison Research conducted for The Associated Press and television networks with 18,132 voters nationwide. This included interviews with 16,531 voters Tuesday in a random sample of 268 precincts nationally. In addition, landline and cellular telephone interviews were conducted Oct. 22-31 with 1,601 people who voted early or absentee. There is a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 1 percentage point for the entire sample, higher for subgroups.
[Associated
Press;
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