Of prominent GOP figures, Paul Ryan was the most popular, the survey found. Poll: 54% want GOP to move right

Two-thirds of Republicans want their party to change its direction, and more than half say they want the party to become more conservative, according to a new poll.

When asked if Republicans just need to make a stronger case on its positions or whether it needs to reconsider some of those positions, 59 percent of GOP voters surveyed in a new Pew Research Center poll said the party needs to reconsider some policies, while 36 percent said it just needed to make a stronger case. Sixty-seven percent said the party needed to address major problems, as opposed to 3o percent who said needed changes were minor.


How the party should move, though, was more split. Just over half, 54 percent, of Republican voters said the party leaders should move in a more conservative direction, while 40 percent said they should be more moderate.

On the issues, the one area where Republicans said the party is too conservative is same-sex marriage (31 percent to 27 percent). On the issues of immigration, government spending and guns, significantly more Republicans said the party was not conservative enough than too conservative. Republicans were split, however, on abortion, with 25 percent saying the party was too conservative and 26 percent saying it was not conservative enough.

The poll also showed the tea party is strong among primary voters, making up almost half of the Republican primary electorate. Though just 37 percent of all voters said they agreed with the tea party, that number was 49 percent among likely Republican primary voters. Of those who said they disagreed with the tea party, roughly half were conservative non-tea partiers (29 percent of Republican voters), and roughly half (31 percent of Republican voters) were liberal or moderates.

Of prominent GOP figures, Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) was the most popular, with 65 percent viewing him favorably and 15 percent viewing him unfavorably.

Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) was viewed 55 percent favorably to 19 percent unfavorably, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) was favorably viewed 50 percent to 20 percent, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie was favorably viewed 47 percent to 30 percent and Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) was seen 33 percent favorably to 13 percent unfavorably, with 53 percent saying they had no opinion.

Congressional party leaders House Speaker John Boehner and House Minority Leader Mitch McConnell were toward the bottom of the pack. Boehner was viewed 44 percent favorably to 29 percent unfavorably, and McConnell was favored 36 percent to 24 percent.

Pew surveyed 1,480 adults nationally, including 497 Republican and Republican-leaning registered voters, from July 17-21 for the poll, which has an error margin of plus-minus 3 percentage points overall and 5.1 percentage points for Republican results.